everdred12a wrote:It probably has something to do with a government conspiracy. Area 51 and all that.
everdred12a wrote:Actually, that is pretty strange. I've never been to Arizona (or anywhere in the southwest, for that matter), but whenever people mention Arizona, I instantly think Desert. I guess it comes down to that whole thing where Greenland is covered with ice, but Iceland isn't....
livewire wrote:When Kazekami and I woke up in the morning people had built little snowmen on the hoods of the cars! 0_o
Wave wrote:That's funny! How much snow was on the ground? I used to live in Arizona. It's not that unusual to get 2 or 3 inches of snow every year, but from what you said it does not sound like a typical Arizona snow storm.
Pascal wrote:We got rain down in Glendale, actual rain, FROM THE SKY!
Pascal wrote:But no, we normally get snow, it’s just that we normally get more of it over a longer period of time.
We ALMOST got snow in Phoenix. The Weather Channel and the WeatherBug issued a Winter Advisory stating that there was going to be snow at 2000 feet. Phoenix is 3000 feet. The temperature dropped enough to have snow in Phoenix for the first time in 10 years. The last time we had snow in Phoenix was when I was 3 years old. Oh and Pascal, I don't think we should include the time when it hailed so much that it was almost like having snow.
As for the weird weather, I agree. The August '96 was the worst storm in history for Phoenix. Too bad I don't have pictures of it. Digital cameras and camera phones weren't really popular back then. To explain how bad it was, ALL the news stations were covering it, the weathermen on the news were extremely confused and everyone sorta prepared for the worst. But we didn't know what to really expect.
The clouds turned blacker than black. And then they did something weird which made any and everyone go crazy. The clouds started turning green. Not green as in faint tint green, more like a solid dark murky green that could be seen everywhere. Even the news cameras picked up the green clouds. The day the sky turned green really.
It gets worse. My father decides to go out for dinner that night. I was against it the whole time. I was right too. As we walked out, the sky was green and I saw another freaky thing. An inverted tornado. Let me explain that. You know how a tornado spins and a cloud starts coming down? This one spinned and rotated upward. If that weren't enough, my mom (who was born and raised in Chicago) felt as if it was tornado weather. No animals or birds out. No wind. Just total eerie silence.
Pascal wrote:I remember that green tint too, but it was only visible towards the beggining of the storm... But the storm lasted through the night so its visibility is to be expected. I was sitting in my wooden fort watching it come in, when the wall of wind hit. The fort (though well made) shook like crazy and then my mother ran outside to yell at me to come in. But what was really cool, was the fact that I could jump into the air and the wind would carry me partially forward. I didn't even have to run, I could sorta moonjump my way to the house! When we went to the front padio to watch (like I always do to my mother's concern) you could see the physical boundaries between where one wind gust started and and ended. In the front there would be a thick layer of moving dust, granted it was moving at about 100 some odd miles an hour near our house but that was really wild. I don't remember the tornado though, I think I saw a wall cloud to our north, but that would have had to have been near that small hill-mountain to our north thats covered in strange sorta lava type rocks. Storms are cool.
Pascal
Ah yes. I forgot about flying. My friend who weighed about 140 at the time decided to go outside at the time while the storm was going strong. He jumped in the air and counted to 5 seconds before landing again. Basically, he flew, no wings, no special shoes, just a lot of wind.
Sigh, yes Arizona does have a heat shield. Its called the mountains everywhere surrounding us. They prevent any moisture and clouds from getting in. Only random hurricanes and tornadic weather that sometimes gets in.
Lava type rocks? O.o I have no idea what your talking about. Is it somewhere around Anthem?
Pascal wrote:WOW! 5 seconds, that's a long time, but I believe it. I wish I could have spent more time outside than on our patio.
Not really the mountains as much as the massive city streets. Note that the storms move over the mountains rather rapidly but come to a dead halt when they come near the outskirts of pheonix.
Etttooo... You know which hill like thing I'm talk about, I know you do, you just can't see the rocks until you're closer. It's the closest moutain-hill like land structure to the north of Bell Road. It's rather ugly and has the same texture as the closest mountain directly to our east (The big one that blocks out the city skyline). But anyways... cool day today, a few sprinkles not enough for anything major. 50 degrees out though according to our car. (Shivers)
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