You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Short Attention Span Theater-
Global Warming Alert: Thousands still lack power after Northeast storm
2008-10-29

ALBANY, N.Y. – Thousands of utility customers around the Northeast awoke without power Wednesday morning, a day after the season's first big snowstorm blew through the region. The wet snow fell on trees still covered in fall leaves, and its weight, combined with gusty winds, sent limbs crashing down on power lines.

In upstate New York, more than 40,000 customers were without power Wednesday morning, most of them in the Mohawk Valley, Adirondacks and the Catskills, according to statements by utilities National Grid and New York State Electric & Gas. The National Weather Service reported snowfall totals ranging from 6 to 8 inches in northern New York, to a foot or more along the northwestern edge of the Catskill Mountains. Lower elevations and coastal areas were soaked by heavy rain.

In New Jersey, crews were working to restore power to more than 30,000 customers, mainly in the northern part of the state. Jersey Central Power and Light says most of its outages are in Morris, Warren, Hunterdon and Sussex counties. Service could be restored by Wednesday afternoon, the utility said.

Accumulations from the unusual wintry weather include about 14 inches at New Jersey's High Point State Park and about a foot in Lebanon Township, the National Weather Service said. In Pennsylvania, parts of the Pocono Mountains were under a foot of snow, but an earlier wind advisory has been canceled.

A lake effect snow warning has been posted for northwestern Pennsylvania Wednesday, with accumulations of up to 12 inches possible in higher elevations. More snow and wind was in the forecast for Vermont Wednesday as the storm works its way through the northern part of the state. The National Weather Service posted a winter storm warning for heavy snow in Orleans and eastern Franklin counties through Wednesday night, with 3 to 9 inches accumulation. The northern central and eastern parts of the state also are expected to see more snow Wednesday.

There was even snow in western North Carolina. One school system in the state's mountains was closed Wednesday because of slick roads after 1 to 3 inches of snow fell a day earlier. The earliest known snowfall in the Asheville, N.C., area was less than a half inch on Oct. 1, 1952, the weather service said.
Posted by:tu3031

#10  As per TOPIX + SCIENCEBLOGS, scientists have affirmed that MINI-GAMMA RAY BURSTS DO OCCUR in space.

Nice, but as per the LHC-HADRON COLIDER the MINI/MICRO-BLACK HOLES which have been appearing over Guam-WESTPAC do so not just in space, but ALSO INSIDE EARTH's ATMOSPHERE, AKA THE "GUAM-WESTPAC" IN GUAM-WESTPAC.

* "BLACK HOLES DON'T SIMPLY EVAPORATE" > well then, the HADRON PERTS have yet another new Rush Limbaugh "Frechie" problem to contemplate and resolve, don't they!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-10-29 20:39  

#9  IIRC, REDDIT [old] > SCIENCEDAILY - GLOBAL WARMING PLANET SURVIVAL GUIDE.

Presuming that nothing catastrophic occurs to Earth beforehand, it seems Humanity only has approxi 1.1 Bilyuhn years, not 5.0B-plus, before the GLOBAL WARMING = THE SUN CAUSES THE EARTH TO GET SO HOT AS TO WIPE OUT ANY AND ALL HUMAN AND BIOTIC LIFE, besides also boiling the oceans and the atmosphere. Hopefully, by that time, Humanity will had developed a SUPERMASSIVE SOLAR/ENERGY SAIL TO MOVE THE EARTH AWAY FROM ITS PRESENT ORBITAL TRACK IN ORDER TO SAVE IT FROM THE SOLAR HEAT???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-10-29 20:29  

#8  Several inches of snow has fallen here & there in NE OH. My tomatoes and peppers still haven't been frostbitten, yet particles of sleet are falling.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2008-10-29 17:04  

#7  What are we gonna do if Al Gore dies unexpectedly? The whole dam' planet will spontaneously combust!
Posted by: Mitch H.   2008-10-29 14:20  

#6  John, it was cold out side of Fall Branch (East Tennessee), too. Firewood warms you twice. Once while splitting and again while burning. I heat with a wood stove in the kitchen. I filled the propane tank back in September. 723 bucks, so I'm gonna be a bitt cooler this winter than past. We had snow Monday night and on and off yesterday.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2008-10-29 12:41  

#5  Well here's your problem, John:
"Former Vice President Al Gore last night accepted the National Civil Rights Museum's annual Freedom Award in Memphis."
http://www.memphisdailynews.com/editorial/Article.aspx?id=39191

You're lucky it wasn't colder.
Posted by: Darrell   2008-10-29 11:41  

#4  It was 30 degrees in east Tennessee last night. Had the fireplace going up until about midnight. I've got a lot of firewood that I've cut and split that helps cope with rate increases. Cutting and splitting firewood is a lot like work. Screw my carbon footprint--I would like to put it places where the light don't shine with regards to the global warming goofballs.
Posted by: JohnQC   2008-10-29 11:33  

#3  I had a PT test in it!!!!

I'm sure you passed easily, ARMY GUY, so you won't have to do it again quite so soon. Have fun, dear, and make us proud!
Posted by: trailing wife    2008-10-29 11:06  

#2  Earliest snow in 29 years in lower Bucks County, Pennsylvania. 9,000 homes without power last night. Lots of tree damage because the leaves hadn't fallen yet and accumulated the additional load of the ice and snow plus wind.
Posted by: Darrell   2008-10-29 10:41  

#1  Ya and it was 39* this morning in central fl. I know....I had a PT test in it!!!!
Posted by: ARMY GUY   2008-10-29 10:37  

00:00