Clear skies in the Northeast Friday allowed a great view of where snow was on the ground, where it wasn't, what was frozen, what not. Click on the image to make it bigger and easier to see details. |
While we have some quiet weather moments, some goofy weather videos to share. And a photo.
The photo on the right is a satellite shot taken amid unusually clear skies in the eastern United States on Friday. Click on it to make it bigger and easier to see the details of the current state of the winter.
The snow cover in New England ends just over the Massachusetts border from Vermont and New Hampshire. The Great Lakes are remarkably ice-free for late February. Even the Finger Lakes in New York aren't frozen.
You can also see that a large section of Lake Champlain is also free of ice. It almost certainly will not completely freeze over this year. We have a few warm days coming. Even if it turns cold in March, the increasing sun angle would help erode new ice that forms at night.
Down in eastern North Carolina and southeastern Virginia, you can also see an area of snow on the ground from a small storm the day before. By the end of the day yesterday, that snow in the Southeast was mostly gone.
The clouds off the New England and Mid-Atlantic coasts are caused by cold air blowing over the relatively warm waters of the Atlantic. There were even a few ocean-effect snow flurries from these clouds Friday morning on Cape Cod.
Now some videos:
This one has been billed as a "carbon neutral way to prevent ice dams:"
Next up, stupidity of the day. We see this all the time. People drive right into floodwaters, not knowing how deep it is, not caring how dangerous it is. A lot of it is stupidity.
There's still a lot of flooding going in in England due to two immense storms over the past couple weeks. Here, we see rescuers in elaborate safety gear with boats heading out to retrieve residents from obviously deep floodwater in one neighborhood.
You and I wouldn't drive down that flooded street, right? The turbulent water and the rescue crews would seem like dead giveaways not to proceed. Not everybody thinks like that. Watch the rescuers shake their heads in disbelief:
In Michigan, volcanoes have been erupting last week. Don't worry, no lava in Detroit, no pyroclastic flows in Ann Arbor. Instead, ice has piled up on the windy shores of Lake Michigan. More waves pounding in get under the ice and water pressure creates these "ice volcanoes." They're pretty cool:
Also, in Michigan, another icy phenomenon. A curving current in a small river created a rotating ice disk, much like that larger, more famous one that formed in Maine last year. Here's the mesmerizing Michigan ice disk:
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