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  • Latest outlook shows warm and wet conditions may continue through 2018

    Pam Knox

    September 20, 2018

    The latest set of temperature and precipitation outlooks was released today by the Climate Prediction Center. They show that for October, the forecasts are leaning towards wetter and warmer than normal conditions. This is basically a continuation of the last few months. The outlook for the rest of 2018 shows that most of the Southeast…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate outlooks
  • Florence drives drought from Carolinas but drought expands in AL and enters GA

    Pam Knox

    September 20, 2018

    The heavy rainfall from Hurricane Florence terminated the drought that has recently entered the central Carolinas for good, but lack of rainfall in other parts of the Southeast allowed drought to expand in northern Alabama and moderate drought to enter central Georgia. Alabama may get some relief this week but Georgia is expected to remain…

    Posted in: Drought
  • Weather Photographer of the Year–two competitions

    Pam Knox

    September 20, 2018

    If you like beautiful weather images (and I know you do), you will enjoy these two shortlists of weather photographs selected from over 4,000 entries to the Royal Meteorological Society’s annual photo contest and from the Weather Channel’s competition. Visit https://www.weather-photo.org/events/weather-photographer-year/2018-weather-photographer-year/finalists/ to vote for your favorite from RMetSoc and see the top fan favorites at TWC…

    Posted in: Interesting weather images
  • Sweet potato prices jump after Hurricane Florence flooded fields

    Pam Knox

    September 19, 2018

    The Packer wrote in an article this week that the prices of sweet potatoes rose after Hurricane Florence brought flooding rain to many sweet potato fields earlier this week. Some farmers were able to harvest a portion of their crops but many others were left in the ground. According to the article it is too…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops, Tropical weather
  • “When Hurricane Florence Met Hurricane Fake News”

    Pam Knox

    September 19, 2018

    After every big news event, social media goes crazy with a mix of fact, fiction, and fake news. Hurricane Florence was no exception, with the mythological “fake shark” photo showing up as it has after every hurricane since 2011. But some of the flurry of activity on social media can confuse the situation or provide…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Tropical weather
  • Florence and agriculture in the news

    Pam Knox

    September 18, 2018

    As you can imagine, there have been many stories in the news about the impacts of Hurricane Florence’s winds, storm surge and rainfall on agriculture. Here are some of the ones I have found interesting. Tough to be a farmer under such extreme conditions! Much more to come as flood levels continue to rise. It…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops, Livestock, Tropical weather
  • What it’s like to measure 34 inches of rain in a hurricane

    Pam Knox

    September 18, 2018

    In the past I’ve discussed the CoCoRaHS network and how citizen scientists from all across the US (and now in Canada and the Bahamas, too) measure daily rainfall using a simple rain gauge. These measurements are invaluable in providing ground truth to what is estimated by radars. Here is a neat story about the woman…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Sources of weather and climate data
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The “Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast” blog is provided by the Associate Dean of Extension as a service to Extension agents and agricultural producers across the Southeast US. Come here to find out information about the impacts of weather and climate on agriculture across Georgia and beyond.

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