View Single Post
  #4   Report Post  
Old 04-03-2003, 02:03 AM
Pam
 
Posts: n/a
Default Gloomy Cities

Won't work here in Seattle - we may have 160 days a year with precipitation, but
it doesn't amount to much. Average annual rainfall hovers around 30-35 inches -
far less than most areas of the country except the Southwest. Our native plants
tend to prefer summer drought conditions :-))

pam - gardengal

J Kolenovsky wrote:

Just look at all those cities where one could plant "wet feet" native
plants and bog marginals.

gregpresley wrote:

Here's a list to depress you all:
The 11 drizzliest cities:
Saginaw Mich 181 precipitation days/year
Buffalo NY 168
Syracuse NY 168
Binghampton NY 163
Olympia Wa 163
Seattle Wa 160
Cleveland Oh 156
Akron Oh 153
Burlington Vt 153
Pittsburgh Pa 152
Portland Or 152

Most of the Eastern Cities on this list probably have at least half of their
precipitation days as snow or sleet days. It should be mandatory for people
in any of these cities to spend a week in the desert every winter to remind
themselves of what the sun looks like..........LOL

"Iris Cohen" wrote in message
...
It's a common experience when we decide to get away on a weekend to

start
seeing the sun as soon as we've traveled 30 miles or so, in any direction.

My
wife and I always joke about it ("as soon as we leave Pittsburgh, the sun

comes
out...")

Syracuse is like that, too. It is supposedly the rainiest/snowiest city of

its
size (150,000) in the country. I'm sure Pittsburgh is better than Seattle.

Iris,
Central NY, Zone 5a, Sunset Zone 40
"If we see light at the end of the tunnel, It's the light of the oncoming
train."
Robert Lowell (1917-1977)


--
J. Kolenovsky, A+, Network +, MCP
τΏτ - http://www.celestialhabitats.com - commercial
τΏτ - http://www.hal-pc.org/~garden/personal.html