I got up this morning and checked the current weather conditions and found rain, high wind, ice, snow and yes a couple of tornadoes thrown in for good measure. Yep, I must be in Oklahoma.
It’s a bit warm outside here at work on the U.S./Mexico BorderIt’s 50 degrees F. : Barometer is 30.12 inches: cloudy: This is Norwood, Ohio.
South Texas looks really hot, @martym
Yep, we usually have two seasons. Winter & Summer. Spring and fall only last a couple of weeks.It's usually quite hot in OK, and then one day... boom, it's winter.
You haven’t lived until you walk 5 or 6 blocks to a hotel because an Alberta Clipper blew in, and there is no way you’re making it home from work that night.We just had a day and a half of rain here in SW Ohio, the remnants of the hurricane. Autumn weather here is brilliant- from mid September till early November the skies are blue, there's no humidity, it's just great. November features a few really rainy weeks, and then the winter "permacloud" descends from lakes Michigan and Erie. Grey skies for 3 solid months. It seldom gets really frigid; all winter the average high is within 8 or 10 degrees of freezing. But the sun never shines unless the Great Lakes freeze, which doesn't happen very often. As long as those lakes are warmer than the air above them, that grey cloud just rises and rolls on south. It could be worse- I wouldn't trade my Great Lakes cloud for any of Cleveland or Buffalo or Syracuse's Great Lakes snow. At least our cloud is well behaved.