HunkieDorie23 said:
. . . So is this a La nina year?
I have really stayed out of this thread since I knew that rain was a real problem in the central part of the US, but not here. Here it is cool with sprinkles . . . cool with wind . . . cool with clouds . . . even, cool with sunshine.
Dorie's comment about La Nia and Daisy's rainless Texas comments caused me to look at what NOAA has to say about La Nia. I'd like to post a link but NOAA's information is terribly scattered and often tied to earlier La Nia & El Nio years - even from the last century!
Since the weather patterns start from the west and move east, for the most part . . . and, because I live over here

, I looked at the West. What I came away with is that
usually La Nia years have a quite clear boundary between rain and Southwest drought that runs from about San Francisco Bay to the middle of Wyoming. (Eastern Colorado gardeners have been praying for snow/rain and might even take
hail if water doesn't show up soon.)
The effect of La Nia is worldwide and, apparently, it is blamed for the catastrophic floods in Australia, for example. But, it is also
implicated in the huge snowstorms this winter on the east coast of the US and, of course, the more recent major storms in California.
Good or bad, what it looks like to me is that these major cycles, tied to ocean water temperatures, are coming quickly in the most recent years. So, La Nia may be abating rather soon but this might just put us right back in the opposite, El Nio cycle . . .
Steve