More West Coast Rain!

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Hello Summer!
Joined
Nov 1, 2005
Posts
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:eek: Just when you thought it was safe (and dry enough) to visit the West Coast....

Bear! I've a bone to pick with you! :mad: You said you'd captured and locked away the little green snake! What the heck happened? :confused: Not only has it stormed like crazy all this Sunday, but we've predictions for rain for Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday AND next Sunday!!!

You can' hide in your cave forever! Come out and 'xplain, you cowardly ursine!
 
*finally manages to kick closet open and roll, a hogtied bundle, into the room* mmpfph, mmf, mlmlmlmpf!
 
"It don't rain in California, girl, don't they warn ya, it pours, man it pours."
 
I heard they now have a lifeguard on duty at Sunset And Vine. :rolleyes:
 
I can't find it now but there was a picture of a guy riding a board down the street. I think it was in Malibu.
 
Would y'all mind sending that rain over to the southeast? It's not even April and we're already in a drought.

I'm happy to help collect any snakes, especially if they can chase away the cats that use my garden as a litter box.
 
You think you got trouble with a little rain?
It's snowing here. The area where I live was once called quail run. I now have several quail huddled under some evergreen bushes, in my back yard. They have their feathers puffed up, to insulate them from the cold.

It's supposta be spring!
 
On the other hand -

Worst Texas Drought in 44 Years Eroding Wheat, Beef Supply

March 21 (Bloomberg) -- Hussein Allidina, head of commodities research at Morgan Stanley, talks about the outlook for oil and wheat prices. Allidina speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.”

The worst Texas drought in 44 years is damaging the state’s wheat crop and forcing ranchers to reduce cattle herds, as rising demand for U.S. food sends grain and meat prices higher.

Texas, the biggest U.S. cattle producer and second-largest winter-wheat grower, got just 4.7 inches (12 centimeters) of rain on average in the five months through February, the least for the period since 1967, State Climatologist John Nielsen- Gammon said. More than half the wheat fields and pastures were rated in poor or very poor condition on March 20.
 
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