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Investments > Australian Investments > Global Cooling ...
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Global Cooling News: Deep Freeze Hits Canada

by "0NBZ0" <0NBZ0@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 23, 2008 at 01:14 PM

So much for mythical global warming!!!



Hanneke Brooymans, Gordon Kent and Chris Zdeb, Canwest News Service

April 21, 2008



http://www.nationalpost.com:80/news/story.html?id=461865



Spring has turned into a cruel joke in Western Canada, where a 
late-season blizzard dumped heavy snow on much of Alberta Sunday and a 
cold snap may have devastated fruit crops across the border in B.C.



As much as 60% of the apricot crop and 50% of the sweet cherries and 
peaches could be lost to the freezing temperatures of the last few days 
in B.C.'s Okanagan Valley.



"It is very, very serious for us right now," said Hank Markgraf, 
horticultural manager for the Okanagan Tree Fruit Company.



"I'm born and raised in the industry and I can remember the last 20 to 
25 year pretty well and I've never seen it like this. This is pretty 
bad."



Over the weekend some of the interior saw snowfall. But it was really 
Monday night's drastic dip to -11C in some places that was the death 
knell for soft fruit.



According to Environment Canada there is little relief for the next few 
days as nighttime temperatures continue to dip to as low as -3C in some 
areas.



Christine Dendy, owner of a cherry orchard in Kelowna, is looking at 
losing up to 50% of her crop and she says less fruit going to market 
will also likely mean higher prices at the grocery stores.



"I would think it would be a premium this year, for sure," said Dendy.



Back in Alberta, the RCMP closed a ****tion of the southbound lane of 
Highway 2 Monday to investigate a fatal collision. A tractor-trailer 
crashed near the off-ramp for Didsbury, about 233 kilometres south of 
Edmonton. Road conditions may have been a factor in the crash.



Further north on the same highway, a Greyhound bus slid into a pickup 
Sunday night about 40 kilometres south of Edmonton.



The pickup came to rest in one ditch, the bus in the other. There were 
16 passengers on board the bus at the time. There were no re****ted 
injuries. Road conditions were considered a factor in the crash.



The Edmonton region has been struck with its worst April snowstorm in 
almost 20 years.



One of the hardest-hit areas in Alberta was near Wainwright, about 200 
kilometres east of Edmonton, which has received about 36 centimetres of 
snow, Environment Canada said Monday.



Lloydminster, which is about 250 kilometres east of Edmonton, received 
30 centimetres.



Pam Larocque of the Husky Lloydminster Travel Centre said travellers 
were stunned by the ferocity of the storm, with drifts building along 
roads and wind gusting to 60 km/h.



"It's worse if you're driving in from the east," she said. "We've had a 
lot of people decide to stay the night in [Lloydminster]."



Roads south of Edmonton were also in poor condition, while busy Highway 
63 to Fort McMurray suffered partial whiteouts, ice and blowing snow.



In Edmonton, the city had about 60 vehicles plowing and sanding main 
roads during the weekend, said city trans****tation spokesman Randy 
Kilburn.



"It's a total aberration," he said. "I have basically lived here my 
whole life and I can't remember it being this heavy this late."



The road clearing is costing the city about $100,000 a day, he said.



Environment Canada meteorologist David Wray said another 10 to 15 
centimetres could fall on Edmonton before snow tapers off Tuesday 
morning.



Add in the 10 centimetres that came down on the weekend and you're 
looking at the city's biggest April snowfall since the one-day record 
43.4 centimetres on April 23, 1990, he said.



The current weather in the Edmonton region is unusually cold, with an 
Arctic ridge pu****ng temperatures down 15 to 20 degrees below normal, 
Wray said. The temperature in Edmonton Monday afternoon was -10C, with a 
wind chill of -20C.



People who didn't have to travel were taking winter's return in stride 
Sunday, hauling out inner tubes and toboggans for possibly the season's 
last slide.



Donald Gross, with Jude, 5, and George, 3, said he felt "pretty 
demoralized" when he looked out the window in the morning.



"Honestly, I had to make a pretty big effort to drag myself out the 
door. But the kids are having fun."



The Calgary region coped with 20 centimetres of snow and a wind chill 
hovering around -18C over the weekend. City crews worked feverishly 
through Saturday and Sunday to get roads cleared for Monday's commute.



Calgary was expected to see light snow Monday, tapering off by Tuesday 
morning. Some parts of northwestern Saskatchewan were hard hit, with 
snowfalls in the 15- to 25-centimetre range.
-- 



Warmest Regards

Bonzo

"Attributing global climate change to human CO2 production is akin to 
trying to diagnose an automotive problem by ignoring the engine 
(analogous to the Sun in the climate system) and the transmission (water 
vapour) and instead focusing entirely, not on one nut on a rear wheel, 
which would be analogous to total CO2, but on one thread on that nut, 
which represents the human contribution." Dr. Timothy Ball, Chairman of 
the Natural Resources Steward****p Project (NRSP.com), Former Professor 
Of Climatology, University of Winnipeg
 




 7 Posts in Topic:
Global Cooling News: Deep Freeze Hits Canada
"0NBZ0" <0NB  2008-04-23 13:14:12 
Re: Global Cooling News: Deep Freeze Hits Canada
John Black <jblack@[EM  2008-04-23 09:52:06 
Re: Global Cooling News: Deep Freeze Hits Canada
"Ouroboros_Rex"  2008-04-23 12:58:07 
Re: Global Cooling News: Deep Freeze Hits Canada
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-04-29 22:57:19 
Re: More of the usual Conservative Ignorance
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-04-29 22:58:31 
Re: Global Cooling News: Deep Freeze Hits Canada
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-04-29 22:56:31 
Re: Global Cooling News: Deep Freeze Hits Canada
"V-for-Vendicar"  2008-05-15 01:37:49 

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tan12V112 Thu Dec 4 0:40:59 CST 2008.