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Texas BlogWire

March 22, 2008

It literally rained mud here last Tuesday

Literally, mud fell from the sky here in San Antonio last Tuesday. 

I have no experience with that kind of weather phenomenon before, so I didn't know what to make of it.  My first impression upon seeing my car, after emerging from my office late that afternoon, was "My car is spattered in mud from top to bottom!  How did this happen?  Did some huge truck drive though a deep puddle at high speed?"  With no such large puddle nearby and thus no evidence that such a thing could have happened, I then noted that I had parked underneath a large live oak tree and that it is spring and rationalized that trees are messy in the spring. Then I promptly put it out of my mind, while driving to the nearest gas station to clean off the windows that I could barely see through.  There, some puzzlement  returned as I noted that the line for the car wash was six deep.

Daily life being full of distractions, and the concept of a muddy rain non-existent in my head, I once again forgot all about this, until, after a few days of no internet access thanks to a bad phone line, I read this article in the Express-News, titled, "Just ash with rain? Not so fast":

The strange stuff that fell Tuesday, griming up windows and lining the pockets of carwash owners, has had the additional effect of setting up a sort of meteorological whodunit.

Just what, some scientific sleuths want to know, commingled with the rain as it fell onto vehicles from San Antonio to Corpus Christi, from Austin to Houston?

Some initial reports, including one from a National Weather Service meteorologist, had the primary cause of the deposits as ash from wildfires in Mexico.

Other indications, including satellite photos, showed a dust plume also emerging from central Mexico.    

Another additive to the mix washed from the sky by the rain of a fast-moving cold front may have been particles from bone-dry West Texas.

...

Forrest Mims III, a science consultant and a freelance columnist for the Express-News, took a sample of the stuff from his window and put it under the microscope, forwarding some of his findings to TCEQ.

"There's one black spore and there are three possible soot particles and everything else is dirt, dust, sand. I would say that it's probably less than 1 percent smoke, and that's being generous," he said.

Joe Baskin, the weather service meteorologist who initially thought that what blew over here was mostly smoke since that's what it looked like in photos, said another look indicated that it likely was dust. (The weather service isn't responsible for investigating the stuff once it leaves clouds.)

    

David Gay, acting director of the Illinois-based National Atmospheric Deposition Program, said his government-funded network of researchers had five sample sites in South Texas and would be able to review initial findings as early as next week.

To me and, I suspect, most others here, it is much more plausible that the stuff in the rain was dust and not ash, as was apparently first reported.  The brownish, rusty color of the residue just does not fit the concept of dull gray ash.

So what is going on in west Texas or northern Mexico that their dirt is falling on our city?

January 18, 2007

Our coating of ice remains, for a little while longer

This morning, we are still in the deep freeze in northwest Bexar County -- the winter wonderland look, normally so rare and fleeting here, almost appears to be settling in for the long haul.  Our bushes and trees sag heavily under the tremendous weight of the thick ice that coats every exposed surface, encasing branches and leaves in crystal cylinders and globes.  As we walked around the neighborhood yesterday, the sound of ice-laden branches breaking and falling was commonplace.

The birds appear to be taking the prolonged cold in stride.  In fact, yesterday was an amazing day for backyard birdwatching, as it seemed that all the birds we normally see at various times throughout the day were here constantly -- perhaps not wanting to stray far from the food that must be critical to keep them warm.  In particular, I've never seen so many hermit thrushes in one day -- they are omnipresent, all of a sudden.  And we also had dozens of Lesser Goldfinches, dozens of Chipping Sparrows, plus Tufted Titmice, Carolina Chickadees, Bewick's Wrens, Carolina Wrens, Golden-fronted Woodpeckers, White-winged Doves, and, down the road, a very large hawk, possibly a Red-shouldered Hawk.

Apparently, we are finally going to ease above freezing later today, if only by a few degrees, for the first time since early Tuesday as I recall. Our trees and bushes will be relieved of their burdens, and our ice-covered landscape will revert to its normal appearance, minus quite a few large branches.

Chipping Sparrows Lesser Goldfinches Hermit Thrush

January 17, 2007

Pictures from the San Antonio ice storm

This morning in Bexar County, Texas: Ice, ice, everywhere.

Grill Icicles Cars sealed in ice Picnic table Frozen field of grass Icy branches Rosemary and sage on ice Icy grass Flattened mountain laurel Icicles on house

June 2008

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