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- Jul 17, 2012
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We hit 114 today. Low tonight should be in the low to mid 80's. Can't wait for the sun to go down!
76 here right now, LDRN...come on over, and we'll cook out before the rain moves in!
Not fair (can't find the raspberry smilie)! It was 102 here again today. DD's swim coach told me it would be- my phone only predicted 90, I had to download the accuweather app...Need to come to the beach HC...it was only 72 today here....
Not fair (can't find the raspberry smilie)! It was 102 here again today. DD's swim coach told me it would be- my phone only predicted 90, I had to download the accuweather app...
whole thing at the link above---
England is the chief meteorologist at Channel 9 in Oklahoma City, a position he has held since 1972. This has made him a living legend in the state: the voice of public safety for roughly the last 2,000 tornadoes. Early in his career, he was notorious for issuing public tornado warnings before the National Weather Service did a scandalous violation of hierarchy. He persuaded the owner of Channel 9 to invest in Doppler radar, a technology that promised to improve tornado-warning times to more than 20 minutes, from a single minute, before anyone was even sure it would work. (It did, spectacularly.) In the eyes of most Oklahomans, England is less a meteorologist than a benevolent weather god who routinely saves everyones lives. He has become a cult figure: a combination of Obi-Wan Kenobi, Foghorn Leghorn, Atticus Finch, Dan Rather, Zeus and Uncle Jesse from The Dukes of Hazzard. There is a popular Gary England drinking game that, if followed literally, would probably destroy as many lives through alcohol poisoning as extreme weather does. (Take one drink when Gary says any of the following: hook echo, updraft, metro, Doppler, wall cloud, SkyNews 9, underground, mobile home.)
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Boulder area calls for thousands more evacuations
http://www.centurylink.net/news/rea...p-colorado_flooding_cuts_off_mountain_town-ap
LYONS, Colo. (AP) With rain still falling and the flood threat still real, authorities called on thousands more people in the inundated city of Boulder and a mountain hamlet to evacuate as nearby creeks rose to dangerous levels.
The late-night reports from Boulder and the village of Eldorado Springs came as rescuers struggled to reach dozens of people cut off by flooding in Colorado mountain communities, while residents in the Denver area and other downstream communities were warned to stay off flooded streets...........