El Nino...Jellyfish...Hurricane Nora 1997...Hurricane Joanne 1972...Claudia 1962

Are you making a correlation between the early appearance of the jellyfish, the heavy winds and waves Penasco has had recently, and other events buried in these articles pointing towards another hurricane reaching the Penasco shores?
 
the storm that came about a week after Nora and was during a high tide was one to remember... If I recall there were about 3 deaths attributed to it when several pangas were lost at sea...

and the waves washed everything from the bottom floor of Sr. Amigos and Flavios out into the street... also tore up the sidewalks down in front of what was then Linda Vista Restaurant and now is where the Thirsty Parrot is located...
 
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azdiva

Guest
correlation of events due to el nino

I'm resarching el nino events and former hurricanes that have affected Penasco in the past.
There isn't alot of information available before 1950. There are weather events recorded from
late 1800's from Yuma and Phoenix. Especially when Yuma received 21" on rain in 24 hrs on
a september day. Researchers know a little more about the warming of the eastern pacific waters
and the cause and effect relationship. Hurricanes no doubt have affected Penasco in the past, this
might be the year of the big one. Also RP is a lot more developed and probably that much more exposed.
I'm also thinking about the swarm of daily occurance earthquakes in the Colo Delta region, so far over
600 recorded in one year. Plywood, Duct tape, tarps, water, bleach and batteries would be wise to have
in storage.
 
I haven't had time to bone-up on why, but everyone I've spoken to who has lived in Tucson for a reasonable amount of time will agree that this is the windiest year we've ever had. Just ridiculous sustained gusts for hours on end...A calm day is out of the norm. Guess I could google this stuff...
 

mis2810

Guest
GringoZona, now that you mention it, it has been really windy in Phoenix as well. Freaky weird windy on certain days. The first Sunday in May we had invited some friends over for a carne asada and we had to move inside the wind was so bad. On some days it's even rattled the windows. Very strange.
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
Y'all should read the Fishing Forum more often. I've done nothing but whine about the wind since last fall. It's definitely been outside the normal pattern and trying to find an open window to fish has been difficult at best, at least using Buoyweather and prediction tools. The prediction tools have been out of whack and can't keep up with it. You have to BE THERE, go down to the beach and see what the wind and waves look like before you make a decision to go out or not. Even then, there's been some weird patterns where my buddies call on the radio and say they're sitting in 4 ft. seas to the south, while I'm sitting on glass-flat water to the west. Very odd.
 

Stuart

Aye carumba!!!
Staff member
So what does it all mean?
It means I didn't get to go fishing many times when I wanted to, that's what it means!! :aagh:

In the grand scheme of things, who knows? Call 1-800-GLB-WARM and ask for Al Gore. I'm sure he has lots of theories based on cherry-picked data that he can expound upon.

In my limited view of things (I'm not a scientist, I just play one here on the forum), the jet stream shifted significantly this year due to El Nino conditions and brought us a lot more wind and rain than we would see in our normal weather pattern here in the Southwest. I have read that the El Nino condition has started to wane, so come fall/winter, we may return to our more normal weather pattern.

Interesting read this morning concerning the Easter 7.2 earthquake centered in Mexicali - it actually shifted the Earth's crust up to 10 feet in some places in Mexico. There was a 31 inch shift most everywhere else. This was measured by satellites. Good news for us in AZ! California is that much closer to falling into the ocean! Beachfront property ahoy!! :-D
 
Interesting. We saw lots of jellyfish when there June 12th-15th.

But El Nino is officially gone. Water temps have reverted to neutral conditions. There is some evidence it will flip to La Nina. This is all according the National Weather Service El Nino bulletin.
 
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