Author Topic: From Summer Heatwave to Summer Snow, why British Columbia’s “Swing Between Extremes” is a sign of L  (Read 98 times)

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From Summer Heatwave to Summer Snow, why British Columbia’s “Swing Between Extremes” is a sign of Low Solar Activity, not Global Warming
September 3, 2021 Cap Allon   

Things have cooled down significantly across British Columbia of late; so much so in fact, that SNOW has been falling on the Coquihalla and over the province’s Interior ski hills — a stark flip-flop from the heatwave of June.

Lisa Erven, Environment Canada meteorologist, said the cold temperatures at the end of August resulted in rare summer flurries settling in Silver Star, Whistler and parts of the Okanagan Connector.

“It certainly is a cold weather pattern for August and it does happen from time to time that we have these cold upper lows moving through and this is what happens,” Erven said, in an attempt to brush off the event.

Though she does end with this: “It is a bit of a shock that fall might be arriving.”

https://electroverse.net/from-summer-heatwave-to-summer-snow-why-british-columbias-swing-between-extremes-is-a-sign-of-low-solar-activity-not-global-warming/