Cool and Crispy
Yesterday a colleague at my company moaned and 
groaned, complaining of the painful sunburn he got while staining a 
deck. "No sunscreen?" I asked. "It was so cool I totally forgot." It's a
 common oversight: many people think you only get fried on hot days.
Of course the potential for sunburn has nothing 
to do with air temperature and everything to do with the date and 
subsequent sun angle. The June sun is as high in the sky and direct as 
it ever gets, sunburn potential off the scale.
SPF 50 sunscreen will be optional the next 
couple of days as the next front sloshes overhead, wringing out showers,
 even some heavier rain tonight. Over an inch of water will delight 
flowers in your yard and leave your lawn greener than you thought 
possible.
Hey, I'm trying a positive spin, but it's not working, is it?
Clouds spill over into Thursday, but rare 
sunshine sightings are likely Friday and part of Saturday - probably the
 nicer day of the weekend. More showers arrive late Saturday & 
Sunday.
I'm shocked.
The soggy remains of Pacific Tropical Storm 
Barbara will soak Florida and much of the East Coast by late week. 
Meanwhile Oklahoma is under another tornado threat.
This pattern is a bit surreal.
More Like Early May. Highs in the 60s and 70s into 
at least the first half of next week, storms or frontal passages every 2
 days or so? What happened to June? The best chance of significant rain 
comes tonight and early Wednesday, again Sunday. Sunscreen (and A/C) 
optional until further notice, based on latest ECMWF guidance.
Today's Severe Storm Risk.
 A few T-storms are expected to exceed severe limits again today over 
the Central Plains, even an isolated tornado from Oklahoma City and 
Tulsa to Kansas City. Source: 
NOAA SPC.
 
 An Active Pattern
An Active Pattern.
 NOAA's latest 84-hour NAM model shows a disturbance pushing out of the 
Gulf of Mexico, spreading heavy rain into Florida and possibly coastal 
Alabama by late tomorrow. The next trough of low pressure whips up 
showery rains over the Upper Midwest, a few severe storms over the 
Central Plains. The west remains hot and dry, increasingly vulnerable to
 wildfires.

"...
If
 anything, the events of Friday evening demonstrate storm  chasers need 
 to back off. For too long, too many chasers – both  professional and  
amateur – have been crossing the line..." - excerpt of a post from Washington Post meteorologist Jason Samenow. Story below. Tweet above from a chronology from 
Digital Meteorologist, which has more on Friday evening's tornado tragedy.
File photo of the late Tim Samaras, during a tornado intercept in New Manchester, South Dakota. Photo by Carsten Peter/National Geographic Image Collection.
Lessons From The El Reno Tragedy: The Chasing Conundrum.
 Life is rarely black or white. I do try to see the gray in every 
scenario, and there's plenty of gray when it comes to tornado chasers. 
Do they serve a purpose? Absolutely, but too many chasers in one 
location at any given time can make it exponentially more dangerous for 
everyone. Friday evening's tragedy, which resulted in at least 9 deaths,
 including tornado researcher Tim Samaras, was a reminder that there is 
inherent danger in the pursuit and intercept of nature's most violent 
wind. In today's version of 
Climate Matters I take a look at the pro's and cons of "chasing tornadoes": "
Chief
 Meteorologist Paul Douglas reflects on the the Friday night  tornado 
tragedy that killed 9 people including 3 professional tornado  
researchers. Paul says we need to be careful in the media that we don't 
 incentivize and reward bad behavior.  But there must be a balance  
because by broadcasting professionally shot tornado videos it can help  
show the public the danger and propel them to take cover or not get in  
their cars and drive."
*Note: The semi clip in this video is from a REAR go-pro camera, not the windshield.
Recipe For Disaster. Image upper  left from 
RadarScope app shows location of storm chasers in relation to  El Reno 
tornado. Image upper right shows traffic jam on I-35 south of  Oklahoma 
City, courtesy of KWTV.
Phased Array Doppler Loop of El Reno Tornado. This 
loop
 is from NSSL, showing Friday evening's EF-3 in the western suburbs of 
OKC occluding, veering suddenly northeast, trapping many tornado chasers
 and researchers in the process, a deadly chain of events. Thanks to 
WeatherNation TV meteorologist Susie Martin for passing this along.
A Few Thoughts About Tornado Chasing. Things have  
really gotten out of control. This has been an accident waiting to  
happen for the better part of 20 years now. On some level I blame the  
movie "Twister", which glamorized tornado research and inspired  
countless hundreds (thousands) of amateurs to try their hand at a  
tornado intercept, with visions of great video and local or national TV 
 weather-glory. Ironic, since I helped with special effects with  
"Twister" and even had a line in the movie. I don't want to be a  
hypocrite. I was in Oklahoma on 3 separate occasions, intercepting  
tornadic storms with NSSL, the National Severe Storms Lab. Every time I 
 went down to Oklahoma I was struck by the number of people tagging  
along. Often scores, even hundreds of chasers would converge on the same
  cell by late afternoon. It's a free country - you're obviously free to
  drive when and where you want, and I certainly don't want that to  
change, but something has to be done to avoid another tragedy like the  
one that killed 9 motorists Friday evening, including 3 professional  
tornado researchers Tim Samaras, his son, and intercept partner.
They weren't out there to videotape the tornado 
 and try to sell it to KFOR-TV or The Weather Channel. They were  
conducting research, and yet the sheer number of chasers converging on  
the El Reno supercell (apparently) made it impossible to get away from  
an EF-3 erratic tornado in time. I honestly don't know what the solution
  is here, but one would hope common sense would apply. With the May 20 
 EF-5 which leveled much of Moore, one of the local TV meteorologists  
warned local residents that, without a basement or storm shelter, the  
tornado was "unsurvivable" - he told them to get into their vehicle and 
 try to drive away before the tornado struck. That only makes sense if  
you have HOURS of lead time, which just isn't realistic with the state  
of tornado detection and warning, when the average lead-time is closer  
to 13-15 minutes.
If you had 10 minutes and you were the ONLY one 
 trying to get out of Dodge, maybe. Just maybe. But the problem is this:
  tens of thousands of local residents heard the same admonition, and if
  everyone is trying to get onto the interstate to drive away from a  
tornadic supercell, the result will most likely be gridlock, making you 
 and your family sitting ducks. A bad idea. If you're home, stay home.  
Get into your tub (with bike or football helmets, if you have them) and 
 try to ride out the tornado on the ground floor, away from outer walls 
 and windows. Statistically that's still safer than getting into a car 
or  truck and trying to zip down the highway out ahead of a tornado. 
Friday  evening's multiple fatalities proved it.

 
Call By Responsible Storm Chasers To Ban Reed Timmer Chasing Antics. Here is an excerpt of a 
Google-cached version of a Warren Faidley post from Monday: "
It
 must be hell or heaven for Reed Timmer right now. After promotion 
“getting to close” to violent tornadoes for the past  seven years, he’s 
now facing a new kind of storm. Not only has the  subject of “getting 
too close for no real purpose” become big news, he  just lost several 
friends. Let’s hope to God he uses this heartbreaking  moment to retire 
from inspiring others to follow his footsteps. But  judging by his past 
ego-maniac, money making behavior, I’ll bet he finds  a way to 
capitalize off this horrific event. Sick, but you mark my  words. There 
is a growing number of storm chasers who are asking for public  and 
media retaliation against storm chaser Reed Timmer following the  tragic
 events in El Reno, Oklahoma on June 1, 2013. Blog sites and  discussion
 groups have come alive with complaints and in some instances  harsh 
accusations regarding Timmer and the way he chases, in which many  find 
to be reckless and deceptively reasoned...."
 
 

 
How 3 Storm Chasers Died, And What To Do About It. Here's an excerpt of a thoughtful post from Greg Laden at 
scienceblogs.com: "...
I
 have no idea how many of the people in the viewing area of this  
station saw or heard this report and responded by driving into the path 
 of the tornado. Of those who did I don’t know how many of them were  
primed to use “drive away” as a strategy by earlier chatter in major  
media outlets, and elsewhere such as twitter and other social media. I’m
  not sure how many people actually got in their cars and “drove south.”
  We do know, however, that the highways in the area became jammed with 
 cars, and the vicinity around the intersection of I35 and I40 was  
described as a “parking lot.” One thing we do know is that many people  
who “drove south” to get away from the tornado in fact drove directly  
into its path, created a traffic jam, and most of the deaths associated 
 with this tornado were among those people in those cars. Three 
experienced tornado “chasers” … actual meteorological  scientists … were
 killed when their truck (one of the vehicles depicted  above, probably)
 was destroyed by the tornado. Other professional  meteorologists, from 
The Weather Channel, were injured. As of this  writing, the death toll 
stands at 13 with another 6 (though I’ve also  heard 7) people still 
missing..."

 
A Conversation Starter On Chasing 2.0. Here's an excerpt from 
J. Marsh
 of the American Meteorological Society, although these opinions are his
 own, and don't reflect the official position of the AMS: "...
Good chaser, Bad Chaser?: It
 will be tempting to latch onto the deaths of Tim Samaras and colleagues
 and label them in a “unified” batch with all storm chasers. However, a 
review of Tim’s biography confirms that he was engaged in research to 
advance our knowledge of tornadic storms (http://www.nationalgeographic.com/explorers/bios/tim-samaras/) and was a key element of TWISTEX.  There are numerous colleagues and research programs (e.g., VORTEX2 (http://www.nssl.noaa.gov/projects/vortex2/)
 that involve storm chasing and field work. Our knowledge of tornadic 
storms and how to respond to them have undoubtedly been helped by these 
activities. However, I am on record as being concerned about some 
aspects of the contemporary chasing culture and the “trivialization” of 
the tornado threat. Just last week, I tweeted that “some are 
trivializing the tornado threat.” That tweet was inspired 2 photos seen 
on social media. One photo was of chasers doing silly poses with a 
tornado in the immediate background, and the other was a photo of a line
 of roughly 10 drivers pulled over taking pictures of a tornado with 
their camera phones.  My 
first-order fears have centered around (1) the emergence of a generation
 of inexperienced, thrill seekers; (2) ratings “hype” and desire for the
 most dramatic image or video for use in local or national media (“are 
we getting too close” and does “informative journalism” require a storm 
chasing vehicle in 2013”); and (3) chaser convergence hampering 
emergency response and rescue. ..."
 
Photo credit above: "A vehicle lies 
upside-down at the Canadian Valley Technology Center in El Reno Okla. on
 Saturday June 1, 2013 after tornadoes swept through central Oklahoma on
 Friday." (AP Photo/Nick Oxford)
The Day That Should Change Tornado Actions And Storm Chasing Forever. Here is a perspective I trust and respect, an excerpt of some thoughts from 
Washington Post meteorologist Jason Samenow: "...
There
  is reason to believe some of these motorists were intentionally  
trying  to outrun these storms and weren’t just commuting home or  
running  errands, unaware. Recently, in the wake of the tragedy in 
Moore, Okla.,  some media  outlets told the story of residents who 
successfully eluded  the massive  tornado by driving out of town. CNN 
even quoted an “expert”  who  encouraged this practice. “With the good 
lead time, I’d tell  people to get in their automobile  and go 90 
degrees from that perceived  path,” Ed Bates, an architect who  designs 
buildings that incorporate  storm shelters told CNN.
  “It’s manageable and easy to do — even in a city environment.” But 
it’s  not easy to flee a storm if the tornado is not visible because it 
is  wrapped in rain and/or traffic is at a standstill..."
Photo credit above: "Overturned semitrailer from El Reno tornado, May 31, 2013." (Omaha World-Herald, Chris Machian/Associated Press).
Lesson From Friday Storm Deaths: When Weather Is Bad, Stay Home. Amen. I couldn't agree more with Matt Daniel's post at 
earthsky.org; here's an excerpt: "
...A
  big and concering problem about the May 31, 2013 storms in Oklahoma   
was that at least one local television station in the Oklahoma City   
area, while reporting that weather was imminent, mentioned that going   
underground or leaving your house was the best way to survive  the  
storm.  This is wrong.  When tornados are imminent, going to your   
vehicle and driving on the roads is the last thing you should do.  In my post from Friday afternoon
   – before the storms broke – I described in detail the possibility of 
  severe weather for Friday evening.  Included in the post was a graphic
   from the Norman, Oklahoma National Weather Service Office via 
twitter..." (excerpt above).
* Andy Revkin has a write-up on the El Reno Tornado disaster in the New York Times 
here.
* USA Today questions the role of amateur tornado chasers in 
this Sunday article.
About Tim Samaras. I knew Tim - he was a super-smart
  tornado researcher with a real passion for learning more about how and
  why these storms form, strengthen and die off, why some go on to 
become  EF-4+ monsters, while most fizzle. He was a kind man, a family 
man. His  25 year old son died by his side. The meteorological community
 feels a  real sense of loss; I find it amazing, and more than a bit 
humbling,  that a seasoned professional was killed by a tornado. These 
guys know  how to avoid trouble, how to get out of the way and always 
keep a safe  buffer. All I can think is that traffic prevented Tim from 
moving out of  harm's way. Here's a 
YouTube retrospective of Tim Samaras's life.
Tornado Chasing: Still Not a "Sport". Some days you 
 chase the tornado, other days the tornado changes direction and chases 
 you. The Friday evening El Reno multi-vortex tornado was highly 
erratic,  and this caught storm chasers, professionals and amateurs, 
off-guard.  Here's an excerpt of a first-hand account from Dan Robinson 
at 
stormhighway.com: "
I
  was nearly run over by the El Reno violent wedge tornado as it made a 
  sudden 45-degree turn to the northeast.  I had been on it from birth. 
   It had been moving slowly east-southeast, and I drove east to try to 
get   a backlit view of it.   It suddenly turned northeastward and began
   moving over the road.  I floored it to escape, but my car would only 
go   40mph tops with the strong headwinds.  I escaped the tornado only 
to be   struck by a powerful inflow jet filled with golfball-sized 
hailstones.    This broke my back window and rearview mirror, cracked my
 laptop  screen  and nearly ripped my wiper blades off.   When this 
happened, I  was  outside the car, and throught that the tornado had 
turned again or   expanded on top of me.  I ran and dove into the ditch.
   The wind  pulled  off one of my shoes and the lens hood from my video
 camera.  As I  ran, I  was struck by several large wind-driven 
hailstones and  sustained  several bruises and cuts, the worst to my 
left eyelid.    Below are a few  video captures of the tornado. The 
start of the tornado  exhibited wild multiple vortices.  The most  rapid
 motion I've ever  seen.   I had to do a double-take when reviewing  the
 video that it  wasn't fast-forwarded..."
Unrecognizable. I'm not 100% certain, but I have a  
strong hunch this is the vehicle that Tim Samaras, his son and chase  
partner were driving when they were killed by the EF-3 El Reno tornado, 
 that changed direction suddenly. If this doesn't make you shudder, and 
 reconsider the wisdom of getting close to tornadoes, I'm not sure what 
 will. Image courtesy of 
CNN.
"Chasing The Storm, But Hoping Not To Catch It." The New York Times has more on Samaras's life and recent death 
here.
Ask Paul. Weather-related Q&A:
"On the subject of staying home during a 
tornado warning .... I am always inclined to go outside at look for it. 
(I learned that from my parents during the 1965 tornado outbreak in the 
NW Metro area.) Once I got scared enough to go to my basement, but there
 is no where to hide there. My basement is unfinished, has full size 
windows and no interior walls. Here's my dumb question ...is it better 
to stay upstairs and hide in the bathtub?"
Susan Evans (West Metro)
Susan - the goal in any tornado or severe wind 
storm is to get below ground, below grade. The greatest risk is flying 
debris, and your odds of survival are still greater in the basement. 
Even with windows nearby I would seek shelter under the stairs leading 
down to the basement, under a work bench or table, if available. Avoid 
outer walls and windows. A bathtub would be a good option if you didn't 
have a basement available.
Not Again. Our in-house EHI algorithm (Energy 
Helicity Index) shows another significant risk of tornadoes for  
Oklahoma this afternoon and evening. I hope it's wrong.
Minnesota: One Of The Safer States In The USA For Billion Dollar Weather Disasters.
  Yes, our weather can be annoying, at times damaging, even deadly, but 
 everything is relative. I can't remember the last time we were a "green
  state", as in relative safety. The Washington Post has more details 
here.
More Flooding.  The soaking rains of recent weeks 
(some 20"+ amounts in a few counties)  have left streams and rivers out 
of their banks from eastern Iowa into  western Illinois, with moderate 
to major flooding in the St. Louis area  on the Mississippi (the city's 
protective levees should hold). An  interactive map of flooding details 
is 
here.
* severe flooding has temporarily closed Mississippi River shipping in St. Louis. Details from 
Reuters.
NWS St. Louis:
 "There has been a levee breach on the Mississippi River, affecting West
 Alton, MO in St. Charles county. If you are in or near the West Alton 
area, please seek higher ground immediately!"
Missouri residents told to evacuate after levee breach:
Hundreds of people were being evacuated from their homes in Missouri after a levee was breached Monday night.
Earlier Monday, a bridge connecting West Alton, Missouri, and Alton, 
Illinois, was shutdown after a temporary flood barricade gave way.
Forecasters say there could be major flooding Tuesday.
CNN has details 
here.
Whispers Of Hurricane Season To Come.  Hurricane 
season in the Atlantic basin offically began on Saturday, and  Mother 
Nature is wasting little time. The soggy remains of Tropical  Storm 
Barbara, which hit the west coast of southern Mexico last week,  will 
regenerate into a tropical depression, an additional surge of  tropical 
moisture fueling a nor'easter-type storm. NHC predicts only a  20% risk 
of this system becoming Tropical Storm Andrea, but the storm  may drop 
5-8" rains from Florida to the Outer Banks of the Carolinas  Thursday 
into Saturday 
with a potential for urban and river/stream flooding.
Model Solutions.  Most of the computer simulations 
whisk this tropical disturbance  quickly northeastward across the Gulf 
of Mexico, a fairly rapid forward  motion preventing severe flooding 
from coastal Delaware and New Jersey  into metro New York by Friday and 
early Saturday. There's a better  chance of minor flooding problems 
across coastal New England by  Saturday, based on latest guidance.
Soaking Rains.  Here's the 5-Day Rainfall Outlook, 
showing as much as 5-6" rain for  central and southern Florida, where 
the best chance of flooding will  come Thursday of this week. By Friday 
heavy rain and a 1-3 foot storm  surge spreads quickly up the east 
coast.
Historic Flooding.  Last week we sent out a series 
of briefings highlighting the potential  for major flooding across 
central Europe. That forecast verified. The  image above is from Passau,
 Germany, at the confluence of 3 rivers. It's  the worst flooding there 
since 1501, according to Tagesschau, and some  of the worst flooding in 
20 years on the Danube; traffic curtailed on  much of the Rhine, with a 
50-Year Flood underway in Prague,  Czechoslovakia. Sunday Garmisch was 
totally cut off by flooding rains  and high water levels. Train service 
from Munich to Milan was shut down  due to mudslides and extreme 
flooding. Heavy rain will taper today with  clearing by midweek, but 
very similar to North America, the pattern is  very active and stormy. 
With saturated soils over much of Europe it  won't take much additional 
rain in coming weeks for severe flooding to  return. The potential for 
more flood-related problems into June remains  high.
500 Year Flood? The Danube is way out of it's banks -
 this may have been a 1 in 500 Year Flood for Passau, in southeastern 
Germany. Der Spiegel has some remarkable photos of the flood 
here. Image above: DPA.
* more on extreme flooding in Europe from 
The Washington Post.
Prague Flood Defenses Put To Test. 
BBC has the story; here's the introduction: "
At
 least four people are  now feared dead in the Czech Republic, as heavy 
rain in the western half  of the country continues to cause severe 
flooding. The Czech government  has declared a nationwide state of 
emergency, Prague's metro system has  been shut down and most schools in
 the capital remain closed. With the catastrophic floods of 2002 and 
1997 still very much  alive in people's memories, some Czechs are once 
again battening down  the hatches while others head for higher ground. 
At midday on Monday the  River Vltava in Prague was flowing at 2,815 cu m
 per second - 10 times  its usual volume..."
Photo credit: AFP.
Flood Warnings.  The EU has placed much of southern 
and eastern Germany, including much  of Bavaria, under Flood Warnings. 
Conditions won't improve with receding  water levels until late Tuesday 
and Wednesday. 
This is turning into a Hundred Year Flood from Bavaria to Salzburg and Prague.
Slow Improvement.  The mid-afternoon European 
Satellite shows the center of a very  slow-moving storm, a prolific 
rain-maker, pushing into Russia, with  skies clearing over central and 
northern Germany and most of France. A  clearing/drying trend will push 
into southern Germany and the  Swiss/Austrian Alps over the next 36 
hours.
Good News For Europe.  The Wednesday weather map 
shows high pressure pushing (lighter) showers  and T-showers into Italy 
and the Balkans, so hard-hit areas of Germany,  Austria, Switzerland and
 Czechoslovakia will get a break from Tuesday  into at least Friday of 
this week. Image: Weather Bell.
Summary:  More severe thunderstorms fire up across 
the Plains, with a low-grade  threat for Oklahoma City Tuesday afternoon
 and evening, although the  threat level for large, devastating 
tornadoes will not be as high as  previous weeks. We're keeping a close 
watch on a tropical system coming  out of the Gulf of Mexico. Florida 
facilities that often flood may see  problems by Wednesday night and 
Thursday. Right now I don't expect this  system to strengthen into 
Tropical Storm Andrea, but minor to moderate  flooding (inland and 
coastal) is still possible along the East Coast  from Thursday into 
Saturday. Meanwhile historic flooding continues over  Central Europe, 
with numerous mudslides reported across Switzerland and  Austria and 
some of the worst flooding in centuries from Passau to  Salzburg and 
Prague. The flood crest will continue to move downstream  into Hungary 
and Romania in the coming days. Conditions slowly improve  over the next
 36 hours. We'll continue to monitor conditions - as  always, if you 
have a specific weather question don't hesitate to drop  me a line.

 
NOAA Kills Agency-Wide Furlough Proposal. Some good news for National Weather Service employees (and by extention, the rest of us as well) from The Washington Post's 
Capital Weather Gang: "
Following the recent tornado outbreaks in the Plains, NOAA faced strong Congressional pressure
   not to furlough National Weather Service employees (as a cost savings
   measure in response to the budget sequester). The agency gave in late
   Friday. In an email to staff, NOAA acting administrator Kathryn 
Sullivan  said  the agency was cancelling the furlough plan for the 
entire   organization, which includes the National Weather Service..."
Sunrise Over Minnesota. Here's a 
link to NASA's International Space Station, sent to me by Dr. Randy Wedin at Wedin Communications: "
This
 photo, taken 'above a point in southwestern Minnesota on May 21, 2013' 
might be a good image for Paul Douglas' weather blog - an essential and 
enjoyable component of my daily Internet diet." Thanks Randy!
Astronomers Find First Evidence Of Other Universes. If you want your head to explode dig into this article from 
MIT Technology Review; here's an excerpt: "...
Today,
 another group says they’ve found something else in the echo of  the Big
 Bang. These guys start with a different model of the universe  called 
eternal inflation. In this way of thinking, the universe we see  is 
merely a bubble in a much larger cosmos. This cosmos is filled with  
other bubbles, all of which are other universes where  the laws of  
physics may be dramatically different to ours. These bubbles probably 
had a violent past, jostling together and  leaving “cosmic bruises” 
where they touched. If so, these bruises ought  to be visible today in 
the cosmic microwave background. Now Stephen Feeney at University 
College London and a few pals say  they’ve found tentative evidence of 
this bruising in the form of  circular patterns in cosmic microwave 
background. In fact, they’ve found  four bruises, implying that our 
universe must have smashed into other  bubbles at least four times in 
the past..."
 
 
Stop Work Overload By Setting These Boundaries. Here's an excerpt of an interesting piece from 
The Harvard Business Review: "...
Here
 are five steps to gain that confidence, which you can apply on  an 
individual level or a group level if you have responsibility for  
managing the expectations of your team: 
Step 1: Develop a Time Budget
  People who manage their finances well follow a few consistent  
principles. For one, they spend only what they have, so they avoid  
unnecessary debt and the corresponding stress and cost. They also make  
sure that they allocate their money correctly, so that they have  
sufficient funds for everything they need to buy. Finally, they cut  
costs where they can, without a significant negative impact, and make  
sure to put money into investments where they have a good probability of
  a return. The same principles apply with effective time investment. To
  have a clear sense of what you can reasonably handle, you should start
  out by calculating how many hours you have to "spend" each week. If 
you  tend toward over-allocating time toward work, you can do the  
calculations in reverse..." (Image source 
here).
"When Work Feels Overwhelming Remember You're Going To Die" And Other Uplifting Messages. I love someecards, and 
Marketplace has the story of how this unorthodox e-greeting card company, the anti-Hallmark, got started. Here's an excerpt: "
Sometimes being nice and tactful and giving just doesn't cut it. Thankfully, for those moments, the Internet has given us Someecards.com.
  You've probably seen these around. They're digital greeting cards with
  black and white drawings on solid color backgrounds with hilarious,  
snarky messages. They seem to express all the things you're thinking,  
but would never dare say out loud in a million years. Duncan Mitchell  
and Brook Lundy are the co-founders of Someecards.com.  They talked to  
us about why their e-greetings resonate with so many office workers. 
When it comes to the workplace, what are people griping about? "Every 
aspect of their jobs. Duncan and I worked together in  advertising for 
15 years. It was a great lab for discovering every  possible way to 
complain about work. That's kind of how we started with  Someecards was 
our own brand of complaining and saying things that felt  honest to us 
that maybe people were thinking, but didn't have a way to  express," 
says Lundy..."
67 F. high on Monday in St. Cloud.
74 F. average high on June 3.
70 F. high on June 3, 2012.
Trace of rain fell yesterday in the Twin Cities. No measurable rain at St. Cloud.
.56" rain predicted for the St. Cloud metro area by Thursday morning (00z NAM).
 
TODAY: Mostly cloudy, showers likely. Winds: SE 15. High: 60
TUESDAY NIGHT: Showers, locally heavy rain possible. Low: 48
WEDNESDAY: Showers taper, still cool. High: 58
THURSDAY: A drier day, still mostly cloudy. Wake-up: 49. High: 61
FRIDAY: Dear diary: the sun may come out. Wake-up: 50. High: 66
SATURDAY: Nicer day of the weekend. Fading sun, showers late. Wake-up: 52. High: 70
SUNDAY: Partly soggy. more showers. Wake-up: 50. High: 64
MONDAY: Mix of clouds & sun. Lukewarm. Wake-up: 51. High: 73
* photo of Lake Independence above courtesy of Laura Schara.
Climate Stories...
Climate, Ice and Weather Whiplash. Are changes in 
the Arctic ultimately responsible for a shift in the jet stream, 
resulting in polar amplification? Here's a story and video from Peter 
Sinclair's 
Climate Crock of the Week: "...
This
 year, the extremes continue. I’ve revisited Dr. Francis on the  issue, 
to talk about what last year’s “July in March” spring has in  common 
with this year’s cold and sluggish roll into  summer here in  North 
America. Dr. Francis has become a bit of a rockstar on the Meteorology 
wonk  circuit in the last year, as she makes a compelling case that the 
loss  of arctic sea ice, and more broadly, polar amplification of 
climate  change, and its effect on the jet stream, has been an important
 driver  of the changes we have seen.  It appears that this may be an 
emergent  property of atmospheric circulation that has not been well 
modeled or  foreseen..."
 An Economist's Dire Warning About Global Warming
An Economist's Dire Warning About Global Warming. Here's an excerpt of an article at 
IT World: 
"...
As
 for the global warming skeptics, Weitzman asks, "Are they or the 
mainstream climate scientists more right than wrong? [C]an we afford the
 luxury of assuming that a small minority of climate skeptics are more 
correct than the vast majority of mainstream climate scientists? What is
 the probability of that?" Good question! The answer, at least to any 
rational, objective human 
being, is 0%. There' a zero percent chance that the global warming 
skeptics are right, while the vast majority of mainstream climate 
scientists are wrong. It's plain silliness to believe otherwise. 
Actually, it's far worse than that, as Weitzman concludes: "The bottom 
line is that if we continue on a business-as-usual 
trajectory, then there is some non-trivial probability of a catastrophic
 climate outcome materializing at some future time. Prudence would seem 
to dictate taking action to cut back greenhouse gas emissions 
significantly. If we don't start buying into this insurance policy soon,
 the human race could end up being very sorry should a future climate 
catastrophe rear its ugly head..."
Photo credit above: Flickr/
Mikael Miettinen
Coming Off Fossil Fuels Is Akin To Quitting Smoking - Only Harder. Here's an excerpt from 
The Guardian: "...
The
  idea that society is hooked on fossil fuels – addicted to the  carbon 
 compounds that underwrite everything from the plastic in our   
toothbrushes to the petrol in our cars – is nothing new. But a new paper
  by Steven Suranovic, an academic at the George Washington University, 
 takes the analogy one step further. Comparing  societal dependence on  
fossil fuels to individual addiction to tobacco  using a model derived  
from behavioural economics, Suranovic argues that  unhitching ourselves 
 from coal, oil and gas will be very much like  coming off the 
cigarettes  – but harder..."
Photo credit above: "Thai students  
urge people to quit smoking during 2001 World No-smoking  day parade.  
Steven Suranovic has compared societal dependence on fossil  fuels to  
individual addiction to tobacco." Photograph: Pornchai  Kittiwongsakul/EPA.
 
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