From: "David J Brooks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
n Thu, Oct 23, 2008 at 9:23 AM, AlunFoto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2008/10/22 Jack Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> Brings back chilly memories of my living in the US mid
>> west and ratifies my decision to move to California many years ago.
>> Does this mean we now have a 'global cooling' happening?
>
> No, but it could mean you have a *local* cooling. :-) >
> Autumn is behind schedule in Oslo, this year as it was last year, and
> the year before that...
>
> Very different from the eighties; I remember us kids always spending a
> week-end in the forest just before 15. September each year to go
> fishing. That's when the brown trout spawning season officially starts
> and all angling is prohibited in streams and rivers. Autumn splendour
> was usually at its height by then. Now it happens a month later, so
> there's definately a *local* change in the opposite direction here.

To me, it seems we don't have that nice transition from season to
season i used to remember.

Now its summer, then bam, one day its fall/winter.

Dave

I don't have the math to understand the actual climate models, but the way I understand the explanation of what the models show, is weather will become more unsettled.

I guess spring and fall are when it might show up most noticeably, getting those bigger swings between warm and cold.

Summers will be hotter with changes in rainfall patterns driven by changes in ocean and air currents, but day to day, there won't be as much noticeable variation.

Winters I think you might see greater snowfall farther north as what would have fallen as rain in the south gets shifted farther north.

But it's in the seasons of change where change will be most noticeable.

BTW, I did like the original photo. I'm hoping we'll get just a little snow down here this winter. I've got some photos in mind, but it's gotta snow first.

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