Hazy Days
Here is my reply to Connie.......
"I don't think it is Saraha Dust as it is too early in the year. I think Montserrat might have erupted but the official website is now only giving weekly reports so I can't find out for sure - hubby just thinks it is heat haze because, well, boy it is hot and humid"
Forecast - Diana you know better than to ask that question it always reads the same and they never talk about "haze" only rain % and we know what that means
   it always reads the same and they never talk about "haze" only rain % and we know what that means   
 
Pia
			
			
									
						
							"I don't think it is Saraha Dust as it is too early in the year. I think Montserrat might have erupted but the official website is now only giving weekly reports so I can't find out for sure - hubby just thinks it is heat haze because, well, boy it is hot and humid"
Forecast - Diana you know better than to ask that question
 it always reads the same and they never talk about "haze" only rain % and we know what that means
   it always reads the same and they never talk about "haze" only rain % and we know what that means   
 Pia
Realtor - St John Properties
			
						Thanks Hugo, my post to Connie was from a few days ago so everyone just ignore  It sure is early this year - off to check my "dust plumes" website
  It sure is early this year - off to check my "dust plumes" website 
			
			
													 It sure is early this year - off to check my "dust plumes" website
  It sure is early this year - off to check my "dust plumes" website 
					Last edited by Pia on Thu Apr 29, 2010 10:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
									
			
						
							Realtor - St John Properties
			
						WOW  does not look good for the near future - boy it's early this year.  Here is one of the links that we use just scroll down to SAL (Saharan Air Layer) .........
http://stormcarib.com/goes.htm
			
			
									
						
							http://stormcarib.com/goes.htm
Realtor - St John Properties
			
						Pia, as a veteran of Saharan air, do you know of any negative effects it brings beyond hazy skies?Pia wrote:WOW does not look good for the near future - boy it's early this year. Here is one of the links that we use just scroll down to SAL (Saharan Air Layer) .........
http://stormcarib.com/goes.htm
[EDIT] I found out a little more... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saharan_Air_Layer
Come see us!
			
						"The SAL has also been observed to suppress the development of tropical cyclones..."augie wrote:
Pia, as a veteran of Saharan air, do you know of any negative effects it brings beyond hazy skies?
[EDIT] I found out a little more... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saharan_Air_Layer
At least that's some good news, right?
Matt
			
						What effect does the Saharan Air Layer have on the weather?  Does it bring rain or just haze?  Hopefully not rain since we'll be on island in 6 days.
			
			
									
						
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Generally it suppresses rain, which is very bad for us at this time of year-- and it may be one of the reasons that May is averaging much drier in the past 30 years than in all  the previous decades that rain has been recorded here. We did not see African dust regularly until the 1980s. 
I prefer to not call it Sahara dust, because it mostly comes from areas that are becoming desert, not the relatively old and settled Sahara. Lake Chad, with drastically declining water levels, has been called the "most active dust spot in the world" which is saying a lot. The Gobi Desert of Northern China is expanding rapidly and has sent dust plumes all the way across the Pacific to the Western US.
There are on-going studies of the materials, both natural and synthetic, which may be coming in with the dust, particularly in respect to what may be affecting coral and what may be going into our cisterns. Many pesticides, for example, that are banned in the US are still being exported to Africa.
			
			
									
						
										
						I prefer to not call it Sahara dust, because it mostly comes from areas that are becoming desert, not the relatively old and settled Sahara. Lake Chad, with drastically declining water levels, has been called the "most active dust spot in the world" which is saying a lot. The Gobi Desert of Northern China is expanding rapidly and has sent dust plumes all the way across the Pacific to the Western US.
There are on-going studies of the materials, both natural and synthetic, which may be coming in with the dust, particularly in respect to what may be affecting coral and what may be going into our cisterns. Many pesticides, for example, that are banned in the US are still being exported to Africa.
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