Showing posts with label Mountain Weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountain Weather. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2016

Hudson Valley Weather Visits the DSRC

Every month, I tabulate the weather records and formalize it into a summary for distribution to the public. Amanda, the Media Associate, posts all of our weather summaries online and shares them on social media. When she posted our February weather summary, it sparked the attention of Hudson Valley Weather. For those of you who do not know, they are the "MountainWeather.com" of the Hudson Valley. They are more reliable than the Weather Channel. Pretty impressive. Majority of the locals of New Paltz swear by Hudson Valley Weather. They have told me that even though this organization started out as a hobby for a bunch of businessmen and engineers, they have been predicting the weather of the region more accurately than the Weather Channel. So, back to sparking their attention. They were so stunned that we had a weather station at Mohonk and wanted to close in on some partnerships with using our data and having access to our summaries. So with that, they wanted to meet us. I felt more like a fan than the celebrity when they met us. We talked about what the Daniel Smiley Research Center does, the history of the weather station and data collection, many of our research projects, and of course, brought them up to the lake and weather box. It was a super great meeting and introduction to each other! Hopefully we will develop some closer ties and able to use each other as we continue the focus on Climate Change. 

TheChristyBel
We made their blog!
Daniel Smiley Research Center Staff Meet Hudson Valley Weather Staff
Weather Nerds All Around!

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Rare Clouds Form Over the Tetons

I am wishing I was in Jackson right now...let me tell you and show you why!

Yesterday, there was this really cool wispy cloud that hovered over the Teton Mountain Range. Through the photos that I saw online, it looked super cool and mysterious! I really wish I could've been there to see it in person. 

The clouds were described as 'shape-shifting' and 'had billowed like a handkerchief of a seagull with its beak touching the Grand's summit.' 

Meteorologists called the cloud a lenticular cloud. These types of clouds form downwind of mountain ranges under certain atmospheric conditions. They perfectly occur in symmetrical disks appear like huge alien UFO flying saucers. The lenticular cloud that formed in the Tetons resulted from an unusual combination of strong winds and moisture residing at the 13,000 - 14,000-ft elevations. 

It is just crazy and mind-boggling that clouds can form not just from varying atmospheric conditions, but the land itself! Super cool.

There is a formal article about this where I got this information. Check it out!

TheChristyBel

Photo Credit to the Grand Teton National Park