Cape Cod lucked out again, its rain here again. Even our dog didnt want to run around after her yard toys this morning.
But check this out, a classmate who lives near Rockhampton, Australia sent this picture to me this morning. They are bracing for more rain and high winds.
If we hear about this on our local Martha's Vineyard radio station(they dont do national or world news), then it must be really bad.
Looking at their blogs about the previous flood was awful, and now they expect 2 to 3 feet of rain and a huge storm surge.
Jane
That's a lot of rain on top of what they've already had!
We had around a half inch of freezing rain last evening and over night in the Akron area.
But it sounds like we were really lucky compared to some other places.
Best of luck to all you others who are less fortunate.
Jack
Looks like the local officials got the message after the last snow we had, they managed to keep it all well to our west. But that didn't stop the warm air from scrambling toward the south! Yesterday at Noon it was ~64°F by 10pm it was 29 and falling! But the 50+mph gusts blew the rest of anything warm completely away. At least the sun is visible today and it is supposed to "warm" up to 30. Sorry I can't share the grief of you Yanks! Yeah, sure, right!

Reminds me of a very interesting but tragic story of a storm in 1888: QUOTE("The Children's Blizzard")
January 12, 1888, began as an unseasonably warm morning across Nebraska, the Dakotas, and Minnesota, the weather so mild that children walked to school without coats and gloves. But that afternoon, without warning, the atmosphere suddenly, violently changed. One moment the air was calm; the next the sky exploded in a raging chaos of horizontal snow and hurricane-force winds. Temperatures plunged as an unprecedented cold front ripped through the center of the continent. By Friday morning, January 13, some five hundred people lay dead on the drifted prairie, many of them children who had perished on their way home from country schools. In a few terrifying hours, the hopes of the pioneers had been blasted by the bitter realities of their harsh environment. Recent immigrants from Germany, Norway, Denmark, and the Ukraine learned that their free homestead was not a paradise but a hard, unforgiving place governed by natural forces they neither understood nor controlled. With the storm as its dramatic, heartbreaking focal point, The Children's Blizzard captures this pivotal moment in American history by tracing the stories of five families who were forever changed that day.
Now, we understand these things and plan as if we might even control them...