| Good morning - what's the weather today? |
Our weather forecast for the next ten days is
a chance of a thunderstorm, with temperatures ranging from 31°Celsius to 36°Celsius. That’s hot!
And
maybe it will be true, and maybe it won’t.
We’ll let you know at the end of the ten
days.
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| Photo from internet, summer snow storm BC |
Being Canadians, we are obsessed with the weather. In Canada, the conditions can vary tremendously in one day from hot and
sunny to downright cold with snow and ice, but hopefully not in June, July, August, September, or October. Although driving through the high-mountain
passes of British Columbia in August, we have experienced snow. Not our idea of
a fun summertime road trip!
| Getting wet - but sunny in 15 minutes |
On Isla, we compulsively check two
different internet weather sites. I like Intellicast, and Lawrie prefers Weather
Underground. Other island friends use Windguru, Accuweather, plus a
relatively new one called WeatherSpark. From May to October, we also check NOAA,
the American-based National Weather Service, for potential tropical storms.
The strange thing is, the forecasts are only
about 50% accurate, even with satellite images and computer modeling. The
forecast might be for a chance of thundershowers with the possibility of 117mm
of rain (4.5 inches), but we’ll have a hot sunny day with absolutely no rain.
| From Isla towards the storm over Cancun |
If we look toward Cancun, a few
miles to the west, they likely will be experiencing the forecasted rain.
Now
that’s a very odd thing because there are no mountains in the state of
Quintana Roo. It is a relatively flat piece of land with the highest point in the
entire state located in the southwestern region, and rising a grand total of 230
meters above sea level, or 750 feet.
There is nothing very tall in the entire state to ‘snag’
the clouds to hold them over the city, yet Cancun seems to get more rain than
Isla.
| Showers are headed our way |
Over time, Lawrie and I have become amateur
weather forecasters. We look toward the ocean; if the clouds are dark and the
horizon is hazy, we have ten minutes to shut the windows and pull in outdoor
cushions.
Then twenty minutes later, we open the windows and put out the cushions.
It’s a tough life!
When making your
vacation plans, don’t be put off by the forecast of grumpy weather. It may or
may not be accurate.
There was, for a short time, a humorous
sign, complete with a large stone suspended from a rope, posted near the Isla
Mujeres Quinta Region Naval base.
It summed up weather forecasting on
Isla Mujeres.
The stone is wet: it’s raining.
The stone is dry: it’s not raining.
The stone is swinging: it’s windy.
The stone
is still: it’s not windy.
There is no stone: it’s blowing a hurricane.
There
are two stones: you’re drunk.
The moral of the story: you’ll know what the
weather is going to be when it happens.
Hasta Luego from paradise, Lynda, Lawrie, Sparky, and Max

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1 comment:
Exactly!
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