Light Rain

Light Rain possible today, Thursday, and tomorrow, Friday. From NOAA’s forecast discussion at 8:30 am this morning:

“LIGHT RAIN OVER PORTIONS OF THE N BAY. OBSERVATIONS SINCE LAST NIGHT SHOW THAT HAWKEYE RAWS HAD .07 INCHES AND VENADO HAS RECORDED .16 INCHES. EARLY PANELS OF THE 12Z PANELS HAVE INITIALIZED FAIRLY WELL WITH PLACEMENT OF LIGHT
PRECIP. THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON THE LIGHT PRECIP IS FORECAST TO SPREAD
SOUTH AND EAST. BEST CHANCE FOR PRECIP WILL LIKELY BE OVER
TERRAIN FAVOR LOCATIONS WITH OROGRAPHIC LIFT. TOTAL RAINFALL AMOUNTS
THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON WILL BE AT MOST A FEW TENTHS. THIS EVENING AND
EARLY TONIGHT SHOWERS WILL LIKELY TAPER OFF AS THE WAA AND ISENTROPIC
LIFT SHIFTS EAST. AS MENTIONED IN THE PREVIOUS DISCUSSION…NEXT
BATCH OF LIGHT RAIN WILL OCCUR WHEN THE COLD FRONT SWINGS THROUGH
FRIDAY MORNING AND AFTERNOON. PRECIP AMOUNTS WILL ONCE AGAIN BE ON
THE LIGHT SIDE.”

El Niño Update

From the monthly NOAA report:

“There continues to be disagreement among the models on the eventual strength of El Niño, but the majority indicate that the three-month average Niño-3.4 SST index value will range between +1.0°C and +1.5°C during the Northern Hemisphere winter (Fig. 5). Consistent with the historical evolution of El Niño, a peak in SST anomalies is expected sometime during November-January. At this time, there is a high degree of uncertainty over how long this event will persist. Most of the models suggest that this event will last through March-May 2010, although the most likely outcome is that El Niño will peak at least at moderate strength (3-month Niño-3.4 SST index of +1.0°C or greater) and last through at least the Northern Hemisphere winter 2009-10.

Expected El Niño impacts during November 2009-January 2010 include enhanced precipitation over the central tropical Pacific Ocean and a continuation of drier-than-average conditions over Indonesia. For the contiguous United States, potential impacts include above-average precipitation for Florida, central and eastern Texas, and California, with below-average precipitation for parts of the Pacific Northwest. Above-average temperatures and below-average snowfall is most likely for the Northern Rockies, Northern Plains, and Upper Midwest, while below-average temperatures are expected for the southeastern states.”

Weather Changes

Today, the NOAA forecast discussion had this to say:
“COOLER TEMPERATURES ARE ON THERE WAY TOMORROW WITH 10 TO 20 DEGREES
OF COOLING EXPECTED. THE BIGGEST CHANGES WILL BE SEEN ALONG THE
COAST WITH THE RETURN OF ONSHORE FLOW TO THE AREA. THESE COOLER
TEMPERATURES WILL USHER IN A SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS THURSDAY AS A
COLD FRONT ENTERS NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. BEHIND THIS COLD FRONT SEVERAL
UPPER-LEVEL DISTURBANCES WILL PASS OVER THE AREA PROVIDING A SLIGHT
CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION THROUGH THE WEEKEND.”

Also, there is a meeting Thursday (11/5) at one of the cottages at the Big Sur Lodge to discuss Highway One issues (bicycles, trash, etc.), and formulate a presentation for the Big Sur Multi-Agency Advisory Council Meeting on Friday the 13th. For details on Thursday’s meeting, call Jack Ellwanger 667-2025.

Monday Weather Report

Today’s glorious weather to continue through tomorrow, then a drop of 5 to 10 degrees on Wednesday. Guess I better plan my garden work for tomorrow! There is a chance of rain on Friday, but currently that is just for the bay area, not for down here. I did read a few days ago (and for the life of me, I can’t remember where) that El Niño was strengthening for this winter. We will all be keeping an eye on that! Have a glorious Monday, everyone!

Sunday on Top o’ the World

The weather today is unbelievable. It is why I love Fall. Nights are cool enough to sleep, the bugs are pretty much gone — although I did see the honey bees pollinating the pepper plants — and the days can be quite warm and sunny.

I’ve been working too hard at my job, and not working hard enough in the garden. Today, I changed the equation. I put in a couple of leisurely hours in the garden this morning (gotta start slow, or my body would revolt), and stopped to do the dishes. I love multi-tasking. Clean both my dishes and my fingernails at the same time. Don’t try this if you use an automatic dishwasher.

I had this old wheelbarrow just hanging around, not really doing anything useful, just sort of getting rusty. I have been thinking about making it into a planter. Today I did.
DSC_4520
Hmmm … should I have painted it first? Rustic more my style, I think — or at least my lifestyle.

First, I lined it with plastic, hoping it will rust out that much later. Then, I gathered up all the 5 gallon pots I had used for the nicotina rustica, which had already been harvested, and dumped the nice soil all in the wheelbarrow.

I took the rootbound Shasta Daisy from its pot on the deck, and planted it in the middle of the wheelbarrow, cutting it way back, first. Trust me, this will get big and busy by next Spring.
DSC_4523

I planted some bulbs that were just beginning to sprout (some South African exotic – which is why they are always in pots) and there is room for some of the bulbs I plan on buying tomorrow.
DSC_4524

This is the overall effect. Those are yellow pear tomatoes and jalapeño peppers in the background. They will come out next week so I can prepare the bed for more bulbs.

DSC_4522

After I finished my wheelbarrow planter, I relaxed on the deck for a while (which also got a clean-up) and watched the hang gliders soar from the top of Plaskett — er, I meant Prewitt, haven’t been able to soar from the top of Plaskett since I closed it in 1996. Very peaceful and quiet. I love watching them!

It was hard going inside to finish up a brief due tomorrow, but I eased the burden, somewhat by opening all the doors and windows. My desk is positioned to get the Cone Peak view, so … making the money to buy the bulbs, and bareroot roses, and fruit trees, and seeds and all sorts of stuff to bring my garden back to the glory it once enjoyed.