Sounds like we need to drill for some more fossil fuels as as to keep warm.
"Green" is the new RED.
Umm, no:Maroon Dawn said:
Should be a mild El Niño winter.
Only real risk will be in January if we have one of those years where winter wakes up late, realizes it slept through its alarm and dumps all 3 months of winter weather on us in a two week period of ice
Not impossible in this sort of weather pattern but outside of that should be an very mild winter
Enviroag02 said:GAC06 said:
We have a 500gal tank and if I recall correctly it's supposed to burn 3-4 gallons per hour at full load
The don't fill it to 100% right? Usually only 85%.
MouthBQ98 said:
It would work for as long as it takes.
You think your Internet and tech is going to work if there is an extended widespread power outage?
ShinerAggie said:Umm, no:Maroon Dawn said:
Should be a mild El Niño winter.
Only real risk will be in January if we have one of those years where winter wakes up late, realizes it slept through its alarm and dumps all 3 months of winter weather on us in a two week period of ice
Not impossible in this sort of weather pattern but outside of that should be an very mild winter
It will be a La Nina winter. La Nina conditions have generally persisted all throughout hurricane season, which is why there were some pretty strong storms this year.
La Nina winters can be pretty severe in Texas. La Nina was the culprit in the 2021 Texas freeze.
The longer the cold air is confined to the Arctic (i.e., the milder the fall and early winter months), the more severe the cold outbreak is when it eventually occurs. The only question is who will see the worst of it.
In all fairness, though, the degree of severity of the La Nina impacts matters....so does the timing of the cold shot of air. It could be farther west or farther east. No one can predict it with the current state of meteorology....we just need to prepare.Maroon Dawn said:ShinerAggie said:Umm, no:Maroon Dawn said:
Should be a mild El Niño winter.
Only real risk will be in January if we have one of those years where winter wakes up late, realizes it slept through its alarm and dumps all 3 months of winter weather on us in a two week period of ice
Not impossible in this sort of weather pattern but outside of that should be an very mild winter
It will be a La Nina winter. La Nina conditions have generally persisted all throughout hurricane season, which is why there were some pretty strong storms this year.
La Nina winters can be pretty severe in Texas. La Nina was the culprit in the 2021 Texas freeze.
The longer the cold air is confined to the Arctic (i.e., the milder the fall and early winter months), the more severe the cold outbreak is when it eventually occurs. The only question is who will see the worst of it.
Ok, thought I had read it was transitioning from La to El but maybe that was wrong.
But it's still like I said, a year where we're likely to get a bad two weeks of winter but not consistently cold
Mas89 said:
We have several of these and used them a couple times before getting a whole home generator. Great cheap insurance and great for outdoor activities like kids sports or hunting. They use the one pound bottles which I keep 10 or so of and you can also get a hose and special adapter to connect to regular 5 gallon propane tanks.
And it's click-bait for the rage-seeking anti-everything, not gas and coal folk, hence why we see it every year like clockwork.Rapier108 said:
We hear this every damn year now.
Thanks again. My concern is the chance the supply of natural gas could be curtailed and having onsite propane mitigates that.GAC06 said:
We have a 500gal tank and if I recall correctly it's supposed to burn 3-4 gallons per hour at full load
Rapier108 said:
We hear this every damn year now.
Mas89 said:
Hey I remember those. Had one in each stand in Bandera County 1970s. Good times.
Jack Squat 83 said:
Bottom line: Federal subsidies, fueled by rainbow fart driven policy-makers who are more interested in their Church of Climate Change, are responsible for this man-made disaster we are headed into.
Thank God Republicans were elected and can hopefully course-correct all of this BS. There is simply not enough dispatchable generation.
Also, the solution to grid reliability can't come from an Executive Order. Congress better get some common sense laws on the books permanently.
Shoefly! said:Mas89 said:
Hey I remember those. Had one in each stand in Bandera County 1970s. Good times.
Yea, we got rid of them. We had a hunter shoot 4 times at a 12 point and got so excited he kicked the can over and caught his thermal coveralls on fire. But he got that buck on the 4th shot, it was definitely a wall hanger!
Maroon Dawn said:ShinerAggie said:Umm, no:Maroon Dawn said:
Should be a mild El Niño winter.
Only real risk will be in January if we have one of those years where winter wakes up late, realizes it slept through its alarm and dumps all 3 months of winter weather on us in a two week period of ice
Not impossible in this sort of weather pattern but outside of that should be an very mild winter
It will be a La Nina winter. La Nina conditions have generally persisted all throughout hurricane season, which is why there were some pretty strong storms this year.
La Nina winters can be pretty severe in Texas. La Nina was the culprit in the 2021 Texas freeze.
The longer the cold air is confined to the Arctic (i.e., the milder the fall and early winter months), the more severe the cold outbreak is when it eventually occurs. The only question is who will see the worst of it.
Ok, thought I had read it was transitioning from La to El but maybe that was wrong.
But it's still like I said, a year where we're likely to get a bad two weeks of winter but not consistently cold
MM5 model from @UWAtmosSci showing a 949 millibar ( 28.02" ) low well off the coast at 10 pm Tuesday. High wind watch Tuesday night for the coast, west portion of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Cascade foothills and Bellevue area for easterly wind 25-40 mph gusts 60-65 mph. #wawx pic.twitter.com/s1TRPSZYk3
— NWS Seattle (@NWSSeattle) November 18, 2024
This weekend gave us a little taste of winter weather. It gets real starting tomorrow night. Plan ahead, drive for conditions, and remember that you'll be sharing the roads with our plow drivers. https://t.co/I37ONdMfrx
— WSDOT East (@WSDOT_East) November 18, 2024
annie88 said:
I don't want a mild winter.
I'm sick of mild winters.
Can I still wear my sandals?techno-ag said:
Wednesday it will be cooler for a day.
Winter is coming to Texas. Time to put long pants on.
Tanya 93 said:annie88 said:
I don't want a mild winter.
I'm sick of mild winters.
A week of single digits and below zero at night, with 10 inches of snow can suck though.
techno-ag said:
Wednesday it will be cooler for a day.
Winter is coming to Texas. Time to put long pants on.
annie88 said:Tanya 93 said:annie88 said:
I don't want a mild winter.
I'm sick of mild winters.
A week of single digits and below zero at night, with 10 inches of snow can suck though.
I can see both sides of it. I was in -30 to 0 weather almost 2 years ago in Montana for a week and I loved it, but if I had months of it, who knows. I lived in Texas since I was four and I still ***** about how warm it is here.
However, we have had some decent snow in the last five years. Especially in 2021.
Huh? These guys seem to think cold is far worse than hot.one safe place said:
Better a power outage in the winter than the summer.