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Originally posted by BABYBULL24
Caused by Cirrus clouds a precursor to a hell of a storm. There was a halo around the moon pre-Sandy that was scene as far away as the Mid-west.
Originally posted by minkmouse
Don't know enough about meteorology to comment but the argument seems a bit thin to me. If I'm not wrong, you're saying that because a certain type of cloud appeared followed by a bad storm, then, because the clouds have appeared yet again, the results will be the same? Would that not make meteorology kind of useless? I mean even more so than it already is at predicting weather.
Originally posted by Bone75
Originally posted by BABYBULL24
Caused by Cirrus clouds a precursor to a hell of a storm. There was a halo around the moon pre-Sandy that was scene as far away as the Mid-west.
Looks like you were right. The front that just came through here was a doozy. Tornado warnings all day long. Lots of damage.
Hey this is good to know if we ever find ourselves without power.
Originally posted by DAVID64
www.weather.com...
Looking at a current weather map, there's storms in West and North Texas, Colorado, heading over into those areas.
Something may come of it, but it would be a bit unusual for tornadoes this time of year. Although with the "off" weather we've had, nothings impossible.