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Every Thing Else Board
My rant for the day
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<blockquote data-quote="GoWyo" data-source="post: 1846575" data-attributes="member: 38220"><p>Temperature inversions in the mountain valleys usually are the cause of bitter cold. The cold usually has to come from Canada and then it just sits down in the valleys with no wind to move it out. Each day as the sun goes down the coldest air rolls down off the mountains and sinks into the valleys. Big Piney, Lander and Riverton, Worland, Jackson Hole can get pretty cold. West Yellowstone, MT has frequently been a cold spot. With inversions, it can be -30*F in the valley and +30*F in one of the mountain passes. I live in a valley on the high plains and we get some of the same cold snaps that hit eastern Montana and South Dakota. The wind is what can make things miserable here more than the cold. 10 below and a 20-30 mph wind is hard on stuff. Winter 22-23 was miserable. This year, other than the -27*F period in January, has been like living in the banana belt.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GoWyo, post: 1846575, member: 38220"] Temperature inversions in the mountain valleys usually are the cause of bitter cold. The cold usually has to come from Canada and then it just sits down in the valleys with no wind to move it out. Each day as the sun goes down the coldest air rolls down off the mountains and sinks into the valleys. Big Piney, Lander and Riverton, Worland, Jackson Hole can get pretty cold. West Yellowstone, MT has frequently been a cold spot. With inversions, it can be -30*F in the valley and +30*F in one of the mountain passes. I live in a valley on the high plains and we get some of the same cold snaps that hit eastern Montana and South Dakota. The wind is what can make things miserable here more than the cold. 10 below and a 20-30 mph wind is hard on stuff. Winter 22-23 was miserable. This year, other than the -27*F period in January, has been like living in the banana belt. [/QUOTE]
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