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colapster89

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Tout ce qui a été posté par colapster89

  1. super avec un t c'est pas bin bin super
  2. comment la depression est positionner, le front froid va encore mettre une bon 20-26h a nous atteindre
  3. Je ne sais pas où tu vois du 50k pieds... Le plus haut sommet est à 36k pieds et il est près de Toronto. en effet sa changer je dirais meme 33 000 pied
  4. pour demain le front froid sera enorme et très vigoureux je serais vrm très éttoner de ne pas voir d'action. Pour ce soir peut-etre que sa va se réintensifier il y a encore des somment a 50 000 pied
  5. moi jai une voiture mais l'essence commence a faire mal
  6. montréal DEVRAIT avoir une premiere orage peut-etre la seule de la soirée dans 2h30 environ
  7. echo 45 000 pied vitesse 25 noeud est MAJ: 50 000 pied
  8. Et tu vois ça où ? J'imagine que c'est pas toi qui mesure... non bien sur http://www.meteo.psu.edu/rtwx/ewall/SFCNE/last.html Merci Mais n'oublit pas que c'est le modèle "RUC" et qu'il peut être dans le champ autant que tous les autres... pour le court terme sa reste le modèle le plus fiable
  9. Et tu vois ça où ? J'imagine que c'est pas toi qui mesure... non bien sur http://www.meteo.psu.edu/rtwx/ewall/SFCNE/last.html
  10. le cape commence a monter, le li commence a descendre. Le tout s'amorce TRÈS tranquillement. On dirais depuis le début que les grands lacs créent un effet de blocage peut-être parce qu'il sont encore trop froid je sais pas mais on dirais que rien n'y traverse appart de la petite pluie.
  11. vous aimez ca des dépressions regarder le radar de prevision 12heure d'intellicast
  12. moi mon internet avait lacher lors de la tempete du 3 decembre pi encore une fois lors de celle du 16. J'etais pas content :P
  13. bien sur c'est logique et si bien expliquer
  14. li -1,8 cape 190 sa fera pas des enfants forts sa
  15. sur le radar il ya une ligne de possible orage en debut de formation au nord de mont laurier qui a l'air de descendre vers le sud du quebec
  16. Voici une article de la gazette sur l'année sans été quan le mont tambora avait exploser en indonésie An Indonesian volcano made Montreal's summer of 1816 miserable JOHN KALBFLEISCH, The Gazette Published: 7 hours ago "The weather still continues, with very little variation, extremely cold and unpropitious, and the season of fruits and flowers has been retarded in this province to a later period than remembered by the oldest inhabitant." - Gazette, Monday, June 10, 1816 Email to a friendEmail to a friendPrinter friendlyPrinter friendly Font: * * * * * * * * AddThis Social Bookmark Button Well might that "oldest inhabitant" be alarmed, for Lower Canada was on the brink of the coldest summer in a century. Indeed, before long 1816 would be known, in Canada and the United States alike, as the Year With No Summer. The signs that something was amiss had been around for months. While the previous winter's snow and ice had disappeared in good time, there was little rainfall in April. The "backward weather," as it was called, continued into May, with several frosty nights further retarding plant growth. There were occasional snow flurries. But it was nothing compared with the backwardness that was to follow. On June 5, a severe cold front swept down from Hudson Bay to grip the St. Lawrence Valley for the next five days. Rain beginning in Quebec City on the 6th turned to snow as the thermometer plunged toward the freezing mark, and soon there was a foot on the ground. Drifts reached "the axle trees of carriages," and some people began pressing their sleighs back into service. Snow squalls lashed Montreal. It was so cold in the city that standing water, it was said, froze to the thickness of a dollar coin - doubtless a Spanish or American coin, as Canadian dollars still didn't exist. In the countryside, sheep fresh from that spring's shearing couldn't take the cold and began to die off. Birds took shelter in houses or began falling dead in the fields. Fruit trees were nipped in the bud. Then, mercifully, the sun returned and hopes of a harvest, if a much reduced one, began to revive. "The reports from the country," The Gazette reported on June 17, "are more cheering with regard to the appearance of the wheat in this district than might have been apprehended from the extreme backwardness of the season. The quantity sown, however, is stated as much less than in former years." Slim as these hopes were, however, they were dashed by another cold snap in early July, and a third late in August. Making things worse was the persisting drought. For a society so heavily dependent on agriculture, not only to feed itself but also to generate income from export sales, this was a disaster in the making. That summer, reports began to trickle in from rural areas of people dying from hunger, exposure or disease induced by their weakened state. Surely no one in Montreal suspected that the chief cause of this misery lay half a world away, on the island of Sumbawa in what's now Indonesia. In April 1815 Mount Tambora, a volcano active to this day, blew its top. It was the largest volcanic explosion in recorded history, four times greater than the better known eruption of Krakatoa in 1883. Vast amounts of dust and gas were hurled into the sky and began to circulate around the globe - Mount Tambora, which had stood about 14,000 feet tall, was reduced to just 9,300 feet. The sky darkened perceptibly, certainly enough to affect the following year's weather. Major eruptions in the West Indies in 1812 and the Philippines in 1814 had already helped dim the skies. Finally, the Earth was in the depths of the so-called Dalton Minimum, a period of several years when the sun simply shone less brightly. The effects of this intersection of natural extremes were felt around the world. They were especially dire in northern Europe, New England, Britain's east-coast colonies and Lower Canada. Jean-Thomas Taschereau, a member of the Legislative Assembly in Quebec City, wrote, "The misery is severe. Many will die of hunger." That more did not was thanks to the swift action of Sir John Coape Sherbrooke, who arrived in Quebec City that July as governor-in-chief of British North America. His first act of any consequence, an old report states, was taken "upon his own responsibility." He "threw open the king's stores and advanced a very considerable sum of money for the purchase of such supplies as were not in store." The provisions, sent to hard-hit parishes, helped avert widespread famine. Many farm animals that might have been slaughtered to provide food, or that might have died for want of fodder, were spared. The Assembly not only praised Sherbrooke's action, but it then voted further funds for relief. Even so, the winter of 1816-17 proved unusually harsh and the death toll was significant.
  17. l'humidex se fait bien sentir a montreal en tout cas
  18. Mt Soputan erupts Manado, N Sulawesi (ANTARA News) - Mount Soputan in the northern part of Indonesia`s Sulawesi Island erupted at around 09.00 a.m. on Friday, spewing hot ashes. "The tremors caused by the volcano`s activities are very strong. A total of 45 tremors have been recorded so far," Sandy Manengkey, head of the Mt Soputan observatory post, said. The 1,783 meter-high volcano continued to send clouds of hot ashes into the sky but they were covered by haze, he said. "The clouds of hot ashes are still around the crater but they are slightly moving in westerly direction to Kotamenara and Amurang villages," he said. He said the local volcanology office was coordinating with the regional government in anticipating the threat of hot ashes to residents living on the volcano`s slopes. Decky Tuwo, head of the South Minahasa district vital statistics office, said clouds of hot ashes affected a number of villages on the volcano`s slopes, causing panic among local residents. "South Minahasa district head Ramoy Luntungan has sent a team of rescue workers from the local government to evacuate the people living on the volcano`s slopes," he said. The villages include Kotamenara, Maliku and Ritey in Amurang subdistrict and some in Tumpaan and Touluaan subdistricts in Southeast Minahasa district.(*)
  19. jusqu'a 2 pied de neige de prevu dans les cascades en haut de 4500 pied
  20. il y a de l'action du coté des states
  21. MM ont placé les risques d'orages pour demain matin samedi et dimanche
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