Thread: Cold and damp
View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Old 13-04-2012, 09:39 PM posted to rec.gardens
Higgs Boson Higgs Boson is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jun 2009
Posts: 918
Default Cold and damp

On Apr 13, 10:18*am, "David E. Ross" wrote:
On 4/13/12 9:07 AM, Higgs Boson wrote:









This is an absolutely meaningless message that I feel safe to post
only because I'm among friends (I hope!)


It's April 14. *Cold, damp, rain or threatening. *In So. Calif
coastal, we have -- or had, before global warming -- several late
spring months that dismay tourists who were expecting *fabled Calif.
beach weather. * "Gray May" and " June Gloom" are caused by ocean
weather patterns.


Now the damn things seem to have advanced into April. *Have to wait
and see. *Not that the rain isn't welcome,
since this is basically a desert area. *It blossomed/exploded into a
megalopolis (sp?) thanks to the "Chinatown"
importation of water from upstate by Mulholland. * Would have been
neat to live here in the 20's and 30's, when the smell of orange
blossoms filled the air, and there was no traffic, and, and, and..
(Yes, of course there were downsides.)


I need to get out into the garden -- *plant some more vegs and weed,
weed, weed. * Big chicken huddles in the house...


HB


This winter has been really strange.

Counting from the beginning of November to the end of March, the average
winter chill in my area (about 30 miles from you, between the San
Fernando Valley and Thousand Oaks) over the 11 years prior to this past
winter was 365 hours at or below 45F, ranging from 153 hours to 544
hours. *At 313 hours for this past winter, we were well within that
range and not really far from the average. *However, 24% of those hours
were in the second half of March, following relatively warm January and
February. *Thus, one-fourth of the chill was ineffective, occurring
after my roses and peach tree started blooming.

Then there is rainfall. *In California, summer is the dry season; and
winter is the "not so dry" season. *Thus, a "rain year" is measured from
October to September. *In the prior eight rain years, over 70% of the
rainfall was in the months of December through February. *So far, those
months account for only 23% of this year's rainfall. *Generally, no
significant rain falls after the beginning of April. *The average April
rainfall over the prior eight rain years was only 6% of the year's
total. *So far, this April accounts for 11% of the total.

--
David E. Ross
Climate: *California Mediterranean, see
http://www.rossde.com/garden/climate.html
Gardening diary at http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary


Awesome! You are a stats demon!

I usually go around with my head up my, uh, statistics, hardly
noticing the weather from year to year, because it has been so steady
over the [censored] years I have been in Santa Monica. I just hope
these anomalies don't **** up my blueberries, which will be going into
their second year. I realize they are bred for mininum winter chill,
but they didn't get much of anything this year, The plum and apricot,
also planted last year, are just timidly starting to leaf out.

Group members in other climates might find it hard to realize what a
difference our respective microclimates can make!

You do the praying for me; nobody listens to me Up There!

Well...I dunno, BIG LOUD THUNDER just shook the house...are they
trying to tell me something...g

HB