Drought
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- justiner
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Re: Drought
A nice little rain storm in Twin Lakes, Leadville, Frisco yesterday. Don’t wanna use the M word, but it certainly was a soak.
- CheapCigarMan
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Re: Drought
@ ker0uac @Vids
Thank you for adding history, context, and intelligence to the conversation.
It’s refreshing amidst the emotional hysteria.
I very much enjoyed reading your contributions.
Thank you for adding history, context, and intelligence to the conversation.
It’s refreshing amidst the emotional hysteria.
I very much enjoyed reading your contributions.
I should be on a mountain
- Dave B
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Re: Drought
Not Colorado, but the Pacific Northwest is supposed to be insanely hot this weekend.
So far the hottest it has ever gotten at EasTac (Seattle) in June is 96 degrees. Tomorrow's forecast ranges from 106 to 108. In Seattle.
Portland is supposed to be 109-115. The hottest June temperature ever recorded there so far is 102 which was also the only June temperature that has been over 100 so far.
So far the hottest it has ever gotten at EasTac (Seattle) in June is 96 degrees. Tomorrow's forecast ranges from 106 to 108. In Seattle.
Portland is supposed to be 109-115. The hottest June temperature ever recorded there so far is 102 which was also the only June temperature that has been over 100 so far.
I'm old, slow and fat. Unfortunately, those are my good qualities.
Re: Drought
But hey! On the local level our June wildfire problem is clearing up.
Traveling light is the only way to fly.
IG: @colorado_invasive
Strava: Brent Herring
IG: @colorado_invasive
Strava: Brent Herring
- dubsho3000
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Re: Drought
Fires are part of the natural cycle, for sure, but I would like to reiterate my post from earlier in the thread and point out that the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere is not normal, and it is not part of a natural cycle. This is exactly the complacency we need to move away from, in my opinion.Vids wrote: ↑Thu Jun 24, 2021 9:31 pm
I respectfully disagree with your post. A forest fire in itself is not a bad thing, it gets rid of old growth and regenerates new feed for wildlife. If it's not threatening houses I say let it burn. Frankly, there are a lot of areas in CO that have so much dead beetle kill that the forest needs to have a good burn and start over. It's part of the natural cycle, and has been happening since long before we all hiked the 14ers.
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Re: Drought
Western drought brings another woe: voracious grasshoppers
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireSto ... s-78453460
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireSto ... s-78453460
"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." - Isaac Newton
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Re: Drought
agreed.dubsho3000 wrote: ↑Sat Jun 26, 2021 7:23 amFires are part of the natural cycle, for sure, but I would like to reiterate my post from earlier in the thread and point out that the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere is not normal, and it is not part of a natural cycle. This is exactly the complacency we need to move away from, in my opinion.Vids wrote: ↑Thu Jun 24, 2021 9:31 pm
I respectfully disagree with your post. A forest fire in itself is not a bad thing, it gets rid of old growth and regenerates new feed for wildlife. If it's not threatening houses I say let it burn. Frankly, there are a lot of areas in CO that have so much dead beetle kill that the forest needs to have a good burn and start over. It's part of the natural cycle, and has been happening since long before we all hiked the 14ers.
"When trees catch fire, the carbon in their timber combines with oxygen to release energy and carbon dioxide. Wildfires are part of the natural carbon cycle, and the carbon dioxide they release is soon absorbed by young trees. But if a forest is cut down, burned, and not allowed to regrow, all its carbon is turned into carbon dioxide that increases the greenhouse effect."
so unless we aggressively replant burned areas, it'll take years to get back to a carbon neutral area. good luck trying to grow saplings in a 1200 year drought.
also, on the subject of the bark beetle. I think it's safe to say containment is out of reach. somewhere out there in the ravaged forest are a few trees that survived the beetle. we need to aggressively find it, study the genetic drift, or what properties that made it resistant, and start procreating them ASAP.
<The great mountain pine beetle outbreak | Diana Six | TEDxUMontana> is a 8 year old talk. we've watched this menace and have done little to anything about it. now we pay the price.
"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." - Isaac Newton
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Re: Drought
"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." - Isaac Newton
- SchralpTheGnar
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Re: Drought
Good to see they are not missing out on the fun, but it’s also worth noting that During the Paleozoic era temperatures were routinely above 100 degrees in the Pacific NorthwestScott P wrote: ↑Sat Jun 26, 2021 6:32 am Not Colorado, but the Pacific Northwest is supposed to be insanely hot this weekend.
So far the hottest it has ever gotten at EasTac (Seattle) in June is 96 degrees. Tomorrow's forecast ranges from 106 to 108. In Seattle.
Portland is supposed to be 109-115. The hottest June temperature ever recorded there so far is 102 which was also the only June temperature that has been over 100 so far.
Re: Drought
Is this tongue in cheek?SchralpTheGnar wrote: ↑Sat Jun 26, 2021 11:35 am it’s also worth noting that During the Paleozoic era temperatures were routinely above 100 degrees in the Pacific Northwest
Traveling light is the only way to fly.
IG: @colorado_invasive
Strava: Brent Herring
IG: @colorado_invasive
Strava: Brent Herring
Re: Drought
You're not wrong about that, but I think what we are witnessing, if we don't get a handle on carbon emissions, is the permanent deforestation of much of the western US. It's simply getting too hot and dry to support trees in many locations. The beetle kill and fires are symptoms of that, more than causes.Vids wrote: ↑Thu Jun 24, 2021 9:31 pmI respectfully disagree with your post. A forest fire in itself is not a bad thing, it gets rid of old growth and regenerates new feed for wildlife. If it's not threatening houses I say let it burn. Frankly, there are a lot of areas in CO that have so much dead beetle kill that the forest needs to have a good burn and start over. It's part of the natural cycle, and has been happening since long before we all hiked the 14ers.rmattas wrote: ↑Thu Jun 24, 2021 8:04 am some deep thoughts going on here...I like to keep it simple, we're in a very bad drought. pour some resources into whatever it takes to put the damn fires out, because we're going to need it in the future.
good luck to all, I hope you guys have a better year than forecast.