No, Really! - I Love the Aberdeen, SD Weather

Posted by Rolf Joho on November 5th, 2010 filed in Global Warming


I love living in Aberdeen! You want to know what I like the best – the weather. I know, I know, you think I am crazy, but hear me out first.

What usually happens when there is a cold front is that warm air is displaced and moves over the cold air. This is because warm air is lighter. Once there, warm air will grow cooler and form into clouds.

Now let’s contrast that to Aberdeen. The flowers here struggle to bloom by the end of May and if you get over ambitious, you may lose all of your hard work to a late frost. Here in the Aberdeen area, we sometimes struggle to get ours planted, because the window of time to plant is very narrow. Now let’s talk about the wind. It is relentless, hour after hour, day after day and month after month. We rarely catch a break from the wind.

Because of these alarming incidents, most governments are attempting to lessen, if not successfully defeat the harmful effects of global warming. The Kyoto Protocol legally binds all member regions to reduce usage of four greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, sulphur hexafluoride. Its main goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Unlike cold fronts, warm fronts are not typically associated with devastation. This and other warm air mass conditions put warm fronts in stark contrast to cold fronts. The following are what you would expect when a warm air mass approaches or passes:

• Temperature conditions during warm fronts are opposite of that during cold fronts. Before a warm front passes, the temperature is noticeably cooler. If you are directly in line as a warm air mass passes, you will notice a quick change in temperature towards warmer levels.
• Cold fronts may lead to strong showers. Warm fronts however are typically accompanied only by light showers and drizzling especially as the warm front passes. Despite the drizzle though, surroundings can still feel more humid.
• Winds in the southern hemisphere will blow north to northeast. Those in the northern hemisphere will blow south to southeast. As the warm air mass passes, the direction of the winds will shift.
• Visibility as a warm front passes will be poor and hazy. Sometimes, fog can also form near the ground.
• Atmospheric pressure during the passage of warm fronts will fall and then rise and then fall again after it passes

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