Saturday, March 8, 2014

February 2014 Blue Duck Weather News


February 2014 Weather News!

What an unbelievable weather month around the world! In the North East U.S. it’s being called the “angry winter of 2014.” So much snow and record cold a new depressive disorder is being named for it. In the West, for the first time in history, California ranchers and farmers may receive no water allocations for their crops this spring. (Remember no farms no food) On one day during the Sochi Winter Olympics it was warmer there than Florida! Some say the weather there was the biggest adversary to the athletes.

And here in the Arizona desert we are experiencing temperature and fire condition not normally seen until April and May. No rain for over two months, rattlers already crawling and temperatures twenty degrees higher at the end of the month than the beginning. What the hell is going on?

As this planet is spinning madly on its axis weather is bound to change regardless of the politics of global warming but some of the extremes reported in the past editions of Blue Duck Weather, and this edition, are extreme.

Leaving politics and economics aside Blue Duck Weather attempts to report the facts only, as they occur with a bit of sick humor thrown in to keep you sane. And how weather does play into the economic impact on the world probably doesn’t have a price tag that is even imaginable. I knew it to be true instinctively but never thought or read about it in the context I am about to present.
Energy Poverty- 3.5 million people lack adequate access to energy. 4 million people die each year from energy poverty. Millions around the world must choose between paying for food or power. This is the world’s number one human and environmental crisis. This is “where the rubber meets” the road in terms of economies, world powers and weather. Without the cooperation of the weather for sustainability all else is not possible.

Read about a thief taking advantage of icy weather, what SAD means, the state with the worst drought in five hundred years, possibly the worst drought in Arizona in five hundred years according to one scientist, the warmest winter Olympics on record, tornadoes with snow on the ground!, a snake handling pastor who gets his just rewards and so much more in this exciting edition of Blue Duck Weather!

The average temperature on The Land for February was 58.95 degrees. The average temperature at Talking Trees and Antelope Hill was 45.82 degrees.

There was no rain and hasn’t been any since December 20th, 2013.

The low water level in Lake Powell is startling at 41% and will ultimately affect the water rationing that will happen in California. Lake Mead is 48% full, Pleasant is 76% full and Roosevelt 48%. If the great lakes of the southwest turn into piss holes we are fucked!

2-1- For the first time in California’s history there were 407 wildfires last year, a new and terrible record. Indians and Catholics alike are performing rain dances in the state. (I would like to see what a dance party with the two together would be like.)

During California’s most severe drought of all time state officials announce they won’t allocate water to agencies that serve 25 million people and one million acres of farmland. This is the first time in the 54 year history of the State Water Project that it has taken such drastic actions. It was taken to conserve the little water that remains behind the dams in the state. (What does this mean anyway, water not sold to neighboring states? Is there a water war in our future?)

Prince Charles has called people who deny human caused climate change as a “headless chicken brigade” who is ignoring overwhelming scientific evidence.

So far Chicago has had four and a half feet of snow this season, thirty nine inches in Detroit.

2-2- Third warmest January on record in Phoenix, Arizona. But on this date in 1939 there was .05”of snow in Phoenix.
And with a major winter storm in the plains Pux. Phil says six more weeks of winter for weary citizens of the Midwest and Northeast. (He was shot to death for this prediction.)

A man (bastard) is accused of using a tow truck to steal cars that were abandoned in Atlanta last week after the snow storm and traffic jams.

2-3- The storm that dropped a foot of snow in Texas and ten inches in the Ohio Valley is headed to the Northeast, with thousands of flights cancelled.

2-4- Second winter storm in a week to dump a foot of snow in the Northeast and Midwest. The storm will impact 32 states and two thousand miles. Winter Storm Warnings are posted from the Rockies to southern Maine. More Americans under alerts than any storm of last year. Every business is shut down in Kansas with the warning “Stay Home!”

A German shepherd on a walk with its owner is swallowed up by a ten foot deep sink hole that suddenly opened in a park in New York. Firefighters dug a hole wide enough at the top to get in and rescue the dog. When they pulled the pooch up from the watery hole the dog “owner” said “It was a beautiful thing. He was wagging his tail and looking at all the people.”

A ten year old girl is in serious condition after being impaled by a metal rod while sledding north of Baltimore, Maryland.

2-5- Arizona snow pack is only 15% of normal. (God, it’s going to be a brutal summer if rain or snow doesn’t come quickly.)
From his frozen location in Colorado RyDuck reports 18 below zero last night with a wind chill of thirty below. (My duck ass would be frozen solid.)

Millions of people without power and one hundred and fifteen million affected in 32 states from this latest storm. In Maine, Pennsylvania and New Jersey it is snowing two inches per hour. Ten inches of snow in Boston with forty five inches so far this season.

2-6- Power lines snapped by ice and snow and four hundred thousand without power in Pennsylvania. The power company says it is the worst winter storm ever for the state and emergency conditions are declared.

Snow level drops to five thousand feet in Arizona but not much is expected.

In Sochi, Russia on the eve of the Winter Olympics it is fifty degrees. In some parts of the United States it did not reach the freezing mark.

A chemical smell is still in the water after the spill in Charleston, West Virginia even as residents have been told the water is safe to drink.

2-7- Two hundred and twenty two thousand still without power in Pennsylvania.
Two inches of snow at Sunrise, Arizona and five inches at Snow Bowl. And here in the parched deserts it has been 49 days with no rain.

An earth science professor at the University of Arizona says tree ring records this water year, which began October 1st, really stands out as one of the worst single years for drought in the last five hundred!

“Seasonal Affective Disorder.” A serious and severe type of depression far worse than the cabin fever associated with “winter blues” has been “discovered” in the United States. It is because of the continuous cold and dark days of winter.

2-8- 1.11’’ deficit in the “rain bucket” in Phoenix for the year. Usually an inch of rain falls in January and February.
This is the halfway point for winter in the northern hemisphere.

Residents in Tonopah, Arizona protest Hickman’s Family Farms plan to build a farm factory holding 2.2 million stinking ass chickens. Residents want an environmental impact study to determine the impact to health and natural resources. This little community is twenty miles west of Buckeye and residents are simply beside themselves with rage.

A Las Vegas pet shop owner is seen on a security camera setting her store on fire with 22 puppies inside. She was handcuffed, jailed and a two hundred and fifty thousand dollar bond posted. (Get a fucking rope!)(Mrs. Blueduck is totally willing to buy the rope)

A nationwide propane shortage is due largely to the bitter cold and has struck an Indian reservation on the Dakotas’ border. A healthy sixty one year old woman was found dead in a rundown mobile home with an empty propane tank. The morning she died the temp was the same inside as outside the home, one degree above zero. Hypothermia is the suspected cause as the woman had tried to remove some of her clothing before she died.

2-9- “Drought Fears Laid Bare- Alarming Dry January Fuels Greater Worry about Arizona Wildfire Season, West’s Water Supply”. Zero snow recorded in forty four measurement stations in northern Arizona, the first time in thirty years. .01’’ of rain along the Little Colorado, two percent of normal!

Much welcome rain to parts of California. Warm, moisture packed system from the Pacific Ocean known as the “Pineapple Express”. Seven inches of rain in Marin County, three inches of rain in San Francisco and San Jose. Four feet of snow on top of Lake Tahoe Ski Resort. But Southern California is as dry as a bone.

In Portland, Oregon three days of snow brings freezing rain and people told to stay home.
2.9” of snow at the Seattle Tacoma International Airport breaking a record for this day.
115,000 still without power, lights and heat from ice storm several days ago in Pennsylvania and Maryland. (Those poor folks have to be miserable. I hope they all have fireplaces with plenty of wood stocked.)

2-10- Eighty percent of the Great Lakes are frozen but just how thick the ice is a major safety concern.
60 degrees in Sochi, Russia, warmer than Indiana.

The governor of Georgia declares a State of Emergency for the next two days due to pending ice storm. Schools are closed and emergency shelters are being put up.

Britain’s worst rainfall in 250 years (!) has stranded some residents in Moreland on a forty square mile patch of land since Christmas!

A search resumes today for a man who jumped from an icy Interstate bridge into a river to avoid a skidding tractor trailer in Arkansas. He was among three who left their vehicles after an accident. All three quickly jumped and two rescued.

Rescuers stayed overnight with a stranded hiker near Salome, Arizona. A man and two women wearing light clothing had gotten trapped on a ledge. It was too dark when rescuers reached them so they parked their asses until morning. “Always be prepared. You don’t know what’s going to happen when you are hiking.”

A zoo in Copenhagen kills a healthy giraffe because rules imposed by the European Zoo Association to deter inbreeding. Among seven others at the zoo “Marvin was put down with a pistol because there already were a lot of giraffes with similar genes in the breeding program” The meat was fed to carnivores at the zoo. (Fucking mankind loves to play God whenever there is an opportunity in the name of science or religion.)

2-11- Approaching ice storm in the South described as “catastrophic by the National Weather Service. An event of historical proportions.” A State of Emergency is declared in five states.
Warmest Winter Olympics on record in Sochi, Russia.

2-12- All flights into Atlanta have been cancelled Metro Atlanta devoid of traffic as everyone stays home. One half million without power. And folks in North Carolina walk away from their cars with six inches of snow; more in one day than an entire year.
This time last year it was well below freezing in Phoenix. Now they are flirting with record high temperatures.
Sochi is warmer than the continental U.S. at sixty degrees. It is colder and snowier in parts of Florida!

A Polar bear in a German zoo dies after eating a purse and coat that fell into the enclosure.

2-13- 81 degrees at The Land, twenty degrees above normal!
One hundred million affected in fourteen states with the latest “Super Storm” that has fifteen hundred miles of snow embedded in it. One million travelers affected. 800,000 without power. Both Washington airports closed. Pennsylvania breaks a 140 year old record with four snow falls of four inches or more. Fifty inches of snow so far. National Guard called.
And in sunny Sochi it is 70 degrees.

“The Angry Winter of 2014.” In Pennsylvania there is a one hundred car pileup on black ice with twenty people injured. Some drivers stuck for six hours. Twenty one deaths are blamed for the latest storms in the South and North East.

A Rabies Advisory is issued for Pima and Santa Cruz counties in southern Arizona. Since January 1st, thirteen rabid skunks have been identified. There were only seventeen in these two counties all of last year.

2-14- High temperature records broken in Kingman, Grand Canyon, Flagstaff and Prescott, Arizona. It has been two months with no rain in Phoenix. January and February are critical to this state’s annual rainfall.

From her secluded location in Montana, LaurieDuck reports being snowed in for ten days with her family and livestock.

In New York a pregnant lady loading groceries into the trunk of her car with her husband is struck and killed by a snowplow. Her baby boy was successfully delivered by an emergency C section and doing well. 9.5’’ of snow had fallen before this tragic accident.

2-15- High temperature record of 86 degrees in Phoenix breaks the 83 degree record set in 1977.

88% of the Great Lakes are frozen. They hold one fifth of the world’s fresh water (as polluted as that might be.)
Finally, impressive snow in California mountains. Four to six feet of fresh snow in the Sierras since last week. The same has fallen in the mountains of Colorado and Utah.

Due to relentless ice and snow storms in the U.S. this winter there have been more flight cancellations than in twenty five years. Seventy five thousand domestic flights since December 1st with fourteen thousand this week
Six people have been killed by avalanches this week in the West. Avalanche Warnings have been called out for much of the West. On track for the most folks killed in twenty years. Rapid, heavy snow and unstable snow pack are to blame.

2-16- 84 degree high in Phoenix ties record set in 1977. And this prompts more warm weather mountain rescues in Phoenix. A thirty year old man rescued at Echo Canyon due to heat exhaustion. (Just fucking stay home if you are not prepared!)

Six weeks of nonstop rain in southern England. A taxi driver in Britain killed when his car was crushed by falling block from a building during 85 mph winds.

A “freak wave” also broke five windows on a cruise ship killing and 85 year old man.
There is record snowfall in Japan, more than in fifty years.

“Winter’s Toll.” One foot of snow in New England and 125,000 still without power.

2-17- Eighty-eight degree record high in Phoenix.

Four acre fire near Saguarho Lake.

Rain soaks ranches in drought stricken Honolulu.

January had the most rain since 2005.

Six inches of snow and white out conditions in Chicago. 1350 flights cancelled.

11th bighorn sheep found dead in the Catalina Mountains near Tucson was killed by a mountain lion. Thirty-one sheep were reintroduced to the area in November.

A snake-handling pastor in Kentucky shown in the reality show “Snake salvation” dies after being bitten by a snake. He refused treatment and later succumbed at his home.

2-18- The brush fire near the Salt River two days ago quickly turned into an inferno. It started small but soon 50 foot tall flames jumped a sixty foot wide footpath. “Tinder box conditions not normally seen until May.”

Early onset of 80’s bringing out the rattlers out, not usually seen until March or April in the Phoenix deserts. “Snakes don’t work off a calendar, it’s all about temperatures.” And when they come out they are fucking hungry and mean!

With record amounts of snow cities are running out of salt to treat the roads. Connecticut and Rhode Island declare States of Emergency. They are blasting salt quarries around the clock. (I would like to know what happens to all of that salt when everything melts.)

2-19- One year ago today the snow level was down to two thousand feet in Phoenix. The rare freezing rain event that looks like snow caused many to believe it was in the desert.

Brush fire near Prescott has burned one hundred acres. It was started by someone burning dead tumbleweeds.

Record high in Nashville of 78 degrees and thirty states have tornado warnings posted. This storm system extends from Canada to Georgia and the south side of it is warm, moist air.

2-22- Sixty seven days with no rain in Phoenix.

Tornadoes devastate a town in northern Ohio blowing the roof off of a high school gym.

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation has announced that many California farmers caught in the drought can expect to receive no irrigation water from the federally run Central Valley Project. “The grim levels so far prove that the state is in the throes of one of its driest periods in recorded history.”

2-24- Snowmobiler dies in an avalanche on the Idaho-Montana border. Two others were buried but rescued in time. One man was found with only his head above the snow.

Warm weather, stupidity or both? Air rescuers get a teenager off Squaw Peak in Phoenix after he “began struggling on the trail.”

2-25- Radiation from the tsunami in Japan almost three years ago and the nuclear power plant shutdown is expected to reach the North West coast by April. Levels will be monitored.

2-26- Detroit, Michigan has had its harshest winter in sixty years. With six and a half feet of snow and one hundred days below freezing, this city tops two dozen of the hardest hit.

USDA to spend three million dollars to provide food for the nation’s struggling honeybees. This will help farmers and ranchers improve pastures in five states.

2-27- 69 days with no rain may be over as a major storm is expected to move through Arizona with snow level dropping to seven thousand feet.

Forty nine out of fifty states below freezing. White out conditions in Buffalo, New York. Ice floes from the Hudson River to Wisconsin.

“High Alert”. Mandatory evacuations east of Los Angeles. Recent fires mean mudslides from heavy rains. All of L.A. is under a Flash Flood Watch. The snow pack in the state is seventy five percent below normal. (This is not good news. It doesn’t matter how much moisture they get from this storm. Summer is on the way.)

2-28- The system in California is being called the “West Coast Hurricane.” It has the swirling eye of a hurricane. Some places had had more rain in the past two days than an entire year. One thousand homes evacuated due to mudslides.

Deep freeze from Kansas to Massachusetts will affect one hundred million folks.

Snow squalls cause a 96 vehicle pileup north of Toronto, Canada.

On a very tragic and sad note your staff at Blue Duck weather reports a six year old girl freezes to death outside of her apartment in Minnesota. Although she was dressed warmly the wind chill had driven the temperature down to 42 below zero. (Mother Nature loves us but she will kill us if we let our guard down.)

The song for the month, although it is not a weather song but adds to the calamity of this month’s weather, is “What the Hell?” by Paul Thorne.

Until next month remember Pioneers took bullets. Settlers took land.
The Honorable, Distinguished, forgettable MR Blue Duck.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Blue Duck Weather News, January 2014

January 2014 Weather News!



Happy Quacking New Year my faithful readers from around the state, the country and the globe. I have noticed by the blog summary of reader location many of you are our friends in Canada. Understandable as so many of you make a second home in sunny Arizona. I am sure as you read the temperatures and averages for the month of January in Phoenix and surrounding areas you are blue with envy and wish to get right back here to the blissful winters we enjoy. And then get your asses home when the first glint of a hundred degree day is on the horizon.

So I asked myself in my state of weather reflectivity for the past year, what was the biggest weather event or the one that had the most impact on me? Tragically and sadly enough it was the Yarnell Hill Fire that killed 19 young men. A perfect, monster killer weather phenomenon if there ever was. The news is nonexistent in most of the country about that terrible day in June but the aftermath is just beginning here in Arizona. Law suites, who was wrong, wrongful death claims, land claims calling out for negligence in predicting and fighting the fires and the terrible property and home loss folks took on that hot day in June, OSHA safety investigations, independent investigations and the list goes on. And how the tragedy of the fire is blamed on climate change, unchecked land clearing of combustible fuels, too many people building in areas that shouldn’t be built in, unchecked growth and on and on it goes.

I feel so sorry for the families of these men. Young mothers and children orphaned by the loss of their husbands and fathers. If any good comes out of it perhaps it will be the study of why this happened and it may help it from not ever happening again. Perhaps the families of these men will benefit with some peace knowing the boys died loving what they were doing. And perhaps the investigation will lead to better communication, fire science, commander preparedness and air support. The bottom line, in the ever changing weather, it happened because of the “perfect storm.”

It is a brand new year as far as calendars go. And by the months in our years we generally know what to expect with weather. When it will be autumn, winter and spring we gauge the approaching weather generally. Mother Nature has a different calendar she loosely adheres to but often scoffs, kicks at, ignores and basically does what she wants to. Her calendar is based on the rotation of earth, the temperatures of the oceans and seas and the firestorms that happen on the sun. She is her own Queen answering to no one except the gravitational pulls on the axis of this planet. She can love us, hate us and kill us.

In this brand new edition of Blue Duck Weather, the month of January leashed record cold and snow in parts of the U.S. A “polar vortex”, a term I had never heard of, was in effect a high level frigid hurricane originating out of the Arctic. It played havoc on millions and as it moved farther south it brought two states on their knees. Two and a half inches of snow in Alabama and Georgia seems like nothing to you hardy folks used to dealing with feet of snow but I can completely understand how it brought two big cities to a standstill. It all depends on what you are used to.

And then there is California dealing with summer like wildfires and a drought so unprecedented in modern times it is going to result in drastic actions. Water cut offs lead to water wars, even if it means in these modern times attorneys and not guns (I hope.) “Liquid Gold” as water was named hundreds of years ago in the arid southwest. I just hope this type of gold doesn’t rise to a thousand dollars an ounce.

Your fine staff at Blue Duck Weather has been methodical in reporting monthly water levels in the biggest of lakes in Arizona and the South West. We have seen for some time “the writing on the wall.” Lake Powell is at its lowest level since it began filling. Water rationing or ridiculously high water prices are on the way. And believe me they will not just affect California.

Enough New Year’s preaching. Before we get on to all the weather news that fits let us get the boring but necessary weather statistics out of the way.

A very cool average temperature on Land for the month of January at 52.06 degrees. (We will be longing for this in a few months!) Talking Trees and Antelope Hill did not have the usual twenty degree spread in temperature due to the elevation difference between the mountains and here. The average temperature was 43.32 degrees.

There was no rain for the month on The Land as well as Phoenix. Not a good start.

The lake levels are Mead at 48%, Pleasant at 71%, Powell at 41% and Roosevelt at 48%.

1-1- Blizzard Warning for Long Island and Albany, New York. Heavy snow in the Great Lakes with six inches on the ground. Six hundred flights cancelled in Chicago.

1-2- Winter Storm Hercules is a brute! New York declares a State of Emergency with approaching blizzard. Wind gusts up to 50 mph. International Falls 42 below zero this morning! First major winter storm is being called a “monster” affecting one hundred million in twenty states. “This is the big one.” Coastal flooding in Boston. Thirteen hundred miles of highways are littered with stalled trucks. Four inches of snow fell in Indianapolis in four hours.

A Russian research and “cruise “ship ice bound and stuck in Antarctica. Fifty-two scientists and tourists are on board.

1-3- Nine deaths are blamed in the North East on winter storm Hercules. One was a woman suffering from Alzheimer’s who froze to death when she wandered away from her rural New York home. JFK airport in New York closed this morning at six a.m. I-14 in New York and Long Island closed at midnight. Twenty inches of snow in Massachusetts, fourteen inches in Boston. Winter Wind Chill Warnings issued for 22 states. Cold predicted behind this storm not seen since 1980. Twenty-five below zero in Antigo, Wisconsin. All schools in Minnesota will be closed Monday.

1-4- What at least 25 states are experiencing is known as a “Polar Vortex”, literally a high level arctic hurricane. Forty three below zero in Bismarck, one below zero in Oklahoma City.

1-5- With the wind chill is forty below in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Minneapolis schools closed for the first time in seventeen years. Two train engines freeze on a track from Detroit to Chicago. Wind chill warnings posted from Montana to Alabama. Raw steak and hamburger left outside freeze solid in fifteen minutes demonstrating what exposure of skin to the cold will do. (I guess this is the opposite of frying an egg on the sidewalk like we demonstrate when it is over one hundred and fifteen degrees.

Schools in Atlanta, Georgia closed tomorrow. Eleven inches of snow in Nashville and the temperature dropped fifty degrees in twenty four hours. Every state except Hawaii will have freezing temperatures.

50-50 chance of water shortages in Arizona by 2015. Water rationing possible.

1-6- Seven of Phoenix’s hottest years have happened since 2000. “Heat island effect and climate change” the culprits.

One hundred and eighteen year old record shattered with five degrees in Central Park, New York. Thirty one below zero in Chicago with wind chill. 45 below zero near the U.S. and Canadian border. Minnesota is colder than Antarctica today. Nine below zero as far as south As Atlanta, Georgia. Trains headed for Chicago are delayed overnight. Blizzard Warning with Lake effect snow with 40mph winds causing three foot drifts.

Waves up to seventeen feet high slam Britain’s southwest coast of Land’s End.

Fatal avalanched near Vail, Colorado kills one.

1-7- This week’s arctic cold has brought the highest ice coverage in 20 years.

1-8- Arizona Game & Fish seize two young tigers from backyard in Phoenix and Gilbert. The tiger’s appear to be siblings owned by the same man. They have been transferred to Out of Africa Wildlife Park in Camp Verde, Arizona.

1-9- Five people killed in U.S. avalanches this winter.


1-10- The Southern Hemisphere is experiencing the hottest temperatures on record and temperatures in Australia 122 degrees. Since December 27th records set in 34 locations. 50,000 bats have been killed by heat. Heat stressed baby bats are being hand fed in the Australian Bat Clinic in Queensland.

Three hundred thousand people are ordered not to drink, bath or wash with tap water in West Virginia. A chemical spill in the Elk River has contaminated water supplies. FEMA on way with emergency water.

1-11- Just days after the Arctic blast warm air spawns thunderstorms and isolated tornados in the South East. Strong winds from Eastern Alabama to North Carolina. 86mph winds at Raleigh-Durham International Airport in North Carolina. 45,000 without power.

Charleston, West Virginia has declared a State of Emergency due to contaminated water. 787 complaints of nausea, sweating. The U.S. Chemical Safety Board sending teams to investigate.

1-12- Fewest lightning deaths in the U.S. on record for 2013. Twenty three fatalities with Florida and Arizona leading with four each. Over the past 30 years approx. 52 on average died each year. From 2006 to 2012 males accounted for 82% of the fatalities. (Tells you what dumb asses we are as we don’t have the sense to get out of the weather.)

1-13- A one hundred pound tortoise has been reunited with its previous owner after wandering away over a year ago. It was found thirty miles away from Casa Grande in Hidden, Valley Arizona. A resident there cared for it until its microchip was checked to find the original owner.

1-14- Shooting wild buffalo with vaccine laced “bio bullets” to prevent the spread of disease to livestock would be too ineffective and expensive to justify. The capture and slaughter of 2300 bison that migrated into Montana this last decade will continue. The disease is called brucellosis and causes pregnant cows to prematurely abort their young.

1-15- The blast of snow and frigid temperatures of January 5th through 8th have caused “Frost Quakes” known as cryoseisms, a natural phenomenon from a sudden deep freezing of the ground. They open from the surface and result in the freeze thaw cycles which break rock due to high water presence. They have been reported around Toronto, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. Witnesses report that they sound like a bomb blast.

Wildlife monitors have accused Myanmar of failing to protect elephants after finding 30 tusks and thousands of pieces of ivory for sale at a market near China. Myanmar has the second largest population of elephants in the world of about 6,000. Laws forbid trade but violations are rampant.

1-16- For the first time since the Clean Air Act went into effect in 1970 the dust levels in Phoenix are down to acceptable federal regulations. Dust has been cut by 5% each year between 2007 and 2013.

Out of control wildfire in Southern California. State of Emergency declared with hot, dry and windy conditions. 3700 homes evacuated near Glendora, California. The Cody Fire is zero percent contained. Three have been arrested for starting an illegal campfire. Two thousand acres have burned.


1-17- State wide Drought Emergency called in California with “summer like conditions”. The Cody fire is 30% contained with five homes and seventeen structures burned.

1-18- Twenty nine days without rain in Phoenix with a .55 departure from normal.

1-19- The Cody Fire has burned 1900 acres and is 61% contained.

1-20- The Cody Fire is 78% contained.
Due to a 1977 law prohibiting the sale of rats and mice has caused a Butte, Montana pet shop owner to quit selling them and a third of his business is gone after seventeen years. He has also quit selling snakes too because rodents are their favorite meal. Animal Control in December told him a child complained of being bitten by one of his rats.

The Polar Vortex returns! An emergency declared for next winter blast from the Upper Midwest to New England. Propane shortages to heat seven million homes certain.

One inch of snow fell on this day in Phoenix in 1933.

1-21- Eighty-one degree high record in Phoenix today, fifteen degrees above normal. The high on The Land was 72 degrees. (Heat island effect in Phoenix in the winter or shitty air and dirt trapping the heat down?)

Twenty-five hundred flights cancelled. Mountains of West Virginia receive six to twelve inches of snow. Bitter cold behind this storm. Federal government shuts down in D.C. State of Emergency declared in nine counties in New York and Long Island. North east Philadelphia gets ten inches of snow, two and a half inches at Reagan International Airport. A “Weather Bomb” is being predicted.

1-22- Yuma, Arizona sets an 82 degree record.
A woman in Papago Park in Scottsdale Arizona stuck in a cave all night after taking a sunset walk.

Thirty-three days in Flagstaff with no snow. The record is thirty nine days.

One half of the U.S. is under Freeze Winter Warnings. Schools are running out of snow days. Twenty below in Fargo, thirty six below in International Falls. Minneapolis schools closed with a wind chill of thirty eight below zero.
Winter storm alerts as far south as Rio Grande, Houston and San Antonio. All are expecting hard ice by tonight.

The expedition of 52 scientists and tourists set foot on dry land for the first time in three weeks since they were rescued from a ship trapped by sea ice. They made the final segment of their rescue journey on an Australian icebreaker. (Some are wondering who is going to foot the bill on the rescue operation that left other vessels trapped in the ice also.)

1-23- 58 degree record high low in Phoenix.

26 degrees in Lake Charles, Louisiana with light snow, sleet and freezing rain. Snow north of I-10 between Houston and San Antonio. Snow and whiteout conditions cause a 46s vehicle pileup on I-94 in Indiana killing three and injuring 22.

Twenty below in Chicago.

1-24- Twenty-five dead pilot whales found in southwest Florida. They came in at high tide and breached, all had empty stomachs and some were emaciated.

1-25- 19 degree low in North Carolina.

1-26- Blizzard conditions across the Dakotas with 54mph winds. Thirty three below in Bismarck.

The only road into Valdez, Alaska is blocked by an avalanche and flooding on the Lower River.

For the first time in one hundred years a new river dolphin species found in the Araguaia River in Brazil’s massive rain forest.

Rescue workers spend the night with an injured hiker in the Lost Dutchman State Park. A sixty-five year old woman fell and dislocated her shoulder. She was located at sundown but could not be airlifted until daybreak. The rescue workers stabilized her and kept her warm and hydrated.

1-27- January proving to be the coldest month this century in the North East. 50 below in the Great Lakes, 36 below in Minneapolis.

A crocodile apparently grabs and kills a twelve year old boy swimming with friends in a river in Australia. Officers are ordered shoot any croc over eight feet long in hoping of finding the boy’s remains. Another boy suffered severe bites to his arms fighting off the beast.

1-28- “Worst snow and ice in a generation threaten an unprepared South.” Snow predicted as far west as Austin, Texas to the Carolinas. This storm will effect fifty million people. Still to the north 24 below in Chicago, 18 below in Pittsburgh, 42 below on the Minnesota, Canadian border. The University of Minnesota shut down for the first time since 1978.

National Guard called to Alabama. Sections of I-10 closed in the south with three thousand flights cancelled or grounded.

And here in Arizona, 16 days in a row at seventy degrees or above in Phoenix.

1-29- Two and a half inches of snow in Atlanta. Children spend the night in schools. Traffic jams so bad that drivers left their vehicles and went to stores and churches to spend the night. Home Depot kept 14 stores open overnight.

Birmingham also hit hard. Thirty hour gridlock with 10,000 kids trapped in 16 communities. Twelve hundred vehicle accidents.” Paralyzed, Genuine Natural Disaster” as the National Guard helps.

Bolivia declares a National State of Emergency to deal with flooding that has killed 30 and left 26,000 out of homes.

And in Phoenix 40 days without rain. Flagstaff usually receive 20 inches of snow in January; so far none.

1-30- What led to snow chaos in Atlanta? Weather forecasts not accurate? State officials had plenty of warning. Storm warnings were issued two days before the storm. Miles of I-75 still have abandoned cars.

State of Emergency declared in California. For the first time in California history an “Exceptional Drought” warning has been issued. Snow pack in the Sierra Nevada’s is almost nonexistent. All people are urged to cut water use by 20%. Ten counties may run out of water in six weeks. January is normally the wettest month in California.

On this day in 1985 it was 66 below in Peter, Utah; the coldest temp ever recorded for the state.

“Urban sprawl, genetically modified crops and illegal logging” are blamed for an alarming decline in the number of monarch butterflies wintering in Mexico. The plunge had been so dramatic that the annual migration from the U.S. and Canada is in danger of disappearing for good.

BLM is looking for a shooter responsible for killing two wild adult burros. Officers believe the shooting took place about two in the afternoon in the Lake Pleasant herd management area. Burrow and wild horses have been protected under the Wild Free Roaming Horses and Burro Act of 1971.

Record high low of 58 degrees in Phoenix. 39 mph winds in Winslow, Arizona.
A Las Vegas man is claiming he has killed Big Foot in Texas and said he will be binging the legendary beast to Arizona to show it off.

1-31- The entire month of January has been at or above normal in Phoenix. Blowing Dust Advisory issued in Maricopa and Pinal counties. 52mph winds in Show Low and 49mph winds in Winslow. Flagstaff finally receives snow breaking a 31 day record of no snow.
Motorists left 2,029 cars on frozen, snow covered highways in Georgia from the recent ice storm. Most were picked up by yesterday.
California Water emergency getting worse. 25 million affected if reservoir water is cut off. Never before in history may “liquid gold” be cut off to 710,000 farmers and no rain in January, usually the wettest month.

Until next month when your cracked lips and blackened tongue are begging for water in California and you are begging for a warmer day in the northeast just remember, Pioneers took bullets. Settlers took land.

Your humble weather quack, the distinguished, honorable MR Blue Duck.

Monday, January 6, 2014

December 2103, Thank God this year is over, Blue Duck Weather News



December 2013 Weather News!



Rattlesnakes. You are probably asking yourself why this old fool is opening another amazing Blue Duck Weather News about snakes. It is too damn cold for rattlesnakes in the desert (you think) and what do rattlesnakes have to do with weather?

I waited until December to write this piece as I felt it was finally cold enough not to have any surprise visits from the bastards. But on a much deeper level I am concerned because I did not see one rattlesnake on The Land all spring, summer and fall. This has to be a first in thirty three years! I can’t say I miss the encounters as they are not pleasant at all and are always a surprise of pissed off energy, buzzing and tongue flickering warning you to stay the fuck away or suffer the consequences. But I guess if you are around the enemy for a long period of time, you miss your enemy once you have conquered them or they are gone.

That is what worries me about the absence of rattlesnakes at The Land. It is a sign of much broader ecological conditions, some I will never be aware of as I don’t look through the black glass fixed eyes of a snake. But I do know that fifteen years of drought means little rain, less grass and plants, fewer quail (and their eggs that rattlesnakes love to swallow whole), fewer prairie dogs (That rattlesnakes love to swallow whole, hair and all. Believe me, I have skinned rattlers that had entire stinking rats inside them. It is not a pretty sight or pleasant smell.) In other words the circle of ecology is missing right now. I will not say it is dead but I do worry.

I have shot enough rattlesnakes over the years I suppose there is some guilt in me or fear that I have lead to their absence. But at the time I had the best interest of pets, quacklings and the Lovely Mrs. Blue Duck in mind. I have shot at least two snakes that crawled through a doggie door into my father’s house. One was behind his refrigerator and my dad thought the noise was the fridge compressor going out. That is all I need is to have an old dad barely able to see or hear with a heart condition, to be bit by a rattlesnake.

That is not to say they are gone. They can surprise you even in the winter. Rattlesnakes don’t truly hibernate. If it gets warm enough they will emerge from some hell den and sun themselves thinking of some fat rat to eat or dream of striking you as you walk by in ignorant bliss. One January afternoon about eighteen years ago TwinkyDuck and I arrived home from work in the late afternoon. As we were walking up to the front porch she asked me what the sound was she was hearing from the back of the house. I had a cold and my ears were ringing so I didn’t hear it at first. And then it sounded like running water. But under a window air conditoner was a thoroughly pissed off rattler letting the world know he did not want to be messed with. You would think the rattler would have been lethargic from months of colder weather and sleepy. No way and he was buzzing like hell with nothing around him to spook him.

And finally on December 4th of this year the Lovely Mrs. Blueduck told me there was a fat rattlesnake sunning on a sidewalk at the school she teaches at with eight or nine quacklings around it. The temperature was 55 degrees. Go figure!

In some twisted but natural way I hope the rattlers are not gone for good at The Land. But I also know karma is a bitch. As many of them I have killed I will probably be nailed by one when I least expect it, like January when I refuse to believe the buzzing sound is not a snake but has to be water spraying or something else “rational.”

Read about a Scottsdale, Arizona woman and her dog “attacked” by javelinas, the weather term “Nada”, an amazing survival story about a young couple and their kids stranded in snow, the awful rising death toll from Typhoon Hayian last month, the state with the dubious record of the driest calendar year on record and the mysterious and tragic account of a missing hiker in Oak Creek Canyon in Sedona, Arizona.

But first let us list the data weather facts for the month. The average temperature at The Land for December was 47.74 degrees. The average for Talking Trees and Antelope Hill was 32.17 degrees.

It was an impressive rain year by recent standards with near average amounts of yearly rainfall. On The Land .15 inches fell bringing the yearly total to 7.66 inches. Phoenix received 8.42 inches. But it varied across the Valley. Glendale only received 5.16’’ while Scottsdale received 10.32’’!

Lake Mead finished the year at 47% capacity, Pleasant at 66%, Powell at 43% (nearing record lows), and Roosevelt 47%.

12-2- Rare fog drapes the Grand Canyon caused by a “classic air inversion” with warm air on the top and cold wet air on the bottom. ( I noticed this phenomenon in the desert for several mornings recently. Although it hasn’t rained in over a week the ground is so wet that there was actually fog.)

Winter Storm Cleon approaches with heavy snow in the Rockies, Midwest and ice in the South.

12-3- Nine states are under Winter Storm Warnings. Temps drop in Denver 26 degrees in two hours. Little Rock, Arkansas preparing for a 40 degree drop.

12-4- Dense fog in Belgium causes a 130 vehicle pileup. One dead and seventy six injured. Some victims were in their vehicles for several hours in freezing temperatures. Emergency workers handed out emergency thermal blankets. (I happen to have one in my back pack just in case. They are called space blankets.)

Forty degree drop in temperature in Dallas in twenty-four hours. Ten degree high in Denver. Snow and ice in 27 states. Twenty inches of snow and 40mph winds in Deluth.

12-5- 53 degree high at The Land. Freeze Warnings issued for all of Maicopa and Pinal counties for the next five or six days.

According to the NWS ice storms could be catastrophic for Dallas with a 50 degree drop in temperature. Seven-eights of the country will be in a deep freeze tomorrow. 0 degrees in Denver, 8 below in Billings (Mrs. BlueDucks home town), 29 below in Meeker, Colorado and the entire state of Wyoming below 0 as of mid-morning.

142 mph winds in Wales!

12-6- The storm with hurricane force winds that hit Britain moves across Europe. Ten thousand evacuated along eastern England’s coast after a warning that the country could be dealing with the worst tidal surges in sixty years!

A Scottsdale, Arizona woman and her dog were walking at six in the morning on Thanksgiving Day. Reportedly she and her dog were attacked by by five charging javelinas. She was knocked to the ground. The dog fought the pigs and suffered serious cuts and puncture wounds. It later took sixty stitches to close the dog’s wounds. “Javelinas have incisors that are literally as sharp as razors” according to Game & Fish spokesman.

12-7- Twenty nine degree low with a 56 degree high on The Land.

From his secluded location in Colorado RyDuck reports there have been five days the high has not been above ten degrees.

The outlook for 2014 in the South West: Neither a wet El Nino or a dry La Nina phase is developing. A NWS drought specialist said to expect a “Nada”, a winter of neutral influences from surface ocean temperatures.

Under pressure from the wind power industry the Obama administration will allow companies to kill or injure eagles without fear of persecution for up to 30 years.

12-9- 49 degree high on The Land!

A foot of snow in Newark. Philadelphia International Airport received 8.6” of snow, more than it had all of last year.

A seventy one year old woman in Virginia hit a deer with her car. The deer was catapulted and struck a twenty two year old jogger. Both women are recovering in a local hospital.

12-10- Record lows, Flagstaff ten below zero, Prescott, ten degrees and Showlow 6 degrees.

A young family trapped in Nevada snow found alive after two days. Two adults and four children went on an outing to Seven Trough Mountain range in their jeep. Their jeep overturned but they managed to keep a fire going with a temperatures at 16 below zero. Their cell phone did not work but the last signal it had helped rescuers find them. They were ten miles from Reno, Nevada.

12-11- “Miracle in the mountains.” What the Nevada family did right. They had water, a machet and a flashlight. They stuck with the overturned jeep and slept in the interior of it at night. They heated rocks during the day and placed them in the jeep.

Bird strikes cause the crash of a eight million dollar Air Force jet in Texas; The two pilots ejected safely.

12-12- Winter Storm Electra blasting the Great Lakes. Lake effect snow in upstate New York and Michigan. Twenty below zero with the wind chill in Chicago.

12-13- Near Rockville, Utah, a rock slide crushes a home killing two. The home was buried by dirt and boulders weighing hundreds of tons. The rock slide caused a dirt cloud so thick traffic on a local highway had to be stopped due to poor visibility.

Arizona Game & Fish asking for help identifying hunters that poached four cow elk in the Coconino National Forest on December 7th. One elk was field dressed and taken. The other three were left to rot. The department is asking anyone traveling on 89A that morning around seven thirty to contact investigators if they witnessed a silver pickup truck facing north on the south side of the shoulder.

Wildlife officials in the northern Rockies say it’s time to remove about seven hundred girzzlies in the Yellowstone National Forest off the Endangered Species Act.

“Get festive without firewood.” Direct warning to Maricopa county residents not to burn on Christmas Eve, Christmas day and New Years day. (I’m glad I live in Pinal county but it wouldn’t make any difference where I live anyway.)

12-14- Typhoon Haiyan death toll has passed six thousand poor souls. Sixteen million homes destroyed or damaged and seventy hundred and seventy nine people still missing. This has become the deadliest disaster ever recorded in the Philippines.

A woman survived three bitter cold nights in Alaska by burning her snowmobile and huddling with her small dog. Later she took shelter under her snowmobile with her small dog. The machine had broken down when she went to check on her husband after he left their cabin to check on a trap line and hadn’t returned. When she was found she was severely hypothermic. Temperatures reached twenty below zero! (There was no mention of the overdue husband.)

12-16- Heavy snow from Missouri to Maine with one hundred million in path and the third storm in the past week.

Historic snow in Jerusalem with one foot. First snow in Cairo in one hundred years.

12-17- The global air temperature for November was the warmest on record. 345th consecutive month with global temperatures above the 20th century average. Combined land and ocean surface temperature 56.6 degrees.

A rare late season wildfire in Big Sur California has destroyed 15 homes and 40 threatened.

12-18- Big Sur Fire is 74% contained with 22 buildings destroyed.

12-19- Winter Storm Gemini buries Salt Lake City with eight inches of snow, closing Logan Airport. Thirteen thousand without power.

From his secluded location in Colorado RyDuck reports a record high of 68 degrees. One week ago was below freezing.

12-20- 7.8 inches of snow in Flagstaff.

12-21- First day of Winter and the shortest amount of sunlight the entire year.

Dense Fog Warning for the Phoenix area, especially in the low lying areas.

Four of thirty one bighorn seep released near Tucson are dead. Three have been killed by mountain lions. The cats supposedly responsible were tracked by Game & Fish and shot and killed. (Something about this does just not seem right. The cats were doing what they do, surviving. So elimate mountain lions? What happened to the food chain and the circle of life?)

12-22- A mixed bag of weather just in time for the holidays: Floods and tornadoes in the south, record highs of sixties and seventies in New York, ice and three hundred thousand without power in Michigan. Eighty degrees in Augusta, Georgia.

12-23- From Michigan to New England 400,000 without power due to ice damages.

A hiker from Flagstaff in missing in Oak Creek Canyon since yesterday. He was supposed to return to Manzanita Campground to be picked up by family after being dropped off on December 18th. He had a sleeping bag, backpack, white tarp, guitar, plenty of water but no food. (?)

12-24- A white Christmas? Forty-seven percent of the U.S. has snow on the ground.

Thirty-four buildings destroyed by the Big Sur Wildfire in central California. It has burned 1.4 square miles.

22 year old hiker in Oak Creek Canyon still missing.

12-25- With temperatures in the low twenties two hundred thousand still without power from Michigan to Maine from ice damage from last week’s storms.

12-26- Eight dead from flooding in the eastern Caribbean island of St. Vincent.

An expediton “cruise” ship with tourists and researchers is trapped by ice in the Antarctic.

Five days later one hundred thousand from Michigan to Maine still without power. Seven are dead from carbon monoxide poisoning. One hundred thousand in Toronto, Canada without power.

Sixty people on the ground and air support looking for the missing hiker in Oak Creek Canyon. His family says he is an experienced outdoorsmen. The reason he was carrying no food was to fast.

12-27- Army troops deployed in Espirito Santo to help distribute food, water and medicine to victims of flooding and mudslides that have wracked south east Brazil for ten days, killing 39. 60,000 are homeless.

Rescue barge trying to get to the stranded cruise ship in the Antarctic is trapped by ice.

Search is called off for missing hiker in Oak Creek.

The record low in Arizona for this date was 22 degrees in Yuma in 1911.

12-28- California is experiencing the driest calendar year on record. A Drought Emergency has not been declared yet but so far 3.6’’ of rain. An average rain yer is 14.91’’. There could be catastrophic wildfires next year and water allotment restrictions which would affect agriculture in a major way.

12-29- Ravens that hang out at Red Rock Ranger Station near Sedona reak havoc ripping out wiper blades and weather stripping from U.S. Service and employee vehicles. (Maybe they are trying to tell them something like get the fuck out!) A University of Arizona researcher, in an attempt to occupy the birds, has installed puzzle boxes in the parking lot. To get a food reward the clever ravens will have to open a latch on a box. If they figure it out the challenge will be made harder by adding more latches.

12-30- Thirteen below zero in International Falls/

Two hikers triggered a 800’ avalanche slide on Mount Washington, New Hampshire. They have been rescued after unknowingly entered a avalanche area know as “the hip.”

Well, I am sure if you have read the past few months of Amazing Blue Duck Weather you have noticed a rash of javelina encounters in the state of Arizona and its deserts. Today it was confirmed in a big way. “Javelina encounters on the rise in Arizona.” 347 encounters with seven bites this year. Twelve encounters two years ago. “When development grows past the fringes of wilderness areas.”

And that concludes another edition of Blue Duck Weather my faithful readers. Until next month when you have a hot javelina snoot up your ass remember:

Pioneers took bullets. Settlers took land.

The Distinguished, Honorable MR BlueDuck














































































































































































































































































































































































































































Sunday, December 8, 2013

November (Fashionably Late) Blue Duck Weather News 2013

November 2013 Weather News!

On November 7th, reportedly the strongest storm to ever hit landfall on this planet bore down on the Philippines. Super Typhoon Haiyan had sustained winds of 195mph with some gusts reported at 235mph! This storm equaled a Category 5 hurricane producing waves fifty feet high. At one point the storm was five hundred miles wide.

Your fine staff at Blue Duck Weather don’t usually report the aftermath of a storm, the cleanup or rebuilding efforts. It sometimes takes years. But in this sobering issue of Blue Duck Weather you will read, despite the best international intentions, food and relief can be delivered but getting it where it is needed is quite another challenge. Lawlessness becomes law. Disease becomes rampant as all systems break down and fresh water more valuable than gold, as valuable as life itself. The damage of this massive storm and the aftermath shows how a society can break down in a matter of days.

Features in this amazing issue of Blue Duck Weather are rubber ducks inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame!, one hundred dead elk on a ranch and what happened?, a boy found with a chicken on his neck, a fire fact for this year that may surprise you, the difference in Thanksgiving turkey weights twenty four years ago and now!,

The average temperature on the Land for November was 60.95 degrees. The average for Talking Trees and Antelope Hill was 42.02 degrees.

An amazing rain month in just a few days brought the yearly total to 7.51”, putting us on target for an average annual rainfall. Read it about it more in this issue of Blue Duck Weather.


11-1- A lightning strike may have caused a pipeline to rupture that spilled 20,000 barrels of oil in a North Dakota wheat field.

Ninety two African migrants die of thirst after their trucks broke down in the middle of the Sahara Desert before reaching Nigeria.

11-3- A Swedish man climbing and skiing on New Zealand’s tallest mountain has fallen two thousand feet to his death.

11-4- Tropical Storm Sonia moving quickly toward the southern tip of Baja. “Life threatening flash floods feared.”

40mph winds topple trees on top of cars at a dealership in Peoria, Arizona.

An Indiana man hunting deer fell sixteen feet from a tree stand last Saturday and is paralyzed from the chest down. Doctors feared he would never be able to breathe on his own again. Family wanted the man to be brought out of sedation and told of his condition. They wanted him to be able to decide for himself if he wanted to live or die. The (brave) man decided to die with his family and friends beside him once the breathing tube had been removed.

11-7- Super Typhoon Haiyan headed straight for the Philippines with 195 mph sustained winds “gusting” to 230mph. The storm is five hundred miles wide producing waves fifty feet high.

11-8 Haiyan is said to be the most powerful storm on the planet ever to hit land. Twelve million people are in its path. This monster is big enough to cover most of the United States!

11-9- Twelve hundred feared dead in the Philippines and all systems are down- water, power,travel and communciations.

And this just in from the Lovely Mrs. Blue Duck: Hunters find one hundred dead elk on a 75,000 acre ranch north of Las Vegas, New Mexico. Officials are puzzled as natural causes including poison are ruled out. Further testing found “pond scum” or a neurotoxin produced by algae in warm, standing water. When animals dring they can be dead in minutes to hours from respiratory arrest. (If I saw this in the wilds hunting I would just hang my head and cry.)

Bighorn sheep will be reintroduced to the Catalina Mountains north of Tucson, Arizona. About thirty from the Kofa Mountains north east of Yuma will be captured and relocated. The last heard that lived in the Catalinas died out in the 90s. Suspected causes of the demise were urban development, predation by mountain lions, disease and human impact from higing and bringing dogs into the area. (just shoot the dogs!)

RUBBER DUCKS INDUCTED INTO THE NATIONAL TOY HALL OF FAME. ONLY 53 TOYS SHARE THIS HONOR!

11-10- Front Page Headlines: 10,000 Feared Dead…..horror, devastation in Philippines. “Storm surges high as trees.” Deaths mostly dy drowning and collapsed buildings. The city of Tacloban the hardest hit and all structures are damaged or destroyed. The airport there is a “muddy wasteland of debris with crumpled tin roofs and upturned cars.” The airport’s tower windows are shattered and helicopters flying in and out at the start of relief operations. The city’s two largest malls, grocery stores and gas stations are destroyed or looted. The winds were like a “747 flying just above my roof.” One reporter said the storm surge was like the Tsunami in Japan. A half million people are displaced.

11-11- “The World is Responding”- the Philippines is in a “National State of Calamity.”

11-12- Water born disease and the lack of fresh drinking water now the big concern in the Philippines. The death toll has now been downgraded.

Season’s first snow in the Midwest and Northeast.

A long time employee of an animal sanctuary killed by multiple bites from a cougar. The 36 year old died of “devastating injuries to back and neck.” She was inside the mountain lion enclosure when she was attacked.

11-13- “Desparate”- 73 nations ready to bring relief to the Philippines. Cebu City is foodless, waterless and lawless.

11-14- Mobs overrun a rice warehouse in Tacloban. A wall collapsed and eight are dead as crowd forced its way past armed guards and took off with sacks of grain. Grocery stores and gas stations will not be re-stocked because of fear of looting. Massive amounts of food and water on nearby islands but it can’t be moved in large amounts because there is no fuel for trucks or roads cleared. The UN reports the death toll is 4500 and will rise. (Hunger makes good people do desparate things, especially for their families. I’m sure killing for food is not out of the question as the days drag on .)

11-15-“Brutally hot and humid” One week later 3600 dead and 1200 missing. Two million are displaced. There is no clean drinking water for thousands.

11-16- Tornadoes slam central Illinois today in the community of East Peoria. 53 million in ten states are at significant risk of thunderstorms and tornadoes. 50 homes destroyed in Brockport, Illinois leaving four dead. 89 unconfirmed tornadoes reported today.

In the Philippines two million are homeless, 3800 dead, 1250 hurt and one thousand missing from Super Cyclone Hayian. There is a mass exodus from Talcoban. Now the grave concern is Measles, Typhoid and Polio outbreaks.

11-18- Hardest hit from tornaodes yesterday Washington, Illinois with eight folks killed. Two EF4 tornadoes confirmed in Illinois never seen before. These types of storms usually happen in the spring and summer. “The whole neighborhood is gone” said one resident of Washington. These fast moving storms affected twelve states in one day.

Philippine president says he will camp in Talcoban until he sees more aid coming in. (Good man, get out there in the human misery!)

And this one is from the Lovely Mrs. BlueDuck: Some forty days into Obamacare and 269 people have signed up in New Hampshire. During the same time period in that state 281 moose permits were issued.

“A social service supervisor and a nurse face child abuse charges after an 11 year old North Carolina boy was found handcuffed to a porch, shivering in frigid temperatures, with a dead chicken around his neck! (?).

11-20- Flooding rains kill 16 in Sardinia, Italy. 17.3 inches of rain in twenty four hours, half the amount normally received in a year. The mayor says the ferocity is a “water bomb” with bridges down and water ten feet deep.

Flooding in Vietnam kills 41, 80,000 forced from homes and 400,000 homes affected.

11-21- From his secluded location in Colorado RyDuck reports a high of 60 degrees yesterday with 14 degrees this morning!

And in The Valley of The Sun there is a one hundred percent chance of rain for tomorrow.

11-22- 1.65 inches of rain on The Land. 1.3 inches of rain recorded at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix, shattering a forty year old record of .05 inches of rain in 1973. The White Mountains received seven inches of snow and the Snowbowl above Flagstaff received 10-16 inches.

11-23- 2.44 inches of rain on The Land in just over forty eight hours, a qaurter of our annual rainfall!

Mount Charleston in Nevada receives fifteen inches of snow with more water content in this storm than all of last year for the mountain!

The death toll in the Philippines is 4919 poor souls and 1611 still missing.

11-24- Four feet of snow in the Four Corners region!

The U.S. government for the first time has enforced environmental laws protecting wildlife from wind energy facilities. They have won a million dollar settlement from a power company that pleaded guilty to killing 14 eagles and 149 other birds at wind farms in Wyoming.

11-26- The number of wildfires this year hit a thirty year low in the United States despite the most tragedies in eighty years. 43,000 fires reported across the country so far this year, well below the average 68,000 fires. One contributing factor was a very active monsoon pattern in the Southwest that brought moderate to heavy rainfall. The July through September period was the wettest in the Four Corners region in 119 years.

11-27- An EF2 tornado has been confirmed from last night’s storms in North Carolina. Three people injured and condo damage in Atlantic Beach, North Carolina.

Heavy snow in New York and Michigan. 34mph winds expected in New York City tomorrow. It may affect the Macy Day Parade floats and balloons.

The average weight of a Thanksgiving turkey in 1989 was 19 pounds. Now it is 30 pounds. (What does that say about us?, just look around you.) (Mrs. Duck adds....google why and you might start raising your own birds. As for 30 pounds...uh, never seen one.)

The state of Arizona is cracking down on poaching of rare reptiles. Gila monsters get can get 1500 dollars on the black market. Poachers come from as far away as Australia and Germany. The monsoon season is a favorite time for poachers. “All of that water hitting the ground get the animals moving. People drive at night and using headlights and flashlights to spot reptiles on the move.” There are also 13 species of rattlesnakes indigenous to Arizona.

11-28- A reward is offered for the killing of a spike elk out of season along Highway 87 in the Coconino National Forest in Arizona. The carcass was found intact and was left to waste. (Especially at a time when the meat could have been donated to a food bank if legally taken.)

11-29- An animal handler is recovering in a Sydney, Australia hospital after being attacked by a Bengal tiger at a zoo owned by the family of late wildlife expert Steve Irwin. The tiger dragged the handler into a pool and bit his shoulders and neck during a show two days ago. The man was wearing a poncho and the tiger may have mistaken him for its “favorite chew toy.”

11-30- A six month old Pit bull is found in an apartment rubble nine days after the tornado in Washington, Illinois. The pooch is hungry and scratched but will be fine.

Well, my faithful readers, that wraps up another mind blowing edition of Blue Duck Weather; a relatively inactive month of weather reporting limited to a few pages instead of the novels I usually write. The Lovely Mrs. Blue Duck will be happy, and I am sure you will be too!

This month’s weather song is “Tornado” by Little Big Town.

Until next month when the wind howls out your name remember Pioneers took bullets. Settlers took land.


The Distinquished, honorable Professor MR Blue Duck.










































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































November 2013 Weather News!


On November 7th, reportedly the strongest storm to ever hit landfall on this planet bore down on the Philippines. Super Typhoon Haiyan had sustained winds of 195mph with some gusts reported at 235mph! This storm equaled a Category 5 hurricane producing waves fifty feet high. At one point the storm was five hundred miles wide.

Your fine staff at Blue Duck Weather don’t usually report the aftermath of a storm, the cleanup or rebuilding efforts. It sometimes takes years. But in this sobering issue of Blue Duck Weather you will read, despite the best international intentions, food and relief can be delivered but getting it where it is needed is quite another challenge. Lawlessness becomes law. Disease becomes rampant as all systems break down and fresh water more valuable than gold, as valuable as life itself. The damage of this massive storm and the aftermath shows how a society can break down in a matter of days.

Features in this amazing issue of Blue Duck Weather are rubber ducks inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame!, one hundred dead elk on a ranch and what happened?, a boy found with a chicken on his neck, a fire fact for this year that may surprise you, the difference in Thanksgiving turkey weights twenty four years ago and now!,

The average temperature on the Land for November was 60.95 degrees. The average for Talking Trees and Antelope Hill was 42.02 degrees.

An amazing rain month in just a few days brought the yearly total to 7.51”, putting us on target for an average annual rainfall. Read it about it more in this issue of Blue Duck Weather.


11-1- A lightning strike may have caused a pipeline to rupture that spilled 20,000 barrels of oil in a North Dakota wheat field.

Ninety two African migrants die of thirst after their trucks broke down in the middle of the Sahara Desert before reaching Nigeria.

11-3- A Swedish man climbing and skiing on New Zealand’s tallest mountain has fallen two thousand feet to his death.

11-4- Tropical Storm Sonia moving quickly toward the southern tip of Baja. “Life threatening flash floods feared.”

40mph winds topple trees on top of cars at a dealership in Peoria, Arizona.

An Indiana man hunting deer fell sixteen feet from a tree stand last Saturday and is paralyzed from the chest down. Doctors feared he would never be able to breathe on his own again. Family wanted the man to be brought out of sedation and told of his condition. They wanted him to be able to decide for himself if he wanted to live or die. The (brave) man decided to die with his family and friends beside him once the breathing tube had been removed.

11-7- Super Typhoon Haiyan headed straight for the Philippines with 195 mph sustained winds “gusting” to 230mph. The storm is five hundred miles wide producing waves fifty feet high.

11-8 Haiyan is said to be the most powerful storm on the planet ever to hit land. Twelve million people are in its path. This monster is big enough to cover most of the United States!

11-9- Twelve hundred feared dead in the Philippines and all systems are down- water, power,travel and communciations.

And this just in from the Lovely Mrs. Blue Duck: Hunters find one hundred dead elk on a 75,000 acre ranch north of Las Vegas, New Mexico. Officials are puzzled as natural causes including poison are ruled out. Further testing found “pond scum” or a neurotoxin produced by algae in warm, standing water. When animals dring they can be dead in minutes to hours from respiratory arrest. (If I saw this in the wilds hunting I would just hang my head and cry.)

Bighorn sheep will be reintroduced to the Catalina Mountains north of Tucson, Arizona. About thirty from the Kofa Mountains north east of Yuma will be captured and relocated. The last heard that lived in the Catalinas died out in the 90s. Suspected causes of the demise were urban development, predation by mountain lions, disease and human impact from higing and bringing dogs into the area. (just shoot the dogs!)

RUBBER DUCKS INDUCTED INTO THE NATIONAL TOY HALL OF FAME. ONLY 53 TOYS SHARE THIS HONOR!

11-10- Front Page Headlines: 10,000 Feared Dead…..horror, devastation in Philippines. “Storm surges high as trees.” Deaths mostly dy drowning and collapsed buildings. The city of Tacloban the hardest hit and all structures are damaged or destroyed. The airport there is a “muddy wasteland of debris with crumpled tin roofs and upturned cars.” The airport’s tower windows are shattered and helicopters flying in and out at the start of relief operations. The city’s two largest malls, grocery stores and gas stations are destroyed or looted. The winds were like a “747 flying just above my roof.” One reporter said the storm surge was like the Tsunami in Japan. A half million people are displaced.

11-11- “The World is Responding”- the Philippines is in a “National State of Calamity.”

11-12- Water born disease and the lack of fresh drinking water now the big concern in the Philippines. The death toll has now been downgraded.

Season’s first snow in the Midwest and Northeast.

A long time employee of an animal sanctuary killed by multiple bites from a cougar. The 36 year old died of “devastating injuries to back and neck.” She was inside the mountain lion enclosure when she was attacked.

11-13- “Desparate”- 73 nations ready to bring relief to the Philippines. Cebu City is foodless, waterless and lawless.

11-14- Mobs overrun a rice warehouse in Tacloban. A wall collapsed and eight are dead as crowd forced its way past armed guards and took off with sacks of grain. Grocery stores and gas stations will not be re-stocked because of fear of looting. Massive amounts of food and water on nearby islands but it can’t be moved in large amounts because there is no fuel for trucks or roads cleared. The UN reports the death toll is 4500 and will rise. (Hunger makes good people do desparate things, especially for their families. I’m sure killing for food is not out of the question as the days drag on .)

11-15-“Brutally hot and humid” One week later 3600 dead and 1200 missing. Two million are displaced. There is no clean drinking water for thousands.

11-16- Tornadoes slam central Illinois today in the community of East Peoria. 53 million in ten states are at significant risk of thunderstorms and tornadoes. 50 homes destroyed in Brockport, Illinois leaving four dead. 89 unconfirmed tornadoes reported today.

In the Philippines two million are homeless, 3800 dead, 1250 hurt and one thousand missing from Super Cyclone Hayian. There is a mass exodus from Talcoban. Now the grave concern is Measles, Typhoid and Polio outbreaks.

11-18- Hardest hit from tornaodes yesterday Washington, Illinois with eight folks killed. Two EF4 tornadoes confirmed in Illinois never seen before. These types of storms usually happen in the spring and summer. “The whole neighborhood is gone” said one resident of Washington. These fast moving storms affected twelve states in one day.

Philippine president says he will camp in Talcoban until he sees more aid coming in. (Good man, get out there in the human misery!)

And this one is from the Lovely Mrs. BlueDuck: Some forty days into Obamacare and 269 people have signed up in New Hampshire. During the same time period in that state 281 moose permits were issued.

“A social service supervisor and a nurse face child abuse charges after an 11 year old North Carolina boy was found handcuffed to a porch, shivering in frigid temperatures, with a dead chicken around his neck! (?).

11-20- Flooding rains kill 16 in Sardinia, Italy. 17.3 inches of rain in twenty four hours, half the amount normally received in a year. The mayor says the ferocity is a “water bomb” with bridges down and water ten feet deep.

Flooding in Vietnam kills 41, 80,000 forced from homes and 400,000 homes affected.

11-21- From his secluded location in Colorado RyDuck reports a high of 60 degrees yesterday with 14 degrees this morning!

And in The Valley of The Sun there is a one hundred percent chance of rain for tomorrow.

11-22- 1.65 inches of rain on The Land. 1.3 inches of rain recorded at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix, shattering a forty year old record of .05 inches of rain in 1973. The White Mountains received seven inches of snow and the Snowbowl above Flagstaff received 10-16 inches.

11-23- 2.44 inches of rain on The Land in just over forty eight hours, a qaurter of our annual rainfall!

Mount Charleston in Nevada receives fifteen inches of snow with more water content in this storm than all of last year for the mountain!

The death toll in the Philippines is 4919 poor souls and 1611 still missing.

11-24- Four feet of snow in the Four Corners region!

The U.S. government for the first time has enforced environmental laws protecting wildlife from wind energy facilities. They have won a million dollar settlement from a power company that pleaded guilty to killing 14 eagles and 149 other birds at wind farms in Wyoming.

11-26- The number of wildfires this year hit a thirty year low in the United States despite the most tragedies in eighty years. 43,000 fires reported across the country so far this year, well below the average 68,000 fires. One contributing factor was a very active monsoon pattern in the Southwest that brought moderate to heavy rainfall. The July through September period was the wettest in the Four Corners region in 119 years.

11-27- An EF2 tornado has been confirmed from last night’s storms in North Carolina. Three people injured and condo damage in Atlantic Beach, North Carolina.

Heavy snow in New York and Michigan. 34mph winds expected in New York City tomorrow. It may affect the Macy Day Parade floats and balloons.

The average weight of a Thanksgiving turkey in 1989 was 19 pounds. Now it is 30 pounds. (What does that say about us?, just look around you.)

The state of Arizona is cracking down on poaching of rare reptiles. Gila monsters get can get 1500 dollars on the black market. Poachers come from as far away as Australia and Germany. The monsoon season is a favorite time for poachers. “All of that water hitting the ground get the animals moving. People drive at night and using headlights and flashlights to spot reptiles on the move.” There are also 13 species of rattlesnakes indigenous to Arizona.

11-28- A reward is offered for the killing of a spike elk out of season along Highway 87 in the Coconino National Forest in Arizona. The carcass was found intact and was left to waste. (Especially at a time when the meat could have been donated to a food bank if legally taken.)

11-29- An animal handler is recovering in a Sydney, Australia hospital after being attacked by a Bengal tiger at a zoo owned by the family of late wildlife expert Steve Irwin. The tiger dragged the handler into a pool and bit his shoulders and neck during a show two days ago. The man was wearing a poncho and the tiger may have mistaken him for its “favorite chew toy.”

11-30- A six month old Pit bull is found in an apartment rubble nine days after the tornado in Washington, Illinois. The pooch is hungry and scratched but will be fine.

Well, my faithful readers, that wraps up another mind blowing edition of Blue Duck Weather; a relatively inactive month of weather reporting limited to a few pages instead of the novels I usually write. The Lovely Mrs. Blue Duck will be happy, and I am sure you will be too!

This month’s weather song is “Tornado” by Little Big Town.

Until next month when the wind howls out your name remember Pioneers took bullets. Settlers took land.


The Distinquished, honorable Professor MR Blue Duck.




































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Sunday, November 3, 2013

October 2013 Blue Duck Weather News

October 2013 Weather News!

This is the thirty year anniversary of the historic Great Maricopa flood that made national headlines and cut off your truly and his little family from the cities for a week.

It was not the amount of rain that fell in Maricopa that late September and early October in 1983 that flooded the tiny town and surrounding areas. In the southern and eastern portion of the state it rained for days. Safford, Arizona recorded twelve inches of rain in ten days as a result of remnants from Tropical Storm Octave. The subsequent runoffs funneled from the high ground to the east and to the south toward rural Pinal County with Maricopa in the crosshairs. There were even grave concerns that Coolidge Dam to the east would not be able to take the pressure of the flooding and that it may fail.

When all was said and done 14 people were killed in the state, thousands injured and the damage to homes and property was estimated at one billion dollars.

On October 3rd, 1983 the flood roared into town, at that time a population of 250 residents. (Hard to believe looking at Maricopa now.) No one believed floods would breach the Santa Rosa Wash but they did. Water engulfed the only school in town, the restaurant and everything south of the railroad tracks. When the water arrived “it changed everything.”

Some reported a wall of water seven feet high. Folks scrambled to turn off electricity and warn neighbors. Soon, families climbed onto the roofs of their homes awaiting rescue. It wasn’t just the water that was dangerous. There were snakes, rats and floating debris in the water.

The Arizona National Guard sent soldiers to help move in supplies and Pinal County Sheriffs moved deputies into the area to help with search and rescue operations.

Cleanup of the K-12 school took six weeks. Homes had two feet of mud in them. One man said he will never forget looking back to the east from town and seeing a “solid sheet of wet, glistening mud for as far as I could see.”

On that October day before the floods roared through every wash north and south of town the Lovely young Mrs. Blueduck had been tipped that the water was coming. She drove sixteen miles to the nearest pay phone (we had no home phone then as there was no phone service available yet on The Land), and called my boss in Phoenix. He radioed me that I better get home (there were not cell phones than and office to truck communication was by radio.). Heading home as fast as I dared I could see engineers on the tiny bridges spanning washes north of Maricopa. Maricopa Road was a dangerous two lane road full of dips, potholes and occasional wild horses wandering into traffic. The engineers were ready to close the road as I made it southbound.

Fortunately our little nest was sixteen miles south of Maricopa so no flood waters came this far south. But what cut us off from work, Phoenix and Casa Grande were closed interstate bridges. I-8 was closed to the south. I-10 was closed to the east over the Gila River. There was no Maricopa Road at its juncture with the Gila as it was completely washed out.

The one store to get supplies was a tiny little commissary on the Reservation north of us. They were rationing eggs, milk, gas and bread. Looking back we did just fine, our little family of four riding the flood out.

But what about the next time? Maricopa now has a population of sixty thousand people thirty years later. The Army Corps of Engineers took to the sky in the days after the flood, observing how the water spread out and making plans to improve the area washes and bridges to prevent wider flooding in the future.

The Santa Rosa Wash was widened after the flood, which helped diminish the damage from another “hundred year flood” ten years later in 1993. But one long time Maricopa resident said recently “You can’t predict anything.” All I know is this many people later in Maricopa and another flood like 1983 would be a national disaster.


It seems javelinas made a lot of news in the early part of the month in Arizona, none of it any good being the victims of man or vehicle. Also read about a freak, tragic accident on a Colorado hiking trail, ‘’Super smog”, “A Super Typhoon”, where road kill is now legal to take for food, and so much more in this jam packed exciting issue of Blue Duck Weather!

But first it is necessary to get weather statistics out of the way. It was nineteen degrees cooler on The Land at the end of the month than the beginning with an average temperature of 68.79 degrees due to a cold front that passed through.

Talking Trees and Antelope Hill had and average temperature of 46.08 degrees, also nineteen degrees cooler at the end of the month due to the same cold front that affected Arizona temperature.

Not a fucking drop of rain fell in the month of October on The Land or for most of the state.

And that brings us to the shrinking, although steady, lake levels. Mead is 46% full, Powell 45% full, Pleasant 52% and Roosevelt 45% full.


10-2- Tons of jellyfish force one of the world’s largest nuclear reactors to shut down in Sweden.

A man and his wife from the lowest lying nation on earth is trying to convince judges in New Zealand that he is a refugee from climate change. They left six years ago for higher ground due to rising seas.

10-3- The first named winter storm of the season (you read it first in Blue Duck Weather last year. The National Weather Service believe if they name threatening storms, like hurricanes, people will pay more attention to the potential harm they cause.) Atlas will bring snow to parts of the northern Rockies.

Wandering javelinas keep a school locked down near 51st Street and Thomas in Phoenix until Arizona Game & Fish relocate them.

And in a separate incident 10 javelinas found dead at an intersection in north east Scottsdale struck by cars. Two babies a few weeks old found on top of dead mamas trying to nestle.

A father and four family members killed on a hiking trail in Colorado by rolling, massive boulders. A 13 year old girl survived and said Dad shielded her. The boulders weighing as much as one hundred tons left a slide gash the size of a football sleeve on the mountain.

10-4- Tropical Storm Karen threatening the Gulf Coast and mandatory evacuations in Louisiana due to storm surges three to five feet high.

A tornado destroys homes in north east Nebraska near Wayne.

A blizzard warning is issued in six states including Wyoming and South Dakota with 70mph winds.

A high today of 89 degrees in Phoenix, cooler than Washington, DC.

10-5- Record breaking four feet of snow in portions of South Dakota. Rapid City received 19’’, the most on this day since 1919.

80mph Santa Anna Winds blow into Southern California.

10-6- “Without warning”. Flash flooding in Kentucky prompts 80 emergency rescues and 75 roads closed. Seven inches of rain in 36 hours ties old record.

The tornado that hit Wayne, Nebraska has been confirmed as an EF4 with 170mph winds.

10-8- Typhoon Fitow slams eastern China with a staggering 574,000 evacuations and 35,800 sea vessels called to shore. One man died when he was blown off a hill while trying to help rescue a stranded fisherman.

And blame it on the fucking federal government shutdown: Colorado River runner permit holders denied scheduled launch dates will receive refunds. They will be allowed to schedule with choice of dates until 2016 and they have ninety days to apply.

10-9- Snow Advisory in northern Arizona above 6500’. Dust Storm Warning for the valley until 7:00pm. (Yours truly got caught in this mess heading south on Maricopa Road. It was one of the few times I had to pull completely off the road, turn off the lights and take my foot off the brake so someone wouldn’t plow into the back of me. The visibility was zero and when I finally got back on the road I could see several cars piled up on the opposite side of the road. I couldn’t see or hear the crash but there was debris all over the highway.)

Typhoon Fitow closes 60 parks and a zoo in Beijing. The single day total of rain was 6’’, the most since 1961.

10-10- Twenty degrees below normal around Arizona with a high of only 71 degrees on The Land. Flagstaff received 3.5’’ of snow breaking a record of 1’’ for this date.

Montana Fish and Wildlife approve regulations to allow people to go on line for permits to salvage road kill for food. The animals they hit with a vehicle “accidentally” will be fare game for the table if they apply within 24 hours of the kill. ( Some rednecks I know would just consider this another form of “hunting.”)

10-11- Super Cyclone Phailin is forming into a Category 5 hurricane and is the biggest weather system on earth today. (That is saying a lot!.)

A 56 year old Tucson man is crushed to death when the side of a wash caved in while he and a friend were looking for rocks and minerals. His friend walked for miles to reach authorities. It took them two hours to arrive to the site and two hours to dig him out of two to three feet of rock and sand.

A zookeeper who worked there for 30 years was killed by an elephant in south east Missouri. It is not believed the elephant attacked the man but merely “brushed” against him

10-12- Super Cyclone Phailin is said to be a humanitarian disaster. It is as broad as Hurricane Katrina was and has a foot print the size of France. As it strikes India twelve million people will be affected. One hundred and fifty mile per hour winds with twenty to thirty foot storm surges 800,000 evacuated.

A reward up to five thousand dollars is being offered by Arizona Game & Fish for information leading to the arrest of anyone who killed ten javelinas found near Saguaro National Park in Tucson. It is not clear if the pigs weres shot as all the meat was taken.

A 27 year old man has fallen to his death off Midgley Bridge in Oak Creek Canyon, Arizona. He fell two hundred feet to the canyon floor and investigators think it was suicide. His vehicle was found stopped on the bridge with the driver’s side door open. Sheriffs found a bedroom slipper near the car.

10-13- Phailin claims 13 souls in India. Early evacuations are credited for more lives not being lost. Damage to crops estimated to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

A seventy two year old deer hunter, lost for 19 days in the rugged mountains of northern California is rescued by other hunters and carried out on a make shift stretcher. It was not unusual for him to separate from his hunting partner for a few hours but somehow he managed to stumble and was unconscious he believes for an entire day. He survived by shooting small game with his rifle and packing leaves and dry grass on himself to stay warm. He also stayed close to water.

10-14- Arapahoe Basin Ski Resort in Colorado is the first to open in the nation this season.

10-15- Up to four feet of snow fell in parts of Black Hills, North Dakota last week killing ten to twenty thousand head of cattle. The vast majority of ranchers do not have insurance. One rancher lost over a thousand head of cattle and had to to bury them in a massive grave.

You read it here first several months ago about moose dying off in Michigan but now it seems it is spreading. From British Columbia to New Hampshire moose are dying and the speculation is stress from warmer temperatures, parasites and ticks. Up to one hundred thousand ticks can hide in the thick hair of a single moose.

10-16- Chinese rescuers evacuate 86 ‘tourists” from Mount Everest after they were stranded by heavy snow. They were about to return after “sightseeing” at the mountain’s North Base Camp. (Call me naïve or having a fixed image of the hardships climbers have endured on this mighty mountain but is hard to relate to recreational “tours” on this mighty mountain.)

10-17- Typhoon Wipha grounds hundreds of Tokyo flights. On one island thirty inches of rain fell in 24 hours. There are seventeen missing, fifty dead and three hundred and fifty homes destroyed.

10-18- Major wildfires burning in New South Wales in Australia; one thousand evacuated and two hundred homes burned.

10-19- Nearly thirty separate wildfires, twenty two out of control burning in the Blue Mountains of Australia. 193 homes have been destroyed and 109 damaged.

10-20- State of Emergency declared and fires in Australia have consumed 200 homes and has burned 180 square miles.

Tropical Storm Raymond has formed and moving toward Mexico’s southern Pacific coast. This area is still in bad shape after Manuel last month. Ten thousand people are still evacuated from flooded homes and landslide risks.

80 percent of Colorado’s roads have been repaired since the historic flooding last month. There were worries that roads would not be repaired before winter snow started to arrive. But Glen Haven, Colorado is still a “ghost town” and inaccessible.

10-21- The fires in Australia are now the size of Los Anegels.

Raymond is now a Category 3 hurricane.

10-22- The fires burning in Australia now reach one thousand miles. The initial fire began during a military training exercise.

Raymond stalls and is downgraded but still producing heavy rain on the Mexican coast.

“Super smog” blankets Harbin, China and visibility is down to half of a football field. Small particle pollution is 40 times higher than international safety standards. One resident said “I couldn’t see anything out of my apartment window and thought it was snowing.”

10-23- At ninety five degrees today Phoenix the hottest city in the nation. (What a lovely honor to have!)

10-24- A huge landslide covers part of a road in Denali National Park, Alaska. A two hundred foot stretch of the road is covered with 30,000 yards of rock and soil from five hundred feet above the road.

Arctic temperatures the warmest in the last century than in the last 40,000 years. (I don’t care whether you believe in global warming or not, this is alarming!)

A 169 pound catfish is caught on the Ebro River in Spain. The man that caught the lug, or maybe the fish caught him, was fishing from an inner tube and was drug for a mile. He said several times his tiny inner tube was about to be pulled underwater.

10-26- Days of torrential rains in India have left 39 dead with 70,000 evacuated!

A fully intact 76 pound deer found inside of a 16 foot Burmes python in the Florida Everglades.

10-27- Millions in England and Wales are told to prepare for heavy rains and hurricane force winds from a storm unofficially named St. Jude.

10-28- Thirteen dead, mostly from fallen trees and 270,000 without power. 90 mph winds pound the Isle of Wight.

60mph winds in Show Low Arizona and the snow level expected to drop to 7500 feet.

10-29- The most deadly stretch of an Arizona highway when the dirt blows; A short but very dense dust storm on I-10 near Pichacho Peak causes a nineteen vehicle pile up that kills three and twelve injured. The freeway was closed in both directions for six hours.

Rain and snow in Flagstaff, Arizona. A Freeze Warning is issued for Mohave County.

10-30- One hundred acre Whiting Fire burning east of Show Low near the New Mexico border. The cause is unknown.

10-31- Heavy rain and flooding cancels Halloween in portions of Texas. High wind warnings issued in 16 states. The barometric pressure will drop to a Category 2 hurricane level. Twelve to fourteen foot seas on Lake Erie.
There you have it my fine readers, another staggering edition of Blue Duck Weather! But wait, this is a bonus month and we shall leave you with two quotes for the month:

“Listening I could hear
Within myself the snow
That was coming, the sound
Of a loud, cold trumpet-
John Haines, Poem for a Cold Journey 1966.

And a viwpoint on Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River: “It made a hell of a lot better river than it does a Reservoir.” River guide and long time rafter, Richard Quest.

Until next month, and hopefully you won’t find yourself inside a sixteen foot Burmese Python, remember Pioneers took bullets. Settlers took land.


The Distinguished Professor MR Blue Duck.