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  • North Carolina climate summary for February 2017 now available

    Pam Knox

    March 1, 2017

    The State Climate Office of North Carolina has issued their latest monthly climate summary for February 2017.  You can read it at https://climate.ncsu.edu/climateblog?id=227&h=5666e5c1.  

    Posted in: Climate summaries
  • How’d that Farmers Almanac winter forecast work out? Not so well

    Pam Knox

    March 1, 2017

    From Jared Rackley, former UGA graduate student and now working for the NWS in Louisiana: Still think the Farmers’ Almanac is reliable? How did that “Penetrating Cold and Very Wet” winter work out for you? As March begins, meteorological winter (Dec.-Feb.) comes to an end. This winter was not only unseasonably warm across much of…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news
  • Happy spring!

    Pam Knox

    February 28, 2017

    March 1 marks the beginning of spring for climatologists–if you’re an astronomer, you will have to wait until later this month.  Dr. Marshall Shepherd describes why we use March 1 as the start of spring in his Forbes.com blog here.  Wednesday will feel like spring across the Southeast, including a chance for severe weather, so…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Events
  • “California Precipitation: From Famine to Feast”

    Pam Knox

    February 28, 2017

    The WunderBlog has an excellent retrospective of the last several years of the drought in California and how the last very wet season has knocked out the drought in a lot of the state.  But they do note that even with all of the rain, it will take a long time for the aquifers to…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Drought
  • “Siberia’s ‘doorway to the Underworld’ Is Getting So Big It’s Uncovering Ancient Forests”

    Pam Knox

    February 28, 2017

    ScienceAlert.com posted an article this week on a huge crater that has formed in the Siberian permafrost region since the 1960s and is rapidly growing.  As it does, it has revealed ancient forests, carcasses of mammoths and ancient horses, and what could be 200,000 years of climate records.  The records come in the form of…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Forests, History
  • Peaches are blooming in Watkinsville

    Pam Knox

    February 27, 2017

    I noticed when I drove home from work in Watkinsville GA today (just outside Athens) that the peach orchard on the university farm is in bloom (and no, this picture is not from Watkinsville-we’re a lot flatter).  This is about a month earlier than usual, which is consistent with observations I’ve previously mentioned from the…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Fruit
  • Meteorologists remember Bill Paxton and “Twister”

    Pam Knox

    February 27, 2017

    My Facebook feed exploded yesterday once news of actor Bill Paxton’s demise following heart surgery was made public.  Bill Paxton was a well-regarded character actor who was in many famous films, including “Alien” and “Titanic” and in the HBO series “Big Love.”  (Interestingly, he was in Dallas and saw President Kennedy earlier in the day…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Severe
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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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