Educate me, please

R. Richard

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Educate me. "Spend any time at all in Hilo and you'll find that rain is a fact of life in this tin-roofed port and farming center on the Big Island of Hawaii. Its average annual precipitation of 129 inches makes Hilo the rainiest city in the nation." However, WeatherBill, Inc. says that Mobile, Alabama is the rainiest city in the United States with 67 inches average annual rainfall. Is it possible that 129 inches of average annual rainfall is somehow less than 67 inches average annual rainfall? Is it possible that Hawaii is not part of the United States? [I would like to see someone from WeatherBill, Inc. go to Hilo Hawaii some Friday afternoon and make the statement in front of a few dozen Primo fueled mokes.] Is it possible that WeatherBill, Inc. is looking for trouble with people who read the newspapers? [In the area where I live we have shortages in some things, trouble is NOT one of them.] Educate me.

Study Reveals Top 10 Wettest U.S. Cities

Do you think Seattle is the rainiest city in the United States? Well, think again.

Mobile, Alabama, actually topped a new list of soggiest cities, with more than 5 feet of rainfall annually, according to a study conducted by San Francisco-based WeatherBill, Inc.

The Southeast dominated the most rainy list, while the Pacific Northwest never enters the list until Olympia, Washington pops up at number 24.

The 10 rainiest cities in the U.S. by amount of annual rainfall include:

Mobile, Alabama--67 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy days Pensacola, Florida--65 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days New Orleans, Louisiana--64 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy days West Palm Beach, Florida--63 inches average annual rainfall; 58 average annual rainy days Lafayette, Louisiana--62 inches average annual rainfall; 55 average annual rainy days Baton Rouge, Louisiana--62 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days Miami, Florida--62 inches average annual rainfall; 57 average annual rainy days Port Arthur, Texas--61 inches average annual rainfall; 51 average annual rainy days Tallahassee, Florida--61 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days Lake Charles, Louisiana--58 inches average annual rainfall; 50 average annual rainy days

The study ranked 195 cities by the amount of rainfall they received annually over a 30-year period, although Olympia actually had the most rainy days on average across the three decades (63) of all the cities in the study. Mobile came in second on the latter scale, with 59 average annual rainy days.

Southeastern cities are so prevalent on the list because the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico fuel storms that frequently soak the region, particularly between June and November.

The study also found that in the past 30 years, the East and Southeast seemed to be getting wetter, while the West got drier. Florida, Louisiana and Alabama were the wettest states, while California, Montana, Nevada and Arizona were the driest (Las Vegas took the top spot for driest city).

Average rainfall was highest in the United States between July and September and lowest between January and March.
 
Possibly they are talking about the Continental United States.

Cat
 
Chicago isn't the windiest either. I know when I was 19 it was ranked 16th windiest and my Hometown Great Falls, Montana was ranked in the to five.
 
Dar~ said:
Chicago isn't the windiest either. I know when I was 19 it was ranked 16th windiest and my Hometown Great Falls, Montana was ranked in the to five.
How exactly do they decide that? By average wind, excessive gusts, or some other criteria? Cities always put too much "civic pride" in those descriptions. It does get windy and cold, but I never understood why it was important to people to call it the "windiest" (or worry about how tall the Sears tower was).
 
S-Des said:
How exactly do they decide that? By average wind, excessive gusts, or some other criteria? Cities always put too much "civic pride" in those descriptions. It does get windy and cold, but I never understood why it was important to people to call it the "windiest" (or worry about how tall the Sears tower was).

Checkout Lou Rawls.
 
SeaCat said:
Possibly they are talking about the Continental United States.

Cat

Possibly they think they are talking about the continental United States, but the damn story just says United States.
 
Dar~ said:
Chicago isn't the windiest either. I know when I was 19 it was ranked 16th windiest and my Hometown Great Falls, Montana was ranked in the to five.

Actually, Chicago was called the "Windy City" for it's popularity as a location for political conventions, being in the middle of the country.

Wind velocity was not a factor, but tell that to anyone whose lost a hat or umbrella on State Street. ;)
 
I'm not surprised that Alabama is right up there at the top. The humidity here is sometimes so high that it's literally hard to breathe when you're outside.
 
TE999 said:
Actually, Chicago was called the "Windy City" for it's popularity as a location for political conventions, being in the middle of the country.

Wind velocity was not a factor, but tell that to anyone whose lost a hat or umbrella on State Street. ;)
The coldest I've ever been was in January about 10 years ago. The temp was around 0 with a fair wind (maybe 20 mph). I was dropping off a demo at a radio station in the John Hancock building, which was undergoing rennovations. There were plywood sheets surrounding the building, which had the effect of creating a wind tunnel. I had to walk about 100 feet through them to get to the entrance. I can't tell you how cold it was, but I've been in 60 below wind chill and wasn't nearly that cold. My face completely froze (even with a hood & mask) and I couldn't breathe. I honestly wondered if I was going to collapse right there. *shiver*
 
TE999 said:
Actually, Chicago was called the "Windy City" for it's popularity as a location for political conventions, being in the middle of the country.

Wind velocity was not a factor, but tell that to anyone whose lost a hat or umbrella on State Street. ;)
I know, thats my point. Everyone now expects it to be windy when that wasn't the real deal at all.;)
 
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