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Your weather forecast for this winter for treasure hunting (El Nino)

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Posted Oct 16, 2009, 10:14:53 pm

I am thinking that the EL NINO will affect our hunting this winter. See what your area has in store for you.
 The Midwest and Northern United States are likely to get a warmer winter,(easier and more comfortable to dig targets) while the Southeast can expect just the opposite: cooler and wetter conditions (easier to get good signals deep).

In Thursday's winter outlook, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says an El Nino weather event — warming in parts of the Pacific that affects weather worldwide — will be a major player in America's winter temperatures.

Forecasters predict warmer than usual temperatures would reach a swath from Washington to Michigan, dipping south to central New Mexico. Alaska also has a higher chance of warmer temperatures.

They also say cooler temperatures are expected from southern Texas to the Mid-Atlantic and in Hawaii.

Other places, such as the Northeast and California, can go any which way on temperatures.

Overall, slightly more than half the nation by area will be warmer than normal, but when it comes to where most people live, about half the population is likely to have warmer weather and the other half cooler, said Mike Halpert, deputy director of NOAA's Climate Prediction Center

The El Nino will play a big role in helping some drought-parched regions, Halpert said. Forecasters said there is a significantly higher probability of wetter winters for Texas, Florida and California and the southern parts of New Mexico, Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina.

Hawaii, the Pacific Northwest and part of the Midwest from Michigan to Arkansas are more likely to be drier than normal because of fewer storms across the Appalachian Mountains, Halpert said.

Halpert said the El Nino is currently weak but forecast to strengthen to a moderate-sized weather variation in the next few weeks. The El Nino not only influences the forecast but it gives forecasters more confidence that what they predict will come true, he said.

The El Nino makes forecasts for a wetter southern Texas and less than average snowfall in the northern Rockies far more likely to come true.
Well there you go.
HH
TnMountains
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Reply To This Topic #1 Posted Oct 16, 2009, 10:26:27 pm

Looking forward to it, last year was just plain nasty in the Pacific Northwest.  thumbsup

HH
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Reply To This Topic #2 Posted Oct 17, 2009, 08:04:45 am

Whenever the forecasters call for this (or just any storms in general), us CA beach hunters start watching the weather for swell-producing storms to batter and erode our beaches.    Kiss

Metal detecting is my one worldy vice!
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Reply To This Topic #3 Posted Oct 17, 2009, 08:07:03 am

no one knows for certain till the weather pattern really begins.

ALLEN
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Reply To This Topic #4 Posted Oct 17, 2009, 09:30:59 am

We can only hope...New Mexico is dry. dontknow

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Reply To This Topic #5 Posted Oct 17, 2009, 01:21:38 pm

I'll let you know in the Spring.............
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Reply To This Topic #6 Posted Oct 23, 2009, 09:05:39 pm

 My weather forecast for the middle Rocky Mountain Area.  Here pretty quick, there will be a bunch of snow which will impede metal detecting.  Following that, the ground will freeze solid down to about 4 feet.  That will put the quietus on the whole deal.  This will be the time to conduct research.  Barring that, the liquor store down on main street will be well stocked, and open for business.  I'm not seein the global warmin thing here yet, maybe it's comin.

This world is not my home.
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Reply To This Topic #7 Posted Oct 23, 2009, 10:01:09 pm

forcast  Huh whats that.............we only get sunshine here icon_sunny   headbang

laughing1 Building my wealth  one pull tab at a time Tank69 ™ laughing1
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Reply To This Topic #8 Posted Oct 23, 2009, 10:50:33 pm

Poor Richard's Almanac is forecasting a colder than normal winter.  read2

" 'Polls' are surveys of uninformed people who think it's possible to get the answer wrong." .........Ann Coulter
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Reply To This Topic #9 Posted Oct 24, 2009, 05:56:46 pm

Mostly everyone in Maryland is predicting more snow this winter.
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Reply To This Topic #10 Posted Oct 25, 2009, 12:36:34 pm

All I've got to say is.


Learn to swim, learn to swim. Down in arizona bay....Only a TOOL fan understands this.   dontknow

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Reply To This Topic #11 Posted Oct 25, 2009, 04:30:07 pm

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/AEoHz56jWGY" target="_blank">http://www.youtube.com/v/AEoHz56jWGY</a>
 thumbsup

Thats hilarious. That guy was something else. LOL.
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Reply To This Topic #12 Posted Oct 26, 2009, 05:01:26 pm

El Nino is like global warming. We get what the lord gives us and not what the farmers almanac says and what these meteorologist say using their fancy computer models and are never right most of the time Undecided I have really got tired of watching the weather and most of the time it does something different. They just said on the weather channel that the earth is cooling down in places. That what I am saying. Oh well, just my thought on weather predictors laughing9

Enjoying the "Good Life" in SoCal
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Reply To This Topic #13 Posted Nov 03, 2009, 10:25:07 pm

Well I got to stick up for the National Weather Service. My son is a lead forcaster in Central Illinois. Right in tornado alley.  Has been with NOAA for 23 years. Always tells me they cannot keep everyone happy. No rain the farmers are mad. Lots of rain and the construction people are mad. Works long hours and  they are one of the few  places that still swing shift. They have 6 shifts and the swing ever week. When bad weather comes he may be  at the Doppler station for 12 to 18 hours for his shift.Then go home and sleep a few hours and go back to  his regular shift again.
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Reply To This Topic #14 Posted Nov 04, 2009, 09:49:50 am

The effects of El Nino in California vary by region...Southern California is classified as a desert and average rainfall is 13 inches.

Central California receives the brunt of the increased El Nino effect and may average +20 inches.

Then there is the Lost Coast area in southern Humboldt County that may get upwards of 200 inches annually.  The Mattole River is there only outfall to the Pacific Ocean.  Its not unusual to see 20 to 30 foot waves with infrequent rouge tsunamis.

The Lost Coast has also the highest earthquake activity in the United States and areas have risen as much as 3 feet in seconds.

The more one learns the more he understands his ignorance.  I am simply an ignor ant man trying to lessen his ignorance
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Reply To This Topic #15 Posted Nov 04, 2009, 07:27:41 pm

The lost coast sound like it would be a very exciting place to live. New landscape all the time. I bet its wickedly beautiful yet deadly.
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Reply To This Topic #16 Posted Nov 05, 2009, 08:58:25 am

The lost coast sound like it would be a very exciting place to live. New landscape all the time. I bet its wickedly beautiful yet deadly.

Been there many times, and yes, its an exciting place...its just remote with a seasonal jeep trail access.

The area is frequented primarily by hikers along the sand beach.

There is a small village on the fringe that was the location of the first oil wells in the US. 

Interesting history for the area...stage coach roads, one room schools, bears and elk up the cazoo...

As to being deadly...you don't hike the Pacific Ocean trail during storms...always use bear bins to protect food...home of pygmy rattlers (on the sand)...

And the earth doesn't open up and swallow people...that's just too Hollywood...

This is not a Jurasic park...just a remote area that will stay that way forever...

The more one learns the more he understands his ignorance.  I am simply an ignor ant man trying to lessen his ignorance
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Reply To This Topic #17 Posted Nov 05, 2009, 03:35:28 pm

The last time (about 14 years ago),when El Nino hit Texas all it brought us was lots of rain,in December of that year I got about 16 inches of rain that month and here in Austin,we had the best wildflowers on the side of the roads. icon_sunny
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Reply To This Topic #18 Posted Nov 05, 2009, 04:28:32 pm

 The farmers almanac is predicting a colder winter, with more snow than usual. Here in the southeast, it is predicting more than other parts of the country. We can all hope that they missed the forecast. Good Luck.  rockhound
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Reply To This Topic #19 Posted Nov 06, 2009, 10:46:37 am

Looking forward to it, last year was just plain nasty in the Pacific Northwest.  thumbsup
I shoveled two to six inches of snow every couple of days for six weeks in Mason county. Got thirty one inches in that time period. Only ten inches deep at the most but never quit melting off before snowing again. A milder version of Buffalo,NY.

I would have gone rock hounding, but all of the rocks were white.

Sea'mus King of the Leprechauns
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Reply To This Topic #20 Posted Nov 06, 2009, 10:53:23 am

My weather forecast for the middle Rocky Mountain Area.  Here pretty quick, there will be a bunch of snow which will impede metal detecting.  Following that, the ground will freeze solid down to about 4 feet.  That will put the quietus on the whole deal.  This will be the time to conduct research.  Barring that, the liquor store down on main street will be well stocked, and open for business.

RGINN,  did I ever tell you how much I love your posts? 

 Smiley


John 3:16
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