[NatureNS] The depths of winter

From: "John and Nhung" <nhungjohn@eastlink.ca>
To: <naturens@chebucto.ns.ca>
References: <21a6406f-8b37-bf8e-a2f2-8256e15b5471@payzant.net>
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2019 10:45:08 -0400
Thread-index: AQIkKCa0XuB+4v5IkV7kpFG+pgSXdaVAlyBg
Precedence: bulk
Return-Path: <naturens-mml-owner@chebucto.ns.ca>
Original-Recipient: rfc822;"| (cd /csuite/info/Environment/FNSN/MList; /csuite/lib/arch2html)"

next message in archive
next message in thread
previous message in archive
previous message in thread
Index of Subjects

Index of Subjects
The value of those data could be considerable.  What sorts of trends do you notice, for instance?  First eight years vs. second eight years?  Or first five, middle sic, last five?

Just thinking out loud!

-----Original Message-----
From: naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca [mailto:naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca] On Behalf Of Peter Payzant
Sent: February 14, 2019 9:27 AM
To: naturens@chebucto.ns.ca
Subject: [NatureNS] The depths of winter

My wife and I have been keeping daily temperature records at our home in 
Waverley for 16 years. Using similar processing to that employed by 
Environment Canada, we produce a graph showing the "average" (not quite 
the right term, but it will do) temperatures for each day of the year.

February 14 is always a happy day for us, because this is the coldest 
day of the year here, on average. The average temperature for this date 
at our home is -6.7 degrees. Tomorrow, the average temperature is -6.4, 
and the temps continue to rise from now on until late July.

So, for us, today is the real depth of winter, and starting tomorrow we 
can expect to see the days slowly getting warmer as we begin to climb 
out of winter once again.

--- Peter Payzant


next message in archive
next message in thread
previous message in archive
previous message in thread
Index of Subjects