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Temperatures in Denver dropped 64 degrees in less than 24 hours, setting a record
CNN ^ | Oct. 10, 2019 | Lauren M. Johnson

Posted on 10/10/2019 7:02:52 PM PDT by Innovative

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To: CA_soon_gone
Sunny, no wind, and 25 degrees can be tee shirt weather if you’re out being active

I have explained that to a lot of people, and no one understands it.

61 posted on 10/10/2019 10:23:30 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
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To: real saxophonist

Climate Activist Greta Thunberg Is Coming To Denver On Friday

October 9, 2019 at 11:54 pm

Bwahhaha!


62 posted on 10/10/2019 10:30:57 PM PDT by McGruff (No one is above the law - Nancy Pelosi)
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To: Innovative
Here in Seattle we have had two straight days of cloudless blue sky, low humidity, and last night tied the all time low of 34 degrees (no night time clouds to trap warm air, temps crash).

Weather like this only happens when we get really strong cold air from Canada.

Very unusual at this time of year.

Except for summer, most of our weather comes in from the Pacific or the Gulf of Alaska. We get full blast Canadian cold fronts only a couple times each year - almost always in winter and spring.

I know most of the USA has had really uncomfortable warm weather for most of the year.

In Seattle, we have had normal to below normal temps almost the whole year - February 2019 had the lowest average temp ever recorded.

Doubly strange - we have another warm water “blob” off the Washington coast.

Last time we got that was during the last El Nino, and we had above average temps for months.

This time - colder than average temps for months!

63 posted on 10/10/2019 10:44:48 PM PDT by zeestephen
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To: Jeff Chandler

this is really the amazing thing about living in the high elevation west.....you get the wonderful extremes....I love it....


64 posted on 10/10/2019 10:58:39 PM PDT by cherry
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To: Innovative

Awesome. My sweet spot is about -40° so any temp drop is greatly appreciated. Added benefit is homeless freeze to death.


65 posted on 10/10/2019 11:50:17 PM PDT by airplaneguy
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To: nothingnew

I live in CO and I don’t even own a jacket. Anything above 0° is too hot for me.


66 posted on 10/10/2019 11:52:08 PM PDT by airplaneguy
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To: dynachrome

Agreed, no big whoop D. I have had 60/25 recently. That is the way things go up here in the mountains.


67 posted on 10/10/2019 11:55:42 PM PDT by bobby.223 (Retired up in the snowy Mountains of the American Redoubt and it's a great life!)
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To: Innovative

And who says the Lord doesn’t have a sense of humor? With all the nonsense about global warming and now, we appear to have simply bypassed fall and are heading straight into winter.


68 posted on 10/11/2019 4:23:51 AM PDT by LouAvul
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To: 4Liberty

LOL! That certainly puts it in perspective!


69 posted on 10/11/2019 5:37:39 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (We come from the earth, we return to the earth, and in between we garden.~Alfred Austin)
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To: Scott from the Left Coast

Sure was windy and now quite chilly this morning here in Vegas.


70 posted on 10/11/2019 6:12:54 AM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Winning is not getting old.)
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To: Innovative

It dropped 43 degrees here in Central Texas - and brought the first real rain since early July - both very welcome


71 posted on 10/11/2019 6:38:20 AM PDT by dirtboy
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To: dp0622

No....the latest update is Climate Disruption. I got the memo.


72 posted on 10/11/2019 7:06:10 AM PDT by GSWarrior (I am a victim of racism every time I am called a racist because of my race.)
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To: sweetiepiezer

Probably the longest sustained wind I’ve experienced, I’m in the far NW of Vegas, positioned between the mountain ranges. Feels like it’s freezing this morning (it isn’t), was almost 90 36 hours ago.


73 posted on 10/11/2019 7:17:59 AM PDT by Scott from the Left Coast (It's the corruption, stupid)
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To: Innovative
I lived in Cheyenne, Wyoming just north of Denver when I was in the 6th grade. My dad was stationedd at the Air Force base there. We lived in a new house on the top of the valley headed south to Denver.

They used to say Cheyenne only had two seasons. Winter and Cheyenne Frontier Days, a week in August, that was celebrated with big rodeo events.

In July of the year we lived there, my brother and I were playing outside the house in jeans and t-shirts. Within 30 minutes, the wind starting howling and the temperature dropped 45 degrees in a half hour. So low that we had to change into winter parkas, stocking caps and gloves. Mom had to turn the furnace on in the house. It was freezing....in the middle of July.

We also had a blizzard and 13" of snow and ice on Mother's Day in May. The wind blew constantly, coming down off the Rockies and could reach 40-60 miles an hour with regularity.

People in that part of the country are used to this kind of fast-changing weather but my dad retired from the military right after being stationed there and we moved to Tempe, Arizona to live. No more freezing cold for us.

74 posted on 10/11/2019 8:36:41 AM PDT by HotHunt (Been there. Done that.)
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To: Vince Ferrer
Agreed. As long as your core is warm. I have hiked with shorts in 20 deg temps. Not recommended if you don't have the right clothing because eventually you will slow down. I had goretex pants and coat and sweats that I could pull over my shorts.
75 posted on 10/11/2019 9:02:53 AM PDT by dhs12345
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To: Innovative

‘Chinook wind’.

They can happen all the way to western Minnesota and almost to Iowa. Not too unusual.


76 posted on 10/11/2019 9:09:32 AM PDT by jjotto (Next week, BOOM!, for sure!)
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To: dp0622

Rapid temp drops are common in Colorado and we see them every Fall season...We get a drop of 40-50-60 degrees following a sunny balmy day as a cold front from the NW sweeps down off the Front Range...Sometimes the fronts come from the NE, and we call those “upslopes”...

Those who are natives or lived here awhile expect these fronts, and we get them most years...If you pay attention to the rapid changes our altitude and topography bring, you can even see ‘em coming...

I remember a sunny warm September day back in the early 80s (last century for you kids out there) that was followed by an overnight big temp drop and a blizzard that dumped more than a foot of snow for Denver...If we had local media who were born here, they might not be making such a big deal out of a regular seasonal occurrence...

Today you’re picking the last tomato, tomorrow gassing the snow blower...That’s Colorado...


77 posted on 10/11/2019 11:54:18 AM PDT by elteemike (Light travels faster than sound...That's why so many people appear bright until you hear them speak)
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