
Chris Scott, The Weather Network's chief meteorologist, says the message from his forecast team is "'buckle up' because it looks like a stormy winter." This year's La Nina weather system bears a striking resemblance to that of 2007-2008, when Toronto rec
Looking forward to it. Dry winters make my skin crawl.
Ditto, says I, as it's raining outside!
Looking forward to it. Dry winters make my skin crawl.
No crawling skin here, what I'm dealing with with these dry winters is flaky and itchy skin.....arrrrrgh!
The CTV article forecasts above normal precipitation and below normal temps.
The Farmers Almanac forecasts below normal precipitation and above normal temps.
We shall see.
Interesting. For this area:
The CTV article forecasts above normal precipitation and below normal temps.
The Farmers Almanac forecasts below normal precipitation and above normal temps.
We shall see.
Yep, I checked my 3 Canadian based almanacs and all 3 call for warmer than normal and drier than normal. Strange that all 3 are in agreement with each other.
Yep, I checked my 3 Canadian based almanacs and all 3 call for warmer than normal and drier than normal. Strange that all 3 are in agreement with each other.
I don't know about those, but you made me Google and I found some trivia for the 2 best-known Almanacs.
The Farmers' Almanac was founded in 1812, and it is indeed the baby compared to the Old Farmer's Almanac and its 1792 origin. They both advertise that they rely on secret formulas to come up with their prognostications. The Farmers' Almanac uses "mathematical and astronomical" formulas, which are passed along from one (anonymous) prognosticator to another -- and only one at a time [source: Farmers' Almanac]. The Old Farmer's Almanac relies on a theory that weather is a result of magnetic storms on the sun's surface, and the forecasts are predicted based on a formula literally locked in a black box at headquarters [source: Old Farmer's Almanac].
https://science.howstuffworks.com/natur ... eather.htm
I wonder what the Candian ones use.
Old Farmer's Almanac
http://www.countryliving.com/life/a3989 ... edictions/
About 80% right with their voodoo.
Winter 2018 will be colder than last year, but forecasters split on how bad it will get