Juan-A-Be

Joined
Jan 27, 2008
Messages
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Finally...... Spring!!:D

They are calling this one "Juan-A-Be" in reference to the famous "White Juan" blizzard of February 2004 which paralyzed this region with 100+ cm of snow and devastating coastal winds.

Other forecasts(http://www.theweathernetwork.com/ne...orm-of-the-year-to-hit-atlantic-canada/23856/) put snowfall amounts higher in the range of 50-70 cm, and stronger sustained winds along the Atlantic coast(where I live) well into the Cat 1 hurricane range driven by 956 mb. I live right on the Atlantic coast of Cape Breton where we should get a fine blow, but Rick Marchand will get hit much harder "up" in the southwestern tip of the province. Have fun buddy!!

"10:48 AM ADT Tuesday 25 March 2014
Blizzard warning in effect for:

Sydney Metro and Cape Breton County

Heavy snow and widespread blowing snow on Wednesday.

This is a warning that blizzard conditions with near-zero visibilities are expected in these regions. Monitor weather conditions..listen for updated statements.

A low pressure system developing off the U.S. seaboard today is forecast to intensify rapidly as it tracks toward the Maritimes on Wednesday. The storm is expected to track near Sable Island Wednesday evening before moving on to Newfoundland on Thursday.

Snow is forecast to begin overnight in Southwestern Nova Scotia and spread to the remainder of the province Wednesday morning. The snow is expected to change to rain late in the day over the eastern half of the mainland and Cape Breton. Elsewhere the snow is expected to taper off Wednesday night. Strong northeast winds will develop during the day Wednesday and gusts up to 100 km/h are possible later Wednesday afternoon and evening. These very strong winds combined with heavy snow will cause widespread whiteout conditions in blowing snow. In general between 25 to 40 centimetres of snow can be expected with this system over most of Nova Scotia. However, some areas over Western and Northern Nova Scotia could locally see in excess of 50 cm, and given the extensive blowing and drifting snow there could be significant variability in snow amounts received within any forecast region.

Additionally on Wednesday afternoon and evening higher than normal water levels combined with rapidly rising wave activity may produce local flooding along much of the Atlantic coast of Mainland Nova Scotia during the high tide late Wednesday. These high water levels combined with the heavy pounding surf could give rise to some coastal erosion in some areas. In the Northumberland Strait water levels will also rise Wednesday evening but appear not to coincide with high tide.

Les Suetes winds gusting up to 160 km/h are expected to develop late Wednesday afternoon and diminish Wednesday evening.


See y'all when we dig out and get power back.:thumbup::thumbup:

-Peter
 
Must be us northerners who think differently. I insisted on a wood burning fireplace in my house, and the builder couldn't understand why. I have kept my house from freezing no less than 10 times in the past three years when we lost power or heat, sometimes for days on end. I have a stand alone propane powered generator to provide emergency electricity as well.
 
When it comes to weather we have been lucky up here (400 plus miles north of Willie). The only time we have lost power was when some fool ran into a power pole south of us. We don't get the wind that happens down south so I think that makes the difference.
 
Wait... you have fools in Canada? I thought the USA cornered the market on them! I need to see who fell down on the job. In the meantime, send those fools further south, please.
 
Bah, that wasnt a storm. My power didn't flicker and I even got mail. Too bad I had already taken the day off for something else, wasted snow day.
 
Hey Tats,

Good to see you.

For us, the wind later that night and the next day, gusts of 129 at Sydney Airport and 144 in Main-a-Deau, were worse than the storm itself. We got about 20-25cm of snow, then BUCKETS of ice and rain that melted most of the snow. The coolest part was the harbor filled up with truck-size chunks of flow ice. At low tide it looks like a martian landscape with huge plateaus of 4-ft thick ice layered up and stranded on the now dry shallows.

-Peter
 
Here's a few photos of the ice field left at low tide in Louisbourg Harbour. I shot these today at 2:00. It is now 8:00pm and, with thanks to a north wind, the harbour is completely clear of all that ice.



In the background of this shot is the famous Fortress Louisbourg:






My house is in the background on the hill at 11:00.


Playing hide and seek:






Bye for now!
 
Nice pics, you must have a fantastic view from your house. Do any shop windows face that way, Im surprised you get anything done if they do.
 
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