CJ Moose ⚒️🌋🦉🍻⛺

@cjmoose
355 Followers
307 Following
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Rock lover, beer drinker, birdwatcher, weather nerd. Polymath. Former NPS, former science teacher, former vet tech. @LukeAF’s official taste-tester, parent of Pi, Stormy, & P-SwAG. 


#Geology #EarthScience #Nature #Outdoors #NPS #Birding #CraftBeer #Camping #TeardropTrailers #Lymphedema #ADHD #SciEd #Education #SciComm #Weather #Meteorology #Humanism #fedi22

@me_valentijn @rhcmuts.bsky.social @ai6yr

I don’t know. They’re on the backside of the island, so they’ve got that going for them. But storm surge is still an issue and they are smack dab on the ocean. If they catch the eyewall, even newer structures don’t do well with Cat 4 winds.

@ai6yr Any info on the fire in Pixlie?

I remember seeing a similar routine at the last Summer Olympics

#Caturday

@mattblaze @wotsac @ai6yr Reporting I'm seeing says there were six people on board. Pilot, copilot, two doctors, a patient, and a family member. Transporting patient to a medical facility in Missouri.
43 years old. Looks like an international air ambulance. All onboard appear to have perished, unclear how many bystanders below injured/killed. 🙏

#Philidelphia #SmallPlaneCrash

Ground stop at Northeast Philadelphia Airport per ABC 6 Philadelphia

@LPerry2 @RunRichRun @ai6yr @douglasvb I hope building officials take a hard look at the houses that fully/partially survived when all the others around them burned in order to study which practices and building materials produced the greatest resistance. That's basically what they did after Hurricane Andrew in Florida; the efficacy of the building codes that resulted can be witnessed after every hurricane. You can easily pick out the pre/post Andrew houses after a landfall.
@ai6yr Could be that those houses benefitted from the earliest firefighting efforts in that area, being closest to the hill. Could be that retardant drops doused flames near those homes while ember cast from higher up the mountain blew right on over them and deeper into the neighborhood.

It’s supposed to be the rainy season in Southern California,
-- but the last time Los Angeles measured more than a tenth-inch of rain was eight months ago,
after the city logged one of the soggiest periods in its recorded history.

Since then, bone-dry conditions have set the stage for the catastrophic wildfires now descending upon the metropolis from multiple directions.

This quick cycling between very wet and very dry periods
— one example of what scientists have come to call
“weather whiplash”
— creates prime conditions for wildfires:

The rain encourages an abundance of brush and grass,
and once all that vegetation dries out,
it only takes a spark and a gust of wind to fuel a deadly fire.

That’s what happened in Los Angeles County this week,
when a fierce windstorm fueled the Palisades and Eaton fires,
which as of Wednesday night had killed at least five people,
destroyed more than 2,000 buildings,
and forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate their homes.

https://grist.org/science/los-angeles-fires-weather-whiplash-research/

The ‘weather whiplash’ fueling the Los Angeles fires is becoming more common

Around the world, dramatic swings between heavy rain and drought are increasing exponentially, according to new research.

Grist