geonuc wrote:So there we are, still. Us in Bend with one FWD vehicle (my Subaru BRZ, which is RWD, has been put away for the winter) and our 4WD Pathfinder on the other side of some very large, snowed-in mountains. Which is why this is in the weather thread. We need to get that vehicle back while the Corolla is still able to make the trip to Portland safely. The road to the Columbia River will ice over in places and I-84 from The Dalles (the town on the river) to Portland is notorious for icing to the point it gets closed.
SciFiFisher wrote:geonuc wrote:So there we are, still. Us in Bend with one FWD vehicle (my Subaru BRZ, which is RWD, has been put away for the winter) and our 4WD Pathfinder on the other side of some very large, snowed-in mountains. Which is why this is in the weather thread. We need to get that vehicle back while the Corolla is still able to make the trip to Portland safely. The road to the Columbia River will ice over in places and I-84 from The Dalles (the town on the river) to Portland is notorious for icing to the point it gets closed.
If the Pathfinder has any serious electronics that control anything you might want to double check those. I had a Plymouth Voyager a number of years ago that did something similar. It was a cracked chip in the onboard computer module. It would run fine when you first started it up but as soon as it warmed up it would start doing what your Pathfinder is doing. The crack would widen when the engine warmed up and mess with the connections. They were unable to find it with the diagnostic equipment because there was no error code for "cracked chip". Every time they hooked up the machine they got a different error message or none at all.
Rommie wrote:It was similarly 70 this weekend and we took advantage w two long bike rides on Saturday and then Sunday.
I mean its nice but it astounds me that people can live through this stuff and not think the climate is changing when you're wandering about Boston in short sleeves in January.
pumpkinpi wrote:Climate change is so extreme that it can snow in Washington DC at 70F!
Thumper wrote:Uber quick temp changes. It rained cats and dogs Saturday. Everything flooded. Temps near 60. Sunday morning it is 14 or so and I found an 8 inch craw dad frozen solid in the middle of the driveway...
Hopefully getting up to 40 today but not looking good at this point. I need to get on the roof and do a half assed spray rubber repair to temporarily quell two minor leaks until i can get a new roof on this spring...
Rommie wrote:SO warm out. Like 40s and sunny today, the first Monday of February, which is roughly what it's been the past few weeks. In BOSTON. We've had snow drops for weeks in the yard already too. This week the weather will turn crappy, but looks like it won't manage to get cold enough to do more than rain.
Perhaps it's because I know what the weather should be like here more than anywhere else I've lived in the last years, but this winter is really disturbing me. Enough to think about applying for jobs in the next few years in areas that will be least affected by climate change- it feels completely irresponsible if you're thinking of bringing any kids in the world to see winters like this and move them to a city expected to dramatically flood on a regular basis or similar. Am I completely nuts for thinking that way?
Rommie wrote:SO warm out. Like 40s and sunny today, the first Monday of February, which is roughly what it's been the past few weeks. In BOSTON. We've had snow drops for weeks in the yard already too. This week the weather will turn crappy, but looks like it won't manage to get cold enough to do more than rain.
Perhaps it's because I know what the weather should be like here more than anywhere else I've lived in the last years, but this winter is really disturbing me. Enough to think about applying for jobs in the next few years in areas that will be least affected by climate change- it feels completely irresponsible if you're thinking of bringing any kids in the world to see winters like this and move them to a city expected to dramatically flood on a regular basis or similar. Am I completely nuts for thinking that way?
pumpkinpi wrote:Rommie wrote:SO warm out. Like 40s and sunny today, the first Monday of February, which is roughly what it's been the past few weeks. In BOSTON. We've had snow drops for weeks in the yard already too. This week the weather will turn crappy, but looks like it won't manage to get cold enough to do more than rain.
Perhaps it's because I know what the weather should be like here more than anywhere else I've lived in the last years, but this winter is really disturbing me. Enough to think about applying for jobs in the next few years in areas that will be least affected by climate change- it feels completely irresponsible if you're thinking of bringing any kids in the world to see winters like this and move them to a city expected to dramatically flood on a regular basis or similar. Am I completely nuts for thinking that way?
No, you're not. We're seriously considering investing in land somewhere in MN so our descendants have somewhere they can live sustainably, should things fall apart.
Rommie wrote:pumpkinpi wrote:Rommie wrote:SO warm out. Like 40s and sunny today, the first Monday of February, which is roughly what it's been the past few weeks. In BOSTON. We've had snow drops for weeks in the yard already too. This week the weather will turn crappy, but looks like it won't manage to get cold enough to do more than rain.
Perhaps it's because I know what the weather should be like here more than anywhere else I've lived in the last years, but this winter is really disturbing me. Enough to think about applying for jobs in the next few years in areas that will be least affected by climate change- it feels completely irresponsible if you're thinking of bringing any kids in the world to see winters like this and move them to a city expected to dramatically flood on a regular basis or similar. Am I completely nuts for thinking that way?
No, you're not. We're seriously considering investing in land somewhere in MN so our descendants have somewhere they can live sustainably, should things fall apart.
Yeah I saw MN is actually probably one of the most unscathed areas, relatively speaking. And Pittsburgh, upstate New York, and New England away from the coasts. (Though to be fair, if it comes as far as having to live off your own land, Lord help anyone trying to do that in New England even if the climate changes.) The funny thing is we were also discussing the Netherlands in this context, but I honestly think they're perhaps one of the best prepared for climate change despite living under sea level- which makes the entire thing really maddening in some ways.
Btw, the big lake in New Hampshire that's the family summer spot does a contest every year where you can place a prediction in February for when "ice out" will happen- aka, when the big tourist boat can go to all three of its ports ice-free. It's happened in March three times in the last decade (versus twice in 100+ years before that), the most recently being March 18 in 2016 being the earliest ever recorded. So now that the predicting is up, I chose March 16. It's barely frozen as is and frankly I could have chosen earlier.
Rommie wrote:pumpkinpi wrote:Rommie wrote:SO warm out. Like 40s and sunny today, the first Monday of February, which is roughly what it's been the past few weeks. In BOSTON. We've had snow drops for weeks in the yard already too. This week the weather will turn crappy, but looks like it won't manage to get cold enough to do more than rain.
Perhaps it's because I know what the weather should be like here more than anywhere else I've lived in the last years, but this winter is really disturbing me. Enough to think about applying for jobs in the next few years in areas that will be least affected by climate change- it feels completely irresponsible if you're thinking of bringing any kids in the world to see winters like this and move them to a city expected to dramatically flood on a regular basis or similar. Am I completely nuts for thinking that way?
No, you're not. We're seriously considering investing in land somewhere in MN so our descendants have somewhere they can live sustainably, should things fall apart.
Yeah I saw MN is actually probably one of the most unscathed areas, relatively speaking. And Pittsburgh, upstate New York, and New England away from the coasts. (Though to be fair, if it comes as far as having to live off your own land, Lord help anyone trying to do that in New England even if the climate changes.) The funny thing is we were also discussing the Netherlands in this context, but I honestly think they're perhaps one of the best prepared for climate change despite living under sea level- which makes the entire thing really maddening in some ways.
Btw, the big lake in New Hampshire that's the family summer spot does a contest every year where you can place a prediction in February for when "ice out" will happen- aka, when the big tourist boat can go to all three of its ports ice-free. It's happened in March three times in the last decade (versus twice in 100+ years before that), the most recently being March 18 in 2016 being the earliest ever recorded. So now that the predicting is up, I chose March 16. It's barely frozen as is and frankly I could have chosen earlier.
Rommie wrote:That page is a little odd for including earthquakes. Like obviously they are a thing, but they're still going to be a thing climate change or not.
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