Hydraulicjump
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2011
- Messages
- 646
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-30 CB
- Hull Identification Number
- FMLT2911F415
- Non-Fluid Motion Model
- Necky Looksha VII, Liquidlogic Remix, Jackson 4Fun
- Vessel Name
- La Barka (2015)
While our tug friends are freezing their fantails off in the upper Midwest, Canada and East Coast, we in the West have it warm, sunny.....and incredibly dry. Here in Northern California we are experiencing an unimaginable dry spell, caused by a "ridiculously resilient ridge" (a term coined by a Stanford grad student) that has been sitting on top of us for more than a year, shutting the door to storms. A colleague at Berkeley who studies Holocene climates says it has not been this dry in 500 years, and that is a conservative estimate. This weather may go back to the Medieval warm period for a comparison. Freshwater tug boating (such as Lake Tahoe and all of the reservoirs) is not going to be so great this season. Go north to Washington and BC. And by the way, this same ridge is responsible for your frigid winter this year.
So I am thinking that freezing yer scuppers may be bad, but come spring, you'll be ok.
Fortunately, the ocean hasn't dried up. San Francisco Bay is as gorgeous as it can get, and hardly anyone is out there messing around in boats, which is a pity. It is MUCH warmer than it will be in the summer.
Jeff
ps: our first rainfall in more than 50 days is likely to occur this Friday. Enough to wet the ground. This during the height of our rainy season.
So I am thinking that freezing yer scuppers may be bad, but come spring, you'll be ok.
Fortunately, the ocean hasn't dried up. San Francisco Bay is as gorgeous as it can get, and hardly anyone is out there messing around in boats, which is a pity. It is MUCH warmer than it will be in the summer.
Jeff
ps: our first rainfall in more than 50 days is likely to occur this Friday. Enough to wet the ground. This during the height of our rainy season.