Where did the monsoon go?
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- justiner
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
Def. some precip, but we've got a long way to go to be at "not a drought" levels
- Chicago Transplant
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
Yeah, we've had short bursts of very intense rain. Its actually pretty bad for our drought to have such heavy rain because our dry soil can't absorb it. Hence all the flash flooding and mud/land slides, which have not been limited to only the burn scars although those areas have been hit the hardest. Loveland Pass was closed this weekend because of a mudslide for example, no burn scar there.
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- Kevin Baker
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
The San Juan's are lush with moisture right now. Full streams, booming flowers, mushrooms everywhere. I felt like I was in a rain forest. The short bursts of intense rain are par for the course during monsoon season with some summers way drier than others. The intensity of the monsoon can vary dramatically from one summer to the next.ECF55 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 02, 2021 11:21 am With the chance that this conversation quickly goes off the rails (not my intent)...I'm an East Coaster and the West is obviously in the middle of a significant drought, but it appears from news headlines that the Colorado Monsoon has resurfaced and afternoon thunderstorm activity is occurring in earnest. Is it all hype, or is Colorado finally getting some summertime precipitation this year?
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- cottonmountaineering
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
yeah for sure, the corn lilys were 6 ft tall last week and all the rivers are fullKevin Baker wrote: ↑Mon Aug 02, 2021 12:10 pmThe San Juan's are lush with moisture right now. Full streams, booming flowers, mushrooms everywhere. I felt like I was in a rain forest. The short bursts of intense rain are par for the course during monsoon season with some summers way drier than others. The intensity of the monsoon can vary dramatically from one summer to the next.ECF55 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 02, 2021 11:21 am With the chance that this conversation quickly goes off the rails (not my intent)...I'm an East Coaster and the West is obviously in the middle of a significant drought, but it appears from news headlines that the Colorado Monsoon has resurfaced and afternoon thunderstorm activity is occurring in earnest. Is it all hype, or is Colorado finally getting some summertime precipitation this year?
Re: Where did the monsoon go?
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- summit21
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
Huh...Scott P wrote: ↑Mon Aug 19, 2019 5:23 pm It doesn't seem that it ever came, at least in most of the mountains. I think I have only heard thunder once this entire summer and even in the afternoons in the mountains it has been sunny when I have been out. It has been nothing but sunny and warm for days on end.
It looks like only a few small areas in the mountains got hit:
Apparently the Sangres and a few plateaus have been getting hit, but that's about it.
https://www.summitdaily.com/news/monsoo ... -10-years/
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- ncxhjhgvbi
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
Original post was from 2019 but he linked a map that auto updates. I've noticed a lot of threads from years ago being brought back up recently...good people are using the forum search function, but have to mind the timestamps for sure!summit21 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 02, 2021 8:22 pm Huh...
https://www.summitdaily.com/news/monsoo ... -10-years/
- supranihilest
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
Just want to point out that Scott P's post is two years old but the graphic linked in the original post is from 2021 (at least as of writing of my post), since it is regularly updated without changing the filename.summit21 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 02, 2021 8:22 pm Huh...
https://www.summitdaily.com/news/monsoo ... -10-years/
Edit: got beat to the punch by two minutes!
- summit21
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Re: Where did the monsoon go?
ncxhjhgvbi wrote: ↑Mon Aug 02, 2021 8:32 pmOriginal post was from 2019 but he linked a map that auto updates. I've noticed a lot of threads from years ago being brought back up recently...good people are using the forum search function, but have to mind the timestamps for sure!summit21 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 02, 2021 8:22 pm Huh...
https://www.summitdaily.com/news/monsoo ... -10-years/
"The weather? The weather? Just show up at the trailhead and see what happens...you'll be surprised!"
Re: Where did the monsoon go?
Every time I've watched pizza being made, they put the cheese on before they put it in the oven.timisimaginary wrote: ↑Wed Aug 21, 2019 1:27 pm the earth is a pizza, global warming is caused by the pizza going into the oven, and the moon is made of delicious cheese which will be sprinkled all over us once we're done baking.
Re: Where did the monsoon go?
You make a point that you can't reason people out of a position that they didn't reason themselves into, but I hardly think that scientist resorting to misinformation and propaganda is a viable soolution. One thing I have noticed is that agw deniers are increasingly shifting from, "it ain't happening" to "It's all natural and there's nothing we can do about it", because it's becoming untenable for even tinfoil hatters to claim it ain't happening. In any case, 50 or 100 years from now, I expect there will still be congresspeople and senators on Capitol Island claiming there's nothing to worry about.shelly+ wrote: ↑Thu Aug 22, 2019 8:09 amthe problem for scientists is that there are a lot of people who don't accept the paradigm in which they are experts. so, in the minds of those who do not accept science as a means to understand the world, the collective agreement of experts is pointless. scientists might want to find a different avenue to convince.Dave B wrote: ↑Thu Aug 22, 2019 5:30 am [
In this case, when every major scientific organization and even the US Military has publicly identified human-caused climate change as a legitimate threat, it is not an appeal to authority fallacy. It is the collective opinion and agreement of experts and should be weighted heavily.
Re: Where did the monsoon go?
Yes, the planet will survive us just fine. The real question is whether it will still be habitable for our species. Personally, I think humans will survive (maybe a few tens of thousands of us), but those remaining will be iron age hunter-gatherers or subsistence farmers (there will be too much scrap metal around for those of us remaining to go back to the stone age).timisimaginary wrote: ↑Thu Aug 22, 2019 8:20 amthe earth WILL correct itself... step one will be getting rid of all us humans. once that's done, it should only take a couple hundred million years or so for things to get back to normal. that's like a short nap for the earth.FireOnTheMountain wrote: ↑Wed Aug 21, 2019 4:32 pmFret not Tom, I hear it from non believers of climate change all the time...it's cool, the Earth will correct itself and it goes through phases.