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  • “Record heat despite a cold sun”

    Pam Knox

    November 16, 2016

    Is the sun causing the warming we have seen in recent decades?  This is a comment I occasionally get from people who are not paying careful attention to how climate works.  While solar radiation can affect climate on a variety of time scales (ice ages from distance-related orbital changes in our trip around the sun,…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate outlooks, Climate science
  • Climate and Crops: A Guide to Variable Climate Farming

    Pam Knox

    November 16, 2016

    There is a great new resource available for free describing the relationships between climate and crops.  It is an iBook recently produced by the Alabama Cooperative Extension System at Auburn University.  Here are some comments about it from their press release: Dr. John Beasley, head of Auburn University’s Department of Crop, Soil and Environmental Sciences,…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops, Tools for climate and agriculture, Uncategorized
  • Where is the cold air?

    Pam Knox

    November 15, 2016

    If you’re wondering where the cold air is this time of year, you are not alone.  A number of my friends have noted on Facebook how late the frost is to Minnesota and the upper Midwest this year and here in the Southeast we are later than normal as well.  You can read about some…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, Climate science, Uncategorized
  • The dark side of the supermoon

    Pam Knox

    November 15, 2016

    Have you enjoyed the view of the full moon that has occurred over the last two nights?  Even with all of the smoke in the Southeast, the drought has kept skies reasonably clear and most folks have gotten a glimpse of how big it is, because it is on the nearest point of its orbit…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science, Coastal
  • “Sour year for sweet potatoes”

    Pam Knox

    November 15, 2016

    AgWeb released a video story today about the impacts of flooding rain in Louisiana and North Carolina on this year’s sweet potato crops.  In some areas of Louisiana, for example, some farmers lost 50 to 70 percent of their crop. In the north, losses ranged from 15 percent to 35 percent.  You can read more and…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops
  • “La Niña, Other Atmospheric Patterns Set to Shape Our Winter Weather”

    Pam Knox

    November 15, 2016

    Corey Davis of the State Climate Office of North Carolina continues his series of blog posts on weather patterns that might affect our winter conditions in the Southeast in his latest post this morning.  La Niña will be one big influence on our upcoming winter, but there are other patterns in play too.  You can…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, El Nino and La Nina
  • Anniversary of the Huntsville AL tornado

    Pam Knox

    November 15, 2016

    From my husband John Knox (also a meteorologist) who grew up in Birmingham AL, in a recent Facebook post, including photos from AL.com: “27 years ago Tuesday, a terrible tornado in Huntsville, Alabama. November is the time of a secondary peak in tornado activity in the Southeast, climatologically speaking. This is because the ingredients for…

    Posted in: History, Interesting weather images, 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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