The U&L Tourism Bureau would like us all to know...
Posted: Sat Jan 24, 2009 5:50 pm
Wifey is huge on vampires. Pretty much any movie, tv show or book on vampires, she's there. She might as well be a fourteen year old girl.
She's got another surgery scheduled in a couple weeks, after which she won't be able to do jack shit outside of the house for awhile. Yesterday was one of her passably "good days," so we decided to go do the whole popcorn/candy/botulism double feature deal at the local cineplex.
Swear to god, nothing makes you have to say to yourself, "At least I'm not AP!" more than paying $4.95 for a fucking Mr Pipp at the movies.
Anyway, back to the vampires.
We managed to time it right so that we could give her two vampire flicks, Twilight and Underworld III: Where The Fuck Is My Kate Beckinsale, ie, The Only Good Reason To See An Underworld Flick.
The thing that prompted this thread was a small bit in Twilight, where they declare the small town of Forks, Washington, to be the rainiest city in America.
Of course this immediately made me think of Dins. Would he be pissed that anything in Washington usurped his precious green and gold camelot for supremecy of the U&L? Surely there must be somewhere in Oregon that could knock off Washington's top dog, right?
So, I looked it up. "Rainiest cities in America" was my initial search heading.
Lo and behold, it turns out ol' Dins might be on to something when he says the U&L's rainy rep is all a bunch of bullshit.
Turns out that scheduling OOC home game scrimmages isn't the only thing dominated by The Meatgrinder. No, SECBSH, take pride in the fact that you're also The Meatgrinder of bad weather...
It's your world...
http://www.livescience.com/environment/ ... ities.html
Study Reveals Top 10 Wettest U.S. Cities
By Andrea Thompson, LiveScience Staff Writer
Do you think Seattle is the rainiest city in the United States? Well, think again.
Mobile, Alabama, actually topped a new list of soggiest cities in the 48 contiguous states, with more than 5 feet of rainfall annually, according to a study conducted by San Francisco-based WeatherBill, Inc.
The Southeast dominated the most rainy list, while the Pacific Northwest never enters the list until Olympia, Washington pops up at number 24.
The 10 rainiest cities in the U.S. by amount of annual rainfall include:
#1-Mobile, Alabama--67 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy days
#2-Pensacola, Florida--65 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days
#3-New Orleans, Louisiana--64 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy days
#4-West Palm Beach, Florida--63 inches average annual rainfall; 58 average annual rainy days
#5-Lafayette, Louisiana--62 inches average annual rainfall; 55 average annual rainy days
#6-Baton Rouge, Louisiana--62 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days (Jsc must be pissed about this one. LSU, only #6??)
#7-Miami, Florida--62 inches average annual rainfall; 57 average annual rainy days
#8-Port Arthur, Texas--61 inches average annual rainfall; 51 average annual rainy days
#9-Tallahassee, Florida--61 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days
#10-Lake Charles, Louisiana--58 inches average annual rainfall; 50 average annual rainy days
The study ranked 195 cities in the contiguous 48 states by the amount of rainfall they received annually over a 30-year period, although Olympia actually had the most rainy days on average across the three decades (63) of all the cities in the study. Mobile came in second on the latter scale, with 59 average annual rainy days. (Several cities in Alaska and Hawaii actually receive more than 100 inches of rain a year, but were not included in the study.)
Southeastern cities are so prevalent on the list because the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico fuel storms that frequently soak the region, particularly between June and November.
The study also found that in the past 30 years, the East and Southeast seemed to be getting wetter, while the West got drier. Florida, Louisiana and Alabama were the wettest states, while California, Montana, Nevada and Arizona were the driest (Las Vegas took the top spot for driest city).
Average rainfall was highest in the United States between July and September and lowest between January and March.
HOWEVER....
http://web2.airmail.net/danb1/usrecords.htm
10 wettest cities
Avg annual precipitation in inches
1. Hilo, Hawaii 128.00
2. Quillayute, Washington 104.50
3. Astoria, Oregon 69.60
4. Blue Canyon, California 67.87
5. Mobile, Alabama 64.64
6. Tallahassee, Florida 64.59
7. Pensacola, Florida 61.16
8. New Orleans, Louisiana 59.74
9. W Palm Beach, Florida 59.72
10. Miami, Florida 59.55
This list shows two U&L cities as being two and three on the list, making them one and two in the Lower 48. Number one there, and by a huge margin, is Quillayute, Washington, which includes the Fork, Washington area. Number two there, Astoria, Oregon, is on the northwest Oregon coast, just a shanked punt away from Portland.
So, maybe there is some truth to Fork's claim? Wonder how they're measuring these things though when Olympia, Washington is only number 24 on the first list while Forks, Washington is number one in the Lower 48 on this second list.
Here's the kicker list though...
10 cloudiest cities
Avg number of cloudy days per year
1. Astoria, Oregon 240
2. Quillayute, Washington 240
3. Olympia, Washington 229
4. Seattle, Washington 227
5. Portland, Oregon 223
6. Kalispell, Montana 213
7. Binghamton, New York 212
8. Beckley, West Virginia 211
9. Elkins, West Virginia 211
10. Eugene, Oregon 209
Aha!
So, okay, while it's true that Portland and most of the U&L are not in fact the rainiest places around, in most instances that's only in terms of sheer volume of rain. In terms of the sheer number of depressing, gloomy days, the kind of days that create uniforms like Oregon's and people like Dins and Kurt Cobain, the U&L is every bit deserving of its stellar reputation.
She's got another surgery scheduled in a couple weeks, after which she won't be able to do jack shit outside of the house for awhile. Yesterday was one of her passably "good days," so we decided to go do the whole popcorn/candy/botulism double feature deal at the local cineplex.
Swear to god, nothing makes you have to say to yourself, "At least I'm not AP!" more than paying $4.95 for a fucking Mr Pipp at the movies.
Anyway, back to the vampires.
We managed to time it right so that we could give her two vampire flicks, Twilight and Underworld III: Where The Fuck Is My Kate Beckinsale, ie, The Only Good Reason To See An Underworld Flick.
The thing that prompted this thread was a small bit in Twilight, where they declare the small town of Forks, Washington, to be the rainiest city in America.
Of course this immediately made me think of Dins. Would he be pissed that anything in Washington usurped his precious green and gold camelot for supremecy of the U&L? Surely there must be somewhere in Oregon that could knock off Washington's top dog, right?
So, I looked it up. "Rainiest cities in America" was my initial search heading.
Lo and behold, it turns out ol' Dins might be on to something when he says the U&L's rainy rep is all a bunch of bullshit.
Turns out that scheduling OOC home game scrimmages isn't the only thing dominated by The Meatgrinder. No, SECBSH, take pride in the fact that you're also The Meatgrinder of bad weather...
It's your world...
http://www.livescience.com/environment/ ... ities.html
Study Reveals Top 10 Wettest U.S. Cities
By Andrea Thompson, LiveScience Staff Writer
Do you think Seattle is the rainiest city in the United States? Well, think again.
Mobile, Alabama, actually topped a new list of soggiest cities in the 48 contiguous states, with more than 5 feet of rainfall annually, according to a study conducted by San Francisco-based WeatherBill, Inc.
The Southeast dominated the most rainy list, while the Pacific Northwest never enters the list until Olympia, Washington pops up at number 24.
The 10 rainiest cities in the U.S. by amount of annual rainfall include:
#1-Mobile, Alabama--67 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy days
#2-Pensacola, Florida--65 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days
#3-New Orleans, Louisiana--64 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy days
#4-West Palm Beach, Florida--63 inches average annual rainfall; 58 average annual rainy days
#5-Lafayette, Louisiana--62 inches average annual rainfall; 55 average annual rainy days
#6-Baton Rouge, Louisiana--62 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days (Jsc must be pissed about this one. LSU, only #6??)
#7-Miami, Florida--62 inches average annual rainfall; 57 average annual rainy days
#8-Port Arthur, Texas--61 inches average annual rainfall; 51 average annual rainy days
#9-Tallahassee, Florida--61 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy days
#10-Lake Charles, Louisiana--58 inches average annual rainfall; 50 average annual rainy days
The study ranked 195 cities in the contiguous 48 states by the amount of rainfall they received annually over a 30-year period, although Olympia actually had the most rainy days on average across the three decades (63) of all the cities in the study. Mobile came in second on the latter scale, with 59 average annual rainy days. (Several cities in Alaska and Hawaii actually receive more than 100 inches of rain a year, but were not included in the study.)
Southeastern cities are so prevalent on the list because the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico fuel storms that frequently soak the region, particularly between June and November.
The study also found that in the past 30 years, the East and Southeast seemed to be getting wetter, while the West got drier. Florida, Louisiana and Alabama were the wettest states, while California, Montana, Nevada and Arizona were the driest (Las Vegas took the top spot for driest city).
Average rainfall was highest in the United States between July and September and lowest between January and March.
HOWEVER....
http://web2.airmail.net/danb1/usrecords.htm
10 wettest cities
Avg annual precipitation in inches
1. Hilo, Hawaii 128.00
2. Quillayute, Washington 104.50
3. Astoria, Oregon 69.60
4. Blue Canyon, California 67.87
5. Mobile, Alabama 64.64
6. Tallahassee, Florida 64.59
7. Pensacola, Florida 61.16
8. New Orleans, Louisiana 59.74
9. W Palm Beach, Florida 59.72
10. Miami, Florida 59.55
This list shows two U&L cities as being two and three on the list, making them one and two in the Lower 48. Number one there, and by a huge margin, is Quillayute, Washington, which includes the Fork, Washington area. Number two there, Astoria, Oregon, is on the northwest Oregon coast, just a shanked punt away from Portland.
So, maybe there is some truth to Fork's claim? Wonder how they're measuring these things though when Olympia, Washington is only number 24 on the first list while Forks, Washington is number one in the Lower 48 on this second list.
Here's the kicker list though...
10 cloudiest cities
Avg number of cloudy days per year
1. Astoria, Oregon 240
2. Quillayute, Washington 240
3. Olympia, Washington 229
4. Seattle, Washington 227
5. Portland, Oregon 223
6. Kalispell, Montana 213
7. Binghamton, New York 212
8. Beckley, West Virginia 211
9. Elkins, West Virginia 211
10. Eugene, Oregon 209
Aha!
So, okay, while it's true that Portland and most of the U&L are not in fact the rainiest places around, in most instances that's only in terms of sheer volume of rain. In terms of the sheer number of depressing, gloomy days, the kind of days that create uniforms like Oregon's and people like Dins and Kurt Cobain, the U&L is every bit deserving of its stellar reputation.