Listen "Episode 124- A Different Version: Weather Synopsys With Enthusiasm 11-2"
Episode Synopsis
Unknown 0:03Good evening, everyone. It is Tuesday evening, November 2, and we have entered the month of for the Great Lakes area. This is the stormiest month of the year. This is a month where storms intensify rapidly. And that's because of the Great Lakes, we have pretty strong storm systems that move across the area. Similar to what we see in March. I think in March, the stronger the storms are stronger. But when the Great Lakes, the effects of the Great Lakes have on storms, that doesn't happen in March, the Great Lakes, the water temperatures are warm, the air rises, and it really intensifies those storms. So we've had some powerhouse storms here in the Chicago area for the month of November. If you look on the weather map, actually, you will see this, you will see that the weather map is reflective of this. We don't see any strong storms in the United States. But we own the ocean area. We just witnessed something unbelievable to me. And nor Easter last week nor Easter, he gets its energy from contrast and temperatures. That thing moved off to the Atlantic Ocean. And it became a named sub tropical storm, a named sub tropical storm.Unknown 1:23I thinkUnknown 1:28I appreciate the excitement in the crowd this evening, very, very much. And we'll be able to continue on with that. But not only that, it also moved into the tropics. So today it's a tropical storm. It's it's a regular tropical storm, the type of thing that comes off of Africa, nobody would think and no one would have a half a million and a billion years that this thing came from a North Eastern, we've seen the opposite. We've seen these tropical storms, they move on to the coast over here in the country, and then they develop into a north east or they run into a front they pull away from the warm waters and that thing starts to fall apart then it runs into a front and it kind of reorganizes it turns into a nor'easter that we've seen before. I've never seen this. I don't know. It's, it's so why haven't I seen this before? It's anyways, the sub tears, the big caution, the really big question is, as of 2002, apparently, as the 2002, we started to named sub tropical storms, it's an official thing, we start to name these sub tropical storms, I assume the criteria for a sub tropical storm is the same thing for a tropical storm. I think it's when a storm reaches maximum sustained winds of 40 miles per hour. It gets its name. That's what I believe. So whatever it does in the tropics, that's what it does in north north of the tropics and sub tropical areas. What's phenomenal about this storm, before we get to my question is that this storm, it's not even over such warm waters. And it's getting its energy from the water. It's a tropical system. So it's really interesting stuff. But this is something that probably is a no November deal. This is a special November deal. Because a lot of things are relative. That's the truth. The rising air is really relative, even zero degree air, I think they will start rising is if it's warm air, if it's 30 below zero all around it. So you have to deal with that. Yeah, the waters are cooler. They're not really so warm. But it could very well be that the air is rising at a rapid pace. Apparently it is because this thing has developed into developed initially into a subtropical storm now into a tropical storm. The other thing that's unique over here is that it's not hitting land. This thing wouldn't be making any headlines at all the except for the fact that it is except for the fact that it wouldn't be making any headlines because it's not hitting in any area. And you know, for those storm lovers, for those people who hate the storm lovers, because they think maybe that the storm Lovers don't care about humanity because people get hurt and stuff. Well this is the one time the storm lovers get to express themselves like never before. Because this is like never before because this is not hitting any...
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