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Old 11-03-13, 11:40 AM   #1
Kptlt. Neuerburg
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I remember the weather while I was living in Washington State. It would be cloudy about 95% of the year, about 2-3 weeks worth of rain every other month, five minutes worth of sun, and summer weather starting on the 4th of July and about 60 degrees year round. If the temp ever got into the 70s you'd see people wearing shorts and a t-shirt.
As for winter it seemed like everywhere else in Washington State got snow and where I lived we got rain, rain, more rain, high winds, constant power outages and very rarely snow. One wouldn't think snow would be rare in a place that's 500 feet above sea level but it is because of how close to Puget Sound it is. The Port of Tacoma is about 20 miles from where I used to live.
It seems that this year Washington State is getting its normal winter storms a bit earlier then normal with 60mph winds and the usual ton of rain, but in a report I read the other day it stated that altitudes of 2,500ft or higher could expect 6-11 inches of snow in a 12 hour period and that's a bit odd.
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Old 11-03-13, 11:48 AM   #2
Sailor Steve
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kptlt. Hellmut Neuerburg View Post
One wouldn't think snow would be rare in a place that's 500 feet above sea level but it is because of how close to Puget Sound it is. The Port of Tacoma is about 20 miles from where I used to live.
Where it rains it can snow if it gets cold enough. The reality in Utah is that the Wasatch Front (Utah's three main population centers, Ogden, Salt Lake City and Provo-Orem, are within 40 miles of each other) marks the end of a desert that stretches 500 miles west to the Sierra Nevada mountains at the border between Nevada and California. Storms coming to Utah are almost always dry, and only pick up moisture as they pass over the Great Salt Lake. Even with that, the cities don't get more than 50" of snow per year on average, with a total rainfall of about 15". If not for the lake we wouldn't have any water to drink.
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