31 Jan 0.40" 4.56" total
Sunday early morning through midday rain brought 0.4" in my back yard. A quick visit later in the day to the ocean side of the hill suggested even less rain over there based on ground dampness and lack of visible ponding. What really wreaked havoc, however, was the high winds that blew over a number of trees.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
2016-01-31
2016-01-27
You keep a knocking but you can't come in.
My brother was watching the house while I was away and caught these photos of a skunk or skunks trying to get back under the house after we sealed up their point of entry.
His triumphant email read:
His triumphant email read:
Try as they might, they can't get back in. Brent and I put the lockdown on Pepe Le Pew's house of fun. Too bad for them. :P
2016-01-21
2016-01-13
Surge tanks vs. rain barrels IV
I'm sure I left you dangling in a previous installment with the question of how rainfall intensity affects the usability of surge tanks. I talked about rainfall intensity without actually answering the question, but we can now get to the answer that I am sure you've been waiting for.
A recent discussion on radio station KPCC asked rain barrel owners what they would do with ALL THAT WATER. The answer was that their tanks were overflowing, they were too heavy to move, and no one knew what to do with the water. They were talking as if they were going to hoard it for a hot summer day! It was a gigantic Duh moment, but they were too blinded by ALL THAT WATER - all 55 gallons of it - to take a leap to the most logical place which is to reject rain barrels and embrace surge tanks.
Meanwhile, a friend who is an actual meteorologist stopped an earlier post in this blog by to say that most 30 minute southern California rain bands could be accommodated by a surge tank. That's really the bottom line, isn't it? If you can't flow rain water directly from your gutters to some place where it will infiltrate, then it might pay to have a surge tank type of set up. Let's see if she's right with a little garden engineering.
It's also nice to make some estimates, since the possibility is that surge tanks needn't be gigantic 55 gallon drums and therefore might be more seemly in the garden.
This post is again mostly stream-of-consciousness garden engineering, which I am pretty sure has a limited appeal. It may also be wrong. Therefore you may find this analysis simple or simple-minded.
A recent discussion on radio station KPCC asked rain barrel owners what they would do with ALL THAT WATER. The answer was that their tanks were overflowing, they were too heavy to move, and no one knew what to do with the water. They were talking as if they were going to hoard it for a hot summer day! It was a gigantic Duh moment, but they were too blinded by ALL THAT WATER - all 55 gallons of it - to take a leap to the most logical place which is to reject rain barrels and embrace surge tanks.
Meanwhile, a friend who is an actual meteorologist stopped an earlier post in this blog by to say that most 30 minute southern California rain bands could be accommodated by a surge tank. That's really the bottom line, isn't it? If you can't flow rain water directly from your gutters to some place where it will infiltrate, then it might pay to have a surge tank type of set up. Let's see if she's right with a little garden engineering.
It's also nice to make some estimates, since the possibility is that surge tanks needn't be gigantic 55 gallon drums and therefore might be more seemly in the garden.
This post is again mostly stream-of-consciousness garden engineering, which I am pretty sure has a limited appeal. It may also be wrong. Therefore you may find this analysis simple or simple-minded.
1.12" rain; 4.04" total
7 Jan 1.0"
8 Jan 0.12"
I think I had a data entry error on the 6th and entered 1.75" when I meant 0.75", so I've fixed that.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
I think I had a data entry error on the 6th and entered 1.75" when I meant 0.75", so I've fixed that.
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone
2016-01-06
0.75" rain; 2.92" total
This is the first of several El Nino - driven storms that are in the queue
5 Jan 2015 0.75" (This was previously reported as 1.75", but I think that was an error. Title and this line fixed 1/13/16.)
Historically, the median rainfall during all of January is about 1.5", additionally, the historic median cumulative rainfall at the end of January is 3.8".
We're definitely headed for the predicted high rainfall winter given that nearly the entire month still lies ahead.
5 Jan 2015 0.75" (This was previously reported as 1.75", but I think that was an error. Title and this line fixed 1/13/16.)
Historically, the median rainfall during all of January is about 1.5", additionally, the historic median cumulative rainfall at the end of January is 3.8".
We're definitely headed for the predicted high rainfall winter given that nearly the entire month still lies ahead.