Snow where I live Woodstock 474m above sea level 20km from Cowra
Attachment 352735 Attachment 352736 Attachment 352737
Attachment 352738 Attachment 352739 Attachment 352740
Please post your snow pics as well
Printable View
Snow where I live Woodstock 474m above sea level 20km from Cowra
Attachment 352735 Attachment 352736 Attachment 352737
Attachment 352738 Attachment 352739 Attachment 352740
Please post your snow pics as well
That's a lot of snow for 474 Alt !!!
My parents are very slowly making their way here from Mudgee - had to go 3/4 of the way to Newcastle to bypass the myriad snow closed roads in the central west
I'm B....y cold just looking at them pics.
Kryn
We had 6" overnight Thursday.
We had a lot of snow too.
Must be due to global warming according to the experts. :roll:
Where are the other pics.
I see you good at building with sustainable resources. Then again not sure how sustainable snow is your way Ray. Nice snow man
Dave TTC
Turning Wood Into Art
I was just driving back from town a little while ago - a car coming the other way had a mini snowman built on the bonnet. Cracked me up.
Could that be termed a Mexican standoff? :roll:
Local weather conditions and climate aren't the same thing. You're talking of events on two different scales both in terms of time and areal extent.
It might be snowing in the Blue Mountains but large parts of Queensland are in drought and here in South Australia it's as cold as hell but it's also as dry as hell.
It was caused by super chilled air rushing up from Antarctica. (however that fits into the discussion)
While on the subject of Antarctica....the fact that the Antarctic ice sheet is still present means that technically the ice age that began at the start of the Pleistocene Epoch is still on-going....we're currently enjoying a shorter period warm event known as an interglacial which started around 11700 BCE. Like weather and climate glacials/interglacials are not the same as ice ages and the intervening long term warm periods.......they operate on different time scales and their areal extent is also different (glacials/ interglacials are more localised).
I tried to put these photos up on the week end but the computer was on a "go slow" so I had to wait till today.
The cold came in in two stages. The first early in the week wasn't as bad as it got by Friday. We are tucked right into the range at the bottom so to see the snow we had to go further up the road 20 odd kms and rise up another couple of hundred metres. Yeh I know it is little more than a dust but it was interesting to see and experience
Snow is snow wherever you are.
Noce pics
Dave TTC
Turning Wood Into Art