On Wednesday, 4 December 2013 13:23:33 UTC, Malcolm wrote:
In article ,
Weatherlawyer writes
Significant volcanic activity arrived with the NE EFS signal (and the
storms, though the storms are a little lack-lustre (all one TD of them.))
"The Shiveluch volcano in Kamchatka has spewed ash nine kilometers high
in the sky, the Kamchatkan territorial emergency situations department
said. No ash fall has been reported from towns nearby. According to
disaster management official, Shiveluch volcano in Russia is currently
not a threat to local residents. The Kamchatkan volcano Shiveluch has
been periodically spewing ash from three to ten kilometers from May 2009.."
http://www.disaster-report.com/
You appear to be linking recent activity by this volcano with weather
events here. Can you please say what the correlation is between the
"periodically spewing" by this volcano since May 2009 and weather events
here in the last 4 and a half years?
Yes, easily enough if you give me the data.
No, (for had you the appropriate data you wouldn't need any more than an ITYS from me.)
It should be fairly obvious, even to you, that volcanic activity of one sort or another is related to wettish weather -not necessarily here but certainly within the purview of this Newsgroup.
It is almost certain that in the season for them, tropical storms of a certain proportion are accompanied one way or another by news-worth VEI and, in appropriate geography, VAA.
And no again.
I am not linking volcanic events with weather here.
I am linking weather forecasts elsewhere with volcanic events in places yet to be determined correctly in appropriate advance. All I have at the moment is appropriate advance. (Probably because I am too lazy to do the job I am not being paid to do, properly.)
If you wish to know more please feel just as free as you did when you had the temerity to post last. I won't bite you harder than you deserve. You may have missed the upshot of my various/previous posts on the subject.
Allow me to reiterate that the thing to look for besides the said forecasts on the Canadian EFS, is the presence of two or three tropical storms (or various appropriate storms elsewhere, out of season) along with the three Lows in a row.
It helps if the storms present themselves as three in a row. (In the present cast the tropical storms didn't arrive. I am still working on plan B. Anyone got satellite graphics of the storms at present aiding and abetting the forecast signal?)