ENVR Water temps in Florida hit 101°

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
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R.0537ec071f58ed27ab12b2b9a4c25a0c



The struggle never ends.
 

knowzone

Veteran Member
I believe:

Firstly,

The video delves into the significance of Earths orbit to the Sun and the changes to localized climate due to "tilt" and deviation to the elliptical path.


Secondly, people seem to focus on above, (the sky, land, water etc.), and then, thanks to conditioning, media, education, religion, societal peer pressure, etc., accept that THEY are the cause of EVERYTHING that goes on "here".

I see the "whole" here as a sort of molecular melting pot. All the atoms, all the molecules are here. They just keep getting moved around, broken, reattached, repaired, recycled, on and on. Do "we" effect change? Sure. We dig stuff up, heat it, press it, cool it, package it and use it for a period of time. What then? Back to Earth....in a landfill. As it was, so shall it be.


Can people cause destructive harm to the environment?
Sure! Possibly forever in our lives, but not that long geologically. (Hiroshima).
HOWEVER, if everyone onboard (planet Earth) decides to go to one side of the globe at the same time, the shift of overweight may be able to cause significant alterations to our orbit creating a cataclysmic change to our environment here on the ground. Why not?! Seems as plausible an explanation in comparison to being accused of using to much aerosol Rite Guard.

I'm not saying the obvious, (rains, temps, etc.) are not valid. They are documented and felt by all. I'm simply not swallowing the narrative being sold by WEF, Gates, Soros, DS, on and on and on and on and on.
I know where they are coming from.

A simple point overlooked by the masses but acknowledged by all when occurring.

WE, are accused by the elite of destroying our home with activity, (while they spray the skies).
Question: What human activity could "We" possibly be doing to cause all the world's volcanoes to become simultaneously active, "farting" up from deep inside?

Out of respect for The Boss I'll stop shy of (too much) woo.

(It does seem to me though, that the past few decades have been spent "changing" - spraying/HAARP/CERN, our ecosystem for perhaps a different sort of life-form.)

kz
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
Such high sea temperatures will lead to high humidity which in turn leads to rain somewhere but how much rain and how fast it comes down?
 

Cacheman

Ultra MAGA!




Drilling down on 101-degree water temperature recording near the Florida Keys. What we know​




2–3 minutes



While the news from earlier this week that a buoy near the Florida Keys recorded a water temperature of 101.1 degrees is alarming, it's not unprecedented.

It's not even the record for Manatee Bay, the observing site where the data came from, said David Zierden, state climatologist at the Florida Climate Center in Tallahassee.

The record for the Manatee Bay site is 102 degrees. It was set on Aug. 15, 2017. Going further back, Zierden said the site recorded a temperature of 100 degrees in 2010.

Something to point out: The Manatee Bay gauge is very close to land, south of Biscayne Bay, and measures the water temperature at a depth of 5 feet.

"Keep in mind that the observations in Manatee Bay are in shallow water in a closed-off cove with dark seagrass on the bottom," Zierden said. "I would not consider them a "sea surface temperature," as that implies open ocean."

Even though there is a bit of a "tap the brakes" vibe when it comes to this week's excessive water temperature news that is making headlines, it comes with "the backdrop that coastal and open ocean temperatures are still running much above normal for the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and around the Florida Keys," Zierden said.

What will it take to cool the water temperatures in Florida?​

Good news. What goes up must come down. Eventually the coastal water will cool off, but there's still lots of summer to go.

"For Manatee Bay, temperatures will come down with a period of rainy or cloudy conditions and/or stronger winds," Zierden said. "Flushing with the tides will also help. They may continue above normal for an extended period, but not at these extreme values."

Until these things start happening, your best bet for relief might be one of Florida's underground springs. Florida springs bring up fresh water from deep in the aquifer.

"They are fairly uniform at 72 degrees in all seasons of the year," Zierden said. "Certainly a refreshing swim with the heat we have been experiencing!"
 

Great Northwet

Veteran Member
Here in the upper left corner of the country I'm not sure what to make of it yet. 70's to 80 temps. are perfect for this place in July.

We know that the El Nino causes the jet stream to go further south and into the Southeastern part of the country and causes more moisture to accumulate there, while up here it will be warmer and dryer than normal-and all fine by me since I'm out in the weather all the time on my job at the University.

2 years in a row I got soaked all the time but last winter wasn't so bad. I counted 7 soaking days over the entire winter.
I've heard that it could be called a Super El Nino. I'm not sure what it means yet, but I don't like it.

I think the Southeast is going to get it this year, but at some point, I'm going to want the rain back.
 

somdwatcher

Veteran Member

Zoom in and check out the buoy data for today in these same areas along the Florida Bay/Keys and Everglades. The water temperatures for the same buoys that have been reading in the 90s to that 101 degree range, are now in the 82 to 88 degree range. Hmmmmm change of wind direction and a system over Florida at this time. I wonder if the media will report on that?
 

BH

. . . .
Got up and out around 7:30 this morning to avoid our current hot spell. Mowed, sprayed around porch and deck for fleas, then grilled a roast that was supposed to be last night's meal (but it was just too hot to grill). Heat index has been at least 10 degrees above ambient with dew points around 70+, yuk. Heat index already mid 90s, will be back inside by 11, my outdoor chores are done.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
That's what he said the locals were saying. We just went through three years of La Nina which hasn't happened in a long time. I think like 50 years. Batten down the hatches, we are gonna get hammered this winter, imo.

Old Farmer's Almanac says it's going to be warmer than normal this winter, except in February, where it will be just normal.
Farmer's Almanac says colder and wetter.

Flip a coin, I guess.
 

somdwatcher

Veteran Member
This thread isn't about your local inland temperatures. The media and social media have been POUNDING this story for 2 weeks about the extreme water temperatures in Florida Bay near the Keys and Everglades and today these same buoys are all reading 10 plus degrees lower back to their normal range. Not a peep from the media.

Zoom in to southern Florida and click on all the buoys southwest of Miami but east of Key West. Maybe one is still reporting 90F and that is at Key West. Normal sea temperature daily variances.

Ask the media and climate change believers to explain this
 
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