Summer is officially over in Alaska, and if you got out in the sun to enjoy both days of it you were lucky.
Those were the two July days the temperature at the offices of the National Weather Service in Anchorage hit 70 degrees or better.
"Those temperatures occurred at the beginning of the month (of July) and were immediately followed by a long stretch of cool and wet weather.
"With only two days above 70 degrees this year, that sets a new record for the fewest days to reach 70,'' the weather-watching agency reported Friday.
Add to the lack of heat and sunshine what the agency calls "an astonishing 77%" of days colder than normal, and you get the picture.
This summer was every bit as bad as you thought it was.
Gardens didn't grow. Salmon returned late. Bees didn't make honey. Swallows didn't breed.
And the sunbathing, well, what sunbathing?
On average, Anchorage sees 16 days that hit 70 or better.
Not this year. Not since 1980 has there been a summer less reflective of global warming than this one. Consider these 2008 benchmarks from the weather service that say this month won't be any better:
Over the course of the past 87 years, September temperatures have reached 70 only 17 times, and two of those 70-degree days came in the same year, according to the weather service.
I wonder what will happen to the political landscape when, in 10 years, they figure out we're actually spiraling toward an ice age. Will the climate pimps pressure companies to increase carbon emissions?
No comments:
Post a Comment