Average trajectory of an Alberta Clipper
This is straight
from my other friend, Wikipedia, who follows Google as my hero. With apologies
to Jane. I would never call it a
Canadian Clipper, or even a Canada Clipper.
Actually, I like Alberta as a name.
My friend Linda’s mother’s name is Alberta, and the clipper lives up to that
name. Our Alberta ran a dairy farm in
New York, raised kids, fed the hired hands and took over the family fertilizer
business when necessary. Alberta is ninety
five. She could do it all over again
tomorrow, if asked.
As the Alberta
clipper heads down to Ohio, it passes over several Great Lakes. By itself the clipper is not a great snow
maker, perhaps a couple of inches. But
over an open great lake, it picks up moisture.
Over two or three great lakes it picks up a great deal of moisture. Lake Erie is the third great lake the clipper
passes over on its way to my house, if that is it's destination.
Now I live on
top of a ridge that marks the division between the Lake Erie watershed and the
Ohio River watershed. The Cuyahoga
River, two miles down the hill north and west of me, flows into Lake Erie. I remember learning in geography that it
rains along the west coast because storms come off the Pacific Ocean, slam into
the Cascade Mountains and drop all the rain on the west side. Great American Desert on the east side, broad
brushing it.
That’s what
happens here in northeastern Ohio. All
that moisture hits the watershed ridge and drops as snow. And, where squalls persist, to quote one
weatherman, even more snow. All
accompanied by leaden grey skies and blustery winds. Akron, Ohio, ten miles south of us, may only
get a dusting. Alberta hit the ridge and
dumped the snow up here
.
Alberta
Clippers mean take the kids to the bus in the morning, and maybe even wait
there for them at night. They mean stay
home if you don’t need to go out, stay warm, read a book or get out some
sewing. They aren’t all that bad. And, they may be over for the winter. We’re half way through the month this week.
Funny...we don't have any special names for all the storm masses that come our way from the Excited States..other than a few we can't print here lol.
ReplyDeleteIt's good that all that melting snow will run into Lake Erie and help raise the level.
ReplyDeleteLet's blame Albertans....Ontarians usually do!
ReplyDeleteJane x
Did you notice that they never name good weather patterns.
ReplyDeleteThank you kindly, Joanne. I get it! My mother said your problems started in the Rockies. I said, NO way! You said, yes sirree, they do--the Rockies of Canada!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good idea to stay home if one can during these clippers!!
ReplyDeletebetty
Snow isn't bad unless you have to get somewhere, the power goes off, or you're stranded in it.
ReplyDeleteWait, that doesn't leave many scenarios where snow's okay, does it? Just the one: home, with a working microwave to make popcorn, snuggled under a blanket reading a good book :)
Nice post, Joanne!Hope you are nice and cosy and wrapped in a good book!
ReplyDeleteAlberta Clippers sometimes take a right turn and head south. When they come down over us they bring high pressure, north wind and temps so cold spit freezes before it hits the ground. Boiling water tossed into Alberta Clipper air vaporizes. Sometimes it comes over us and sits for weeks. Not wishing bad on anyone but we like it when it misses us.
ReplyDeleteI hope it misses our daughter in Illinois. She's awfully tired of shoveling snow and avoiding ice patches. I'm sending you warm aloha from Hawaii.
ReplyDeleteWeather was a mystery back in my childhood. Now, forecasting actually means something. Hope you are seeing the end of winter soon.
ReplyDeleteThat was so interesting and yes, Alberta is a lovely name for a girl.
ReplyDeleteAs I looked out of the window this morning (in Yorkshire, UK) I said to my wife "where on earth is all this snow coming from?" Now I know. Thank you Alberta.
ReplyDeletefascinating stuff!
ReplyDeleteDear Joanne, thanks for explaining the terminology to us. I lived in Minnesota for thirty-eight years and the meteorologists used the term often but I've never heard an explanation.
ReplyDeleteI'm wondering if that lake-effect is why Buffalo, New York, gets so much snow each winter. Peace.
Joanne, thanks for this interesting bit of information which I shall share with my friends in Boston when they complain about their N'oreasters.
ReplyDeleteHappy Valentines Day and congratulations...you are the winner of the Valentine give-a-way on thefeatherednest. email me your mailing address to ournest@live.ca and your prize will be winging its way to you.
ReplyDeletenever knew of an alberta clipper, once almost got lost in a snowstorm in Chicago as a young child just dropped off by the bus, it was a white out, finally made it home, couldn't see two feet in front of me so it was hard to find our building.
ReplyDeleteFor a smaller state, Ohio has such varied weather. When I lived in Cincinnati it hardly ever snowed and if it did, it was maybe 1". Columbus has more snow, but nothing like up North. I actually miss the real snow storms we used to have in NE Ohio (even though I wasn't as far North as you guys are).
ReplyDelete