Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5
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To be fair and balanced, I keep picking on Chuck for his lack of credibility, so I need to call out all of the other posters on this thread who deny any type of change, since it really isn't helping the credibility of the side who relies on evidence and science.
I highly recommend watching Murray Hartman's presentation on 110 years of Lacombe weather(or it may be updated to 112 years since I saw it and discussed it with him 2 years ago). His conclusion was that weather has improved by every possible measure in the 110 years. I have brought this up in previous threads, but as usual, Chuck only considers it valid information if it comes from one of his approved sources, so it was ignored until today.
The article in the cut and paste, conveniently neglected to mention the remainder of Murray's findings. From what I recall Extreme hot days, extreme cold, extreme rainfall, dry periods, rogue frosts, have all been declining over the length of the records, in complete disagreement with the alarmists who promised more of all of them. Heat units have not improved nearly as much as the growing season length, mostly due to the fact that day time highs temperatures haven't increased nearly as much as night time. And obviously it is the higher night time lows that stretch the effective growing season out. And the frost free period has been almost entirely in the spring, not the fall, consistent with the observations of some posters here about falls not improving.
When I check my own area from 1950 to 2010: http://albertaclimaterecords.com/ http://albertaclimaterecords.com/ About 60 km west of Red Deer if you want to check it yourself.
Our growing degree days greater than 5C have hardly increased at all (either side of 2%), yet our growing season has increased by between 10 and 15 days, almost entirely in the spring, not the fall. Lacombe has seen even more dramatic change in the same period as Murray Noted, and evidently he has added Fort Vermillion to his presentation and it has increased even more yet. And the Lacombe research weather station is one of the few that doesn't suffer from Urban Heat Effect, and has been in the same location all along, so is more reliable than almost every other record, which is why he chose it.
I don't doubt that at all based on anecdotal evidence.
Those are genuine changes in weather in western Canada, all for the better, and over a long enough period to be considered climate as opposed to weather. Results may vary in your precise location.
As for David Phillips, he has written books and calendars about extreme weather of our past. Cognitive Dissonance is the only explanation for his views on modern extreme weather. I get the impression that he fully understands, but plays along to get along.
I highly recommend watching Murray Hartman's presentation on 110 years of Lacombe weather(or it may be updated to 112 years since I saw it and discussed it with him 2 years ago). His conclusion was that weather has improved by every possible measure in the 110 years. I have brought this up in previous threads, but as usual, Chuck only considers it valid information if it comes from one of his approved sources, so it was ignored until today.
The article in the cut and paste, conveniently neglected to mention the remainder of Murray's findings. From what I recall Extreme hot days, extreme cold, extreme rainfall, dry periods, rogue frosts, have all been declining over the length of the records, in complete disagreement with the alarmists who promised more of all of them. Heat units have not improved nearly as much as the growing season length, mostly due to the fact that day time highs temperatures haven't increased nearly as much as night time. And obviously it is the higher night time lows that stretch the effective growing season out. And the frost free period has been almost entirely in the spring, not the fall, consistent with the observations of some posters here about falls not improving.
When I check my own area from 1950 to 2010: http://albertaclimaterecords.com/ http://albertaclimaterecords.com/ About 60 km west of Red Deer if you want to check it yourself.
Our growing degree days greater than 5C have hardly increased at all (either side of 2%), yet our growing season has increased by between 10 and 15 days, almost entirely in the spring, not the fall. Lacombe has seen even more dramatic change in the same period as Murray Noted, and evidently he has added Fort Vermillion to his presentation and it has increased even more yet. And the Lacombe research weather station is one of the few that doesn't suffer from Urban Heat Effect, and has been in the same location all along, so is more reliable than almost every other record, which is why he chose it.
I don't doubt that at all based on anecdotal evidence.
Those are genuine changes in weather in western Canada, all for the better, and over a long enough period to be considered climate as opposed to weather. Results may vary in your precise location.
As for David Phillips, he has written books and calendars about extreme weather of our past. Cognitive Dissonance is the only explanation for his views on modern extreme weather. I get the impression that he fully understands, but plays along to get along.
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