Submitted by dave on Fri, 11/13/2009 - 11:08pm

The National Weather Service was forecasting for cooler temperatures with some breezy, wet conditions for this evening – we got a bit more than that. I first noticed lightning, which is rare for Seattle. Then the wind picked-up. More lightning. A bit of “rattle, rattle” sounded on the roof. Nothing serious, just amusing. I ran downstairs to let Anne know that it sounded like it might be hailing. By the time I got downstairs, hail larger than Cocoa Puffs (as much as I’d like to claim the “Cocoa Puff” metric as a “man measurement”, Anne devised it!) was banging against the side of the house. I called my neighbor nearby to suggest that this was somehow his fault; he wasn’t in much of a joking mood as his wife’s car was parked outside. It was probably the most pronounced hail storm I’ve seen in the Seattle area. Just when we thought it was over, it would start again. I’m sure it only lasted a couple of minutes, but it seemed to go on-and-on. Three hours later, much of the hail is still on the ground; it is melting, slowly. The temperature? 36 degrees – burrrrr!
Submitted by dave on Wed, 07/29/2009 - 3:50pm
Seattle is known for its lush green surroundings, cold clear water, and temperate weather... except today. Today we set a new record for the hottest date in Seattle history: 102 degrees. Our normal high temperature for this date is 76. We'll be lucky if the low temperature is 76 tonight. The challenge for people (and pets) here is the inability to escape from the heat. The vast majority of homes have no air conditioning. Even many small businesses have no air conditioning. Those that have air conditioning are discovering that their systems can't keep up with this much heat, or are succumbing to power outages as demand races upward. My dentist's office called yesterday to warn me that they have to postpone my cleaning; the power was out.
Our house has pretty good insulation, so we close it up at about 10:00 a.m. (when the outside temp begins to exceed the ambient temperature in the house) and leave it closed up while the temperature races upward. We’ll keep it closed until the temps cool back down tonight – probably after 7 p.m. Currently, it's about 82 in the house (at 3:45 p.m.) and will probably climb to 84 before the afternoon is over.
Then we’ll throw open every window and turn on the whole-house ventilation system. Our furnace includes a whole-house mode that pulls in outside air to flush radon gas, which is common in the Pacific Northwest, out of the house. In the case of warm weather, it will also pull cooler air from outside and reduce the house temperature quickly.
It’s been a year of interesting weather – far more snow storms than usual, and a “real” summer. I wonder what’s next.
Submitted by dave on Tue, 12/23/2008 - 11:02am
We've added a new security system to our house: ice sickles. The example in the photo is over three feet long, over an inch in diameter, and very pointy. I'm sure that it will dig a pretty significant hole when it drops from the second-story roof. It is as beautiful, as it is deadly... bwah!
My car remains completely immobile; up to its hubcaps in snow. The weather forecasters are suggesting more snow tonight, then rain and snow mixed for the next few days. The Seattle area could see some substantial flooding this weekend; we should be fine since we’re 400 feet higher than most of Seattle on a gently sloping hill.
Submitted by dave on Wed, 07/02/2008 - 7:34pm

Tonight we heard the peel of thunder in Edmonds. To put this event into perspective, we haven't heard thunder here since this time last year. If you know me very well, you know that I
love a hearty thunderstorm. I suspect this storm is several miles away; the thunder is pretty tame and not very frequent. Still, it's music to my ears to hear it again.
Submitted by dave on Sat, 03/15/2008 - 4:38pm

If you've known me for very long, then you know that I'm not particularly handy with physical projects. Give me a keyboard and I can do wonders - but a socket set is dangerous in my hands. Since we purchased our Edmonds home, the Genie "Stealth" garage door opener has been humming - getting louder as time has passed. One night last month it was so loud that I could hear it in our bedroom.
I called Genie and they shipped out a new transformer to replace the one that was humming. Today, I replaced the transformer - seen top, right in the photo. Only a small blood letting was necessary to complete the project. We should know in a couple of hours (once the new transformer has warmed up) if the job was a success.
Submitted by dave on Mon, 01/28/2008 - 6:13am


I awoke this morning to a couple of inches of snow - sitting on top of an icy bed. Our house sits over 400 feet higher than Puget Sound, so we tend to get a little colder than most of the Seattle metro area whose temperatures are moderated by Puget Sound.
The photograph has the odd orange tint because of the local street lights. Their light bounces off of the low snow clouds to produce the eerie, odd color. The human eye performs some natural compensation, but the camera ruthlessly shows the truth.
Starbucks has a fine remote-computing connection, so I'll dig into work from home! No "Snow Day" for me. Jessica will be unhappy when she wakes up - her school was scheduled to be closed today for teacher's in-service anyway.
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