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LOVE golfing in the fall!!!
Oct 5, 2008 | 8:44 AM PST
Category:
Weather
BACK TO THE BLOOM
I grew up in Bloomington, always thinking that DWAN was a strange name for ANYTHING, let alone a golf course. DWan, DWan, DWan, DWan, DWan. Having friends named "Dawn" it just sounds funny. Well, what a "stroke" of luck to get a chance to play this course. It's a BEAUTIFUL course, manicured by some wonderful women who really know their gardening! As a matter of fact when I was there last I made sure to compliment the "greenswoman" who I saw tending to her flowers.
The course is challenging, open, eye-pleasing, old-school. I thought I could see my Dad or Grandpa around just about any corner. But what a day my wife Michele and I had last week in the beautiful, crisp autumn sun. A day made better as Michele (the fledgling linkstress) got her first birdie ever. It was on a challenging par 4 over water and capped off with a long and winding putt.





Dwan, good to finally meet you! I'll be back as soon as I can!
OH, WHAT A WONDERFUL EVENING
Sep 26, 2008 | 7:15 AM PST
Category:
Weather
I LOVE Spring - waking up after a long winter (coming back out of the cave, so to speak), enjoying the warmer weather, the longer days, the hope of all things refreshed. But my FAVORITE season has got to be fall! I love the warm, or cool, evenings (we get both and both are good for their own reasons), the late day sun, especially when passiing cloud decks make the sky more interesting, and I love just watching the world go by bathed in the late-year twilight.
I have been spending a lot of afternoons and evenings going across the street to the park by our house to practice my golfing. Now, earlier this year I was feeding the weeds that surround the playlot MANY a golf ball. I've been waiting for fall to dry out the weeds and let the tall grass fall so I could find most of those golf balls. Well, I figure the time has come, or is about to, so I've been keeping an eye on those weedbeds to see if they would surrender any of my lost golf balls. Last night, it began. With daughter Eryn hanging around the park I went into the weeds to chase a freshly lost Titleist. She followed and quickly made $2.50 as i've been promising her for months 50 cents per found golf ball ANYTIME! Here she is displaying the spoils of her hunt.

Of course, after making the 50 cents per ball (which I'm gonna have to lower to a quarter per because she leaves no weed unturned and will end up quickly breaking my bank) she went back to her favorite part of the playground - THE TIRE SWING! She had to make up for a lost summer as the city pulled it out of the park earlier this year cause it was actually RECALED. It's now fixed and they snuck it back in during the schoolday yesterday. Here she is with one of her friends - Yes, she's getting some major air!


I must say that when it comes to a nice evening I LOVE to put some miles on my sports car (Porsche 924S). Last evening was a nice one to just go "trainspotting" - LITERALLY. I love trains and stopped at the UP yard in Shakopee. Interesting thing was that I read a sign that said remote control locomotives were being used. Sure enough, as the lead units passed by I saw they were empty. Wow! You can't even wave to the engineer anymore!

I love trains at sunset!
Hey, back to the daughters. At the State Fair this year on the last day they got tired and a bit warm so they wanted to slow things down. Taylor decided to hand out posters. Not wanting to be left out, Eryn wanted to help in her own way so I had her walk out to Dan Patch Ave. and hand out the rather slow moving Fox9 Vikings schedules. She got pretty excited and enterprising and probably ended up passing out a couple hundred of those things - at times offering people Adrian Peterson posters on the spot (taking a little business away from Taylor).


If you read about my Wisconsin Brewery Tour trip you might remember I mentioned the Point Brewery. Outside of their building they actually have a few vines of Cascade Hops growing. MMMMMMMmmmmm - Hops!

Hey, don't forget to sign up for FOX9 Weather Text Forecasts at 25899. Just enter the word "weather". Standard text rates apply.
Later, Minnesota.
Erik
September 25-27, 1942 Snow Storm
From September 24th through September 26th 1942, an early season winter storm moved through the Northern Plains, Upper Mississippi River Valley, and Great Lakes. This system produced measurable snow across much of western and southern North Dakota; northern and eastern South Dakota; Minnesota; Iowa; Wisconsin; northern half of Illinois; northeast Indiana; Upper Michigan; and northern and southwest Lower Michigan. In many places of Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin, and northern Illinois, this was earliest measurable snow ever recorded. The highest snowfall total was 9 inches at Sauk Centre. Parts of northern Missouri saw their earliest traces of snow.

Meteorological setup of this early season snow storm...
Prior to the storm's passage through the Northern Plains, Upper Mississippi River Valley, and Great Lakes, an abnormally cool air mass resided across these regions. High temperatures were mainly in the 30s and 40s. This was 20 to 30 degrees below normal for late September.
A surface low pressure system moved southeast through southern Alberta and western North Dakota during the evening of September 24th and the early morning hours of September 25th. This low then moved east southeast across southern North Dakota and northeast South Dakota during the late morning and afternoon of September 25th. By 7:30 PM, the low was located just north of Aberdeen, South Dakota.
During the late evening of the September 25th and early morning hours of September 26th, the surface low continued to move east southeast across southern Minnesota and southern Wisconsin. By 7:30 AM on September 26th, the surface low was located near Madison, Wisconsin. This low then began moving east northeast across southeast Wisconsin and central Lower MI during the late morning and afternoon. By 730 PM on September 26th, the low was located just north of Georgian Bay.
What happened in the states that were affected by this storm?
North Dakota...
The heaviest snowfall recorded in September occurred on the 25th and 26th. It was heaviest in the central part of the state. Many tree branches and shrubs were broken by the weight of the snow. Threshing was seriously delayed by the wet weather. Following the snow, a severe freeze on the 26th through 28th froze the ground to a depth of 3 inches in a few localities. Gardens were destroyed and considerable corn and flax were damaged. Parshall's (Mountrail County) low temperature on the morning of the 26th fell to 4 degrees.
Minnesota...
On the 25th and 26th, a destructive sleet, snow, and windstorm in west-central counties caused a loss estimated at $25,000 to overhead wire systems. Also there was much damage to trees and shrubbery from the weight of moist snow. The snowfall in that storm was the heaviest ever experienced so early in the season in this section of the state. At Bird Island 8.0 inches of snow fell, and at Sauk Centre an unofficial measurement of 9.0 inches was reported. The snow was general over the state, and new records for September snowall were established at all southern stations and at some northern stations.
In Winona and along the river the snow melted rapidly on the pavement. At both Lewiston and St. Charles, the snow was three inches deep on the lawns.
Storm damage also crippled wire service mounted in Minnesota through the morning hours of the 26th.
Mankato reported 2 inches of wet snow. This downed many telephone wires, and tree branches broke under the weight of snow which brought down even more wires.
Fairmont reported crop damage to soy and lima beans. In addition, there were many wires down.
Albert Lea reported 2 inches of snow. This caused damage to the potato and onion crops along with much wire damage.
Austin reported 4 inches of snow. This brought down some power and telephone lines. Telephone service between Rochester and Minneapolis was out during the morning of the 26th.
Minneapolis and St. Paul had slippery snow-covered streets. Several Friday night (September 25th) football games across the state were cancelled.
Iowa...
Snow fell over most of the state, but as the temperature were slightly above freezing point at the surface much of it melted as it fell. However, in a large section of north central Iowa a considerable portion accumulated on the ground. Four inches of snow were reported at Forest City, Mason City, and Allison. The snow also fell more rapidly than it melted along the Missouri border with 4 inches at Millerton. At that town it was estimated that only about half of the total fall accumulated on the ground.
The snow bent down soybeans, making combining difficult. Most trees still retained their summer foliage so that the snow flakes clung to the leaves instead of sifting down through the branches, especially at Forest City, Centerville, Millerton, and Mason City. At Cresco the weight of the snow caused a large tree to fall across Highway 9 and two men from Calmar, Iowa were killed when their tuck hit the fallen trunk. There was some damage to light and communication wires, especially in the vicinity of Estherville and Mason City.
Illinois...
Snowfall varying from a trace to three inches fell from the 25th through the 26th over much of the north and central portions of the state. The heaviest snow was found between Monmouth and Kankakee. Both Dwight and Kankakee received the most snow (2.5 inches) in this band.
Wisconsin...
Unprecedented snow fell on the 26th and 27th. Traces were generally found across southeastern part and in the river valleys of southwest Wisconsin. Meanwhile 1 to 6 inches of snow fell across the remainder of the state. The highest snowfall totals were reported at Tomahawk (5.7 inches) and Deerskin Dam (6.3 inches). The average snowfall for the state was 0.8 inches. The previous highest average for September was 0.1 inches in September 1899, 1908, and 1913.
Michigan...
On the 26th and 27th, unusually early snow fell across almost all parts of the state. Much of the snow melted as it fell. However snowfall totalling more than 2 inches were reported at several stations in Upper Michigan and a few locations in northern lower Michigan. The greatest accumulated snowfall occurred at Dukes (8 inches).
Indiana...
On the 25th and 26th, measurable snow fell across the northeast part of the state. The heaviest totals was 4.0 inches in LaPorte and Wheatfield.
Local snowfall amounts from this snow storm...

Snowfall
Location State Total
-------- ----- --------
Grand Meadow MN 5.0 inches
Medford WI 4.5 inches
Austin MN 4.0 inches
Neillsville WI 4.0 inches
Spring Grove MN 4.0 inches
Waukon IA 3.5 inches
Mauston WI 3.2 inches
Stanley WI 3.2 inches
Blair WI 3.0 inches
Lewiston MN 3.0 inches
St Charles MN 3.0 inches
Cresco IA 2.5 inches
New Hampton IA 2.5 inches
Mather WI 2.0 inches
Reads MN 2.0 inches
Elkader IA 1.5 inches
Hillsboro WI 1.5 inches
Postville IA 1.5 inches
Fayette IA 1.0 inches
Osage IA 1.0 inches
Viroqua WI 1.0 inches
Charles City IA 0.4 inches
Rochester MN 0.3 inches
La Crosse WI 0.2 inches
Winona MN 0.2 inches
Decorah IA Trace
Hatfield WI Trace
Lancaster WI Trace
Mondovi WI Trace
Oelwein IA Trace
Richland Center WI Trace
Wisconsin Dells WI Trace
Sparta WI Trace
The Autumn Color Show
Wisconsin fall color report
Minnesota fall color report
Iowa fall color report
Many people think that cold weather is solely responsible for the color change in leaves, but not so. Leaves begin to turn before we have any frosts. Change in coloring is the result of chemical processes which take place in the tree as the seasons change.
During the spring and summer a food-making process takes place in the leaves, within cells containing the pigment chlorophyll. This gives the leaf its green color. The chlorophyll absorbs energy from sunlight and uses it in transforming carbon dioxide and water to carbohydrates, such as sugars and starch.
In the fall the decrease in intensity and duration of sunlight, and the cooler temperatures cause the leaves to stop their food- making process. The chlorophyll breaks down, the green color disappears and the yellowish colors or other pigments already in the leaf become visible.
Autumn weather conditions favoring the most brilliant colors are warm sunny days and cool, but not freezing, nights. A few hard frosts can cause the leaves to wither and fall from the tree without changing color. The degree of color may also vary from tree to tree. Leaves directly exposed to the sun may turn red, while those on the shady side may be yellow. When warm, cloudy and rainy weather dominates the fall season, leaves tend to have less coloration.
In the Coulee Region, red and scarlet leaves can be found on red maple, red and black oak and sumac. Purple and burgundy can be seen on the green ash and white oak. Sugar maple is responsible for the brilliant oranges. Hickories turn a rich gold. Yellows are common for the trees native to the river floodplain, sliver maple, elm, Cottonwood and white ash, as well as on the birch and aspen of the slopes and ridgetops.
Fall color in the Coulee Region usually peaks between the 10th and 15th of October, but this can vary by a week or so either way.
For more information on why the fall colors occur, follow this link to the U.S. Forest Service internet site.
Rod Swerman - NWS La Crosse
ANOTHER ROUND OF CATCH-UP!
Sep 24, 2008 | 8:53 AM PST
Category:
Weather
Let’s get thru some BREAKING ERIK NEWS (okay, it’s not THAT exciting) and then we'll hit a few weather issues.
SUM-SUM-SUMMERTIME

First of all, it’s been a busy but great summer. The bugs were a little hungrier this year but hey, it’s Minnesota and we need to keep our state birds happy. June began with my drive back from Phoenix in my new (actually 1987) Porsche 924S. It was my Father’s car and thanks to his care it’s a pretty sharp little ride. I’ll be taking it with me on the road over the next few months as I make my way to give those weather talks to area schools and showing it off at car shows around the region. So, if I get a little happy on a sunny day and Tom Halden and I talk about my sweet little sports car, you’ll know of what I speak.

It was nice to meet all of you at the State Fair. Sorry about not having our newscasts live thru the Great Minnesota Get Together but with the RNC approaching we had to have all of our remote broadcasting equipment at the Excel Center so it could be cleared by the Secret Service. I suppose a hand-held (really more of a “shoulder rested”) camera could be turned into a super-soaker, or a ping-pong ball shooter. By the way, thanks for coming up to the booth to voice your compliments AND complaints (as we learn from BOTH!) and it was excellent to meet all of you SUNDAY CIRCULAR fans!!!

This summer gave me some wonderful times with my wife Michele as I introduced her to golf. We’ve been making the “rounds” all over the metro region to check out local golf courses. We’ve found a few favorites but are still hunting for more. Since Fall is my favorite time of year I REALLY look forward to golfing in the next month or so as all of that brilliant color lining the fairway can lift your spirits on even the WORST day!

My summer ended with a personal vacation. It was supposed to be a family vaca but since I had worked literally most of the mid July thru Labor Day and the kids were back in school, the wife said “take some time for yourself”. Being the good husband that I am I DIDN’T argue and set out for a week. The theme was BREWERY TOURS, and it was a good one! I’m a certified beer geek (a HopHead, really – just like our own M.A. Rosko) and an aspiring home-brewer. I’m always looking for stronger, more flavorful and complex beers than what you’ll find at the grocery store. My trip actually started off in the Quad Cities of Iowa/Illinois which is where I lived for the 13 years prior to my move back to the Twin Cities. I was in town to do some free-lance work and visit family and friends. It was odd, but VERY flattering as after a year and a half being away people still recognized and came up to me to say “Hi”, chat, and find out where I was and how things are going.






After a couple Quad City breweries, I made it to Wisconsin. I went to The New Glarus brewery in New Glarus (they make my favorite beer in the world), then on to Capital in Madison (AWESOME Biergarten) on Day one. Day two took me to Milwaukee for Sprecher Brewing (they make a wonderful Oktoberfest, plus GREAT pop for the kids) and Lake Front Brewery (which I highly recommend if ever in Milwaukee). Day three was spent at The Steven’s Point Brewery and then on to Chippewa Falls and Leinenkugel’s. Interestingly enough, I was recognized by some Quad Citians at the Leine Lodge – I thought I had done TOO MUCH sampling for a second!!! Next season I think I’ll head to the Museum of Brewing in Potosi, Wisconsin in the southwest corner of the state. By the way, if you’re looking for a great road trip, just repeat my Wisconsin trek. It was very fun – and in early September the colors of northern Wisconsin were already SPECTACULAR
Now,,, for the Weather – actually, a few things I wanted to discuss earlier this summer.
THE CAP

During severe weather we’ll mention this as being a factor in how widespread the development of thunderstorms will be. The cap is simply a layer of warm air aloft. Since thunderstorms are vertically growing, towering clouds they look for cooler air aloft to rise into as the updrafts in a thunderstorm are warm and the cooler the surrounding upper level air the better chance a storm has to rise dramatically, thus becoming stronger. So, if the cap is broken (temps in that layer of concern cool) or the storm is so strong it “breaks the cap” (is essentially pushed thru it as the lower part of the storm’s rising is like a locomotive pushing from the back of the train to make it go forward) YOU CAN GET A VERY POWERFUL THUNDERSTORM. Think of the cap as literally a bottle cap on a 2 liter bottle of pop. Shake the bottle and you get a lot of potential energy inside the pop bottle. If you never take off the cap there’s no problem. However, if you shake the bottle then remove the cap – all “pop” breaks loose, just like a thunderstorm exploding into the stratosphere leaving those below it at its mercy.
???

Forecasting weather is not always cut and dried. With times of uncertainty, and chances of things happening, what is your feeling of question marks in the forecast. Let me know. Sometimes I’m compelled to put the old “?” on the 7 day planner when on day 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 the chance of rain, let’s say, is an uncertainty. Fox policy says we SHOULDN’T use question marks cause we’re supposed to KNOW if it will rain or not. But, a few days out it’s never really black and white – especially when we’re looking at multiple forecast models whose view of the weather fours out keeps changing a bit at a time. Would it be obvious to you that there is a chance of rain if you saw it on the 4th day of our 7 day? Would you prefer something like a 20% or a 70%??? Again,,, let me know your thoughts by writing a comment below.
REVERSE HEAT INDEX (SUMMER WIND CHILL)

Did you know that on a hot day a large amount of moisture in the air (humidity) can make it feel hotter??? SURE YOU DID. We can give you an idea of how hot it feels with the Heat Index Temperature which combines the effect of the heat with the ability of the humidity to impair your body’s cooling process. Your body sweats to allow the sweat to evaporate off your skin – evaporation being a cooling process. When the air is too full of moisture to allow for the evaporation of your sweat the whole process backs up, heat is retained and builds in your body and you feel hotter. Now on a hot day when the humidity is low cause the air is dry, the Heat Index Temperature can actually be BELOW the real air temperature. This is because your sweat will evaporate more quickly in drier air leading to cooling MORE efficient than normal. Add a breeze on a dry summer day and that Heat Index can drop even further – sometimes ending up 5 degrees below the actual air temperature.
Now, as we get ready for REAL wind chills to arrive in Minnesota over the next few months, keep in mind that you can always comment on my blog, and feel free to e-mail me weather questions about ANYTHING. Weather, TV, whatever you’re curious about. If I can answer it I will. If not, I’ll find someone who can.
From Cloud9,
Erik
At The FOX 9 Fair Booth
Aug 30, 2008 | 8:05 AM PST
Category:
Weather

Ben from North Branch sports this custom made Fox9 T-shirt. Ben says "Fox Rocks"! I say BEN ROCKS!!!
ALL GROWED UP AT 21
On the 13th of this month I will celebrate 21 years of TV Weathercasting. Yep. It all started at a 500,000 watt tv station in Phoenix. While still going to Arizona State University I got a break and was asked to fill in on the morning show at KPNX Channel 12 for a couple days and I was off to the races - well, just one - THE RAT RACE!
I was soft-spoken, shy, all dressed up in my little weatherman's suit and telling Phoenix that the day would be hot and sunny! Sounds tough, huh?
In those 21years I've done a lot of cool things (Flown a Navy Blue Angel and an Air Force Thunderbird - One of the handful that have done both) and scene many wild things (boogie danced with Miss America) and met all kinds of wild people (Ted Nugent comes to mind). One of the nice ones I've met works in Des Moines.
His name is Kurtis Gertz and he's a meteorologist at KCCI who's making the rounds on the internet, lately, for something that happened to him at the Iowa State Fair involving a snake and his shorts (self restraint is getting the best of me, here). Here's the link:
http://www.kcci.com/video/17155809/index.html
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Kurtis and I first met early in my career. We were both in Dubuque, Iowa being interviewed for a main weather job. He got the job cause he was jobless at the time. I ended up working in the Quad Cities (Davenport, Iowa) a few years later only to find that He was there, too, having moved on from Dubuque.
Well, enjoy the video. I'll enjoy my 21st anniversary of TV weathercasting. If anything "wild" happens I'll blog about it,,, or maybe I won't.
Blue skies and warm breezes,
Erik
WEATHER OR NOT
Aug 1, 2008 | 7:37 AM PST
Category:
Weather
During the first hours after any plane crash speculation is the beast that rules. We did have our share of strong to severe weather yesterday at and near the crash site. Whatever really did cause the plane to crash in Owatonna won't even be close to be revealed for quite some time, but knowing what I know about aviation and weather I wish to express some thoughts that might make what was quickly jumped on as the "obvious" cause a little less culprit.
THE STORMS

As I was reporting live from Cologne yesterday morning on the storm heading through south central Minnesota it was evident that no part of the storm was "falling apart". A clear long-lived bow echo was showing up on radar. This formation has the name of "derecho" and is an area of straight line winds that can sustain itself for hours and move through multiple states causeing a narrow corridor of intense damage that can stretch for hundreds of miles. As the storms approached Owatonna around 8:30 the wind gauge at the airport was registering increasing winds ahead of the storm's arrival. Here is a timeline of the storm passed between Medford and Owatonna.
8:30: 63 mph winds/rain increasing quickly
8:38: 72 mph winds/very heavy rain
8:48: 40 mph winds/moderate rain
8:51: 48 mph wind/moderate wind
9:30: (Crash Time) 5-10 mph wind/light rain - NO WARNINGS IN EFFECT - storm had passed
At crash time, witnesses at the airport indicated that the weather had shown a marked improvement. In the sense that they could see the plane as it tried rising again near the end of the runway (nearly a mile away) you'd have to think that the visibility was good, too. Bottom line, even though some reporters said that just "minutes" before the crash the wind gusted to 72 miles per hour, there was actually nearly an hour of separation between that gust and the actual crash. Of course, even late last evening the last national reports about the crash I heard were all mentioning the crash and severe weather in the area in the same breath/sentence - not mentioning that the worst weather was far away at the actual crash time.
THE PLANE

The jet was a Raytheon/Hawker 800. This is the modern version of a Hawker-Siddeley 125 - the world's best selling mid-size corporate jet that started flying back in the 1960s. Something I had to relay to our news staff in the first couple hours after the crash was that this plane was NOT a "Learjet". "Learjet" is a specific brand of corporate jets, not an all-inclusive term for that type of aircraft.
What needs to be said about this plane is that it is no Cessna 152, or Piper Cherokee. It's not a small, lightweight plane that can get overly buffeted by a 30-40 mile per hour wind - if it was it wouldn't ever have been certified. It's a sleek, stable knife-edge type of speedster that can slice its way through many types of bad weather. And the plane is equipped with radars nearly as powerful as TITAN 3D. The weather present at the time the plane arrived in Owatonna would hardly have caused it's flight any trouble.
THE PILOTS
I'm sorry for the loss of these two men and I wish their families the best as they recover from the shock and try to move on. Again, it's far too early to speculate as to any "pilot error" that might have brought the plane down. In terms of the pilots and the weather perspective, you have to realize that to get to the point of being trusted with a multi-million dollar jet like the RH 800 you have to have plenty of flying experience and certain qualifications. One of the basic qualifications of being a professional pilot is to respect the weather! Had the weather been as "severe" as some news outlets continue to say it was, these guys would have been no where near Owatonna, opting to circle at above storm altitude until a landing was feasable or touching down at another field out of harms way. Had the much calmer weather at the time of the actual crash thrown the flight crew any curves it appears that it would have been well within their capacity to handle.
THE AIRPORT

The airport in Owatonna is known as "uncontrolled". Now, all that means is that there is no manned control tower. DO NOT let that title have you believe that the airport is OUT OF CONTROL!!! As a matter of fact, most landing strips, small airports in the United States if not the world are "uncontrolled". What that means is that there are many regulations and protocols in place for flying in and out of these airports based mostly on radio contact with other traffic. If the philosophy of an "uncontrolled" airport was flawed, we would have accidents everyday - but we don't! The fact that the airport was "uncontrolled" most likely had nothing to do with this crash. What I really wanted to mention (again, sticking to the weather perspective) was that this airport DOES have an on site weatehr observation station that was essentially telling the pilots that the weather was just fine prior to the crash for them to attempt a landing with little concern for weather conditions.
MY THOUGHTS ON THE CAUSE
I realize that nothing can be ruled out at this point as a possible cause of the crash. Personnally, I feel that weather should get the least blame BASED ON WHAT I KNOW. As one airport mechanic aptly pointed out in a Fox 9 interview it could have been pilot error, an issue with the plane or a timing issue (not having sufficient runway left/time to accellerate after aborting the landing while attempting to go around and try again).
In a nutshell,
-The strongest part of the storm had passed
-The plane made it to the runway for its landing attempt just fine
-There was no sign of any stray post storm lightning
-The wind was not strong enough on the surface to suspect a shear issue
However, there is something that I thought of when I found out that part of the plane actually collided with a bank of runway lights after getting past the runway. The rain that fell on the airport during the storm was heavy AND intense. It piled up quickly. One thing anyone who drives a car knows is how slick a road can be in the first 15 minutes or so after a heavy storm. This is because accumulated dirt and oils on the road surface allow the water to puddle, and until passing tires essentially "squeegee" off the surface it remains slick as hydroplaning and slippage become issues. Perhaps this runway was still wet to the point where the planes tires (essentially flat-surfaced with parallel groves) were not able to get the traction needed for proper braking or they were simply hydroplaning. This is not a very busy airport and any water on the runway could stay there for a long time - especially in the humid environment after the storm. Could this have been the cause? Of course, it would be indirect but the weather could be blamed in this instance. I did finally hear mention of possible hydroplaning late last night on a local newscast which made me think I might be on to something. This would fit the given scenario. The plane comes down, maybe a little late on the runway. There's limited braking ability or some slipping due to hydroplaning. The crew decides to try another landing. By this time there isn't enough runway left to get the needed lift. Flaps are down, air brakes are up, and by the time the air brakes go back down (if the RH 800 is even equipped with them) there is'nt enough room to gain the speed needed to turn the flaps from a source of drag to a source of lift. As the plane struggles to get lift it gains a few feet of altitude but not in time to clear the runway lights that it clips causing the damage and jolt that sends the plane back down into the cornfield.
Of course, that's just a theory and any possible cause won't be determined until after a lengthy NTSB investigation. They have recovered the "black boxes" - actually orange so they can more easily be found in aircraft wreckage. The CVR (cockpit voice recorder) and FDR (flight data recorder) are now in Washingtion D.C. where it is hoped they can provide clues to the plane's demise.
We'll keep you informed on Fox9, and at MyFox9.Com. And when the official NTSB report is issued, I'll try to provide a link here.
Take Off, Ey - TO A MUSEUM!
Jul 30, 2008 | 7:52 AM PST
Category:
Weather
And, there is no shortage of museums in the Twin Cities, but one that caught my attention AND the attention of my youngest daughter Eryn was the Minnesota Air National Gaurd Museum.

You see, my daughter and I are BIG aviation buffs. We headed to the museum a few weekends ago and were pleasantly suprised by WWII fighters like a P-51 Mustang to an F-16 recently based in Duluth.
The planes on display at the museum (located at the MSP airport) are full of history. Pick an era of military aviation and there are either full planes or parts of planes that you can see, and in some cases touch, or board. A few years ago the museum was the home of an SR-71 Blackbird that might be back when the proposed museum expansion is complete. Volunteers, some of them former pilots of the planes on display, can fill your ears with all kinds of stories. On some days, you can get inside the planes and the kids can sit in the cockpits - total photo op!!!
My favorites include the C-97 (Boeing Stratocruiser) which was one of my favorite "big" planes when I was a kid. To actually go on board and sit at the controls of a plane that I'd only seen pictures of was really neat. That F-16 brought back some fine memories, too. A few years ago I spent a day with the Air Force Thunderbirds and got to fly in, AND fly "Thunderbird 7", the two seat back up plane that makes it to all the air shows that the T-Bird go to each year.
The museum is always looking for volunteers. The best way to convince yourself to help is to just show up. Be ready for a full MP check of your car at the gate, though. You WILL be on a military instalation.
For more info go to: http://www.mnangmuseum.org/index.html
Happy Landings,
Erik
A Little Catch-Up!
Jul 2, 2008 | 9:41 AM PST
Category:
Weather
A NEW BROOM SWEEPS CLEAN!!!
I LOVE Minnesota summer cold fronts - they are like a new broom sweeping out the old air mass and bringing in a fresh one. A front has just passes by on this early Wednesday morning. After a mild and humid start, the winds have picked up from the north and the dew points have dropped. Brings to mind a children's book by Dennis Feltgen. Do you remember him. He worked at KSTP back in the 70s thru early 80s. He now works for the National Weather Service in Miami. He wrote a book called "Smile when the Dew Point Drops" and there couldn't be more truth surrounding that command. Here's a quick scale on Dew Points and comfort.
dp 40s = Very Comfortable
50s = Still Comfortable
60s = Muggy
65+ = Tropical
70+ = Oppressive
The Dew Point is expressed as a temperature - the temperature at which the air becomes saturated. So, the higher the Dew Point, the more moist and humid feeling the air. Relative Humidity is actually a bad scale for measuring moisture discomfort because it can change during the day - high in the cool hours of the morning, lower in the warm hours of the afternoon. The Dew Point is usually steady during the day - and if it does change, like today, if it heads down you can rest assured that as Dennis Feltgen commands you can go ahead and smile because, at least on a summer day, the air will feel much more comfortable. So, as I sit and write this and the front has passed bringing in drier air, the Dew Point went from the mid 60s to near 50 - a GREAT way to enjoy 80 degree warmth!
ON THE LINKS
Wow, the other morning "MR. SMOOTH" Tom Halden and I were tearing up the links at Inver Woods in Inver Grove Heights in the first few hours after sunrise. Can I just say that THE BUGS ARE BACK. I remember being back last year for my first Minnesota summer in 25 years wondering what happened to the bugs? Needless to say, last year was an easy one in terms of the bug problem. But, this year is a whole new problem. I heard that the bugs were back, and as of about 6:30 to 7 pm each evening you can start to feel them taking free shots at your flesh. Well, that morning on the course was not much fun thanks to the fact that Inver Woods is a mix of woods and swamps (but, let me say this - it's a marvelous course that is kept in pristine condition and is an 18 hole'r that would challenge ANYONE. Apart from the bugs A LOT of fun). From the first tee Tom and I fell victim to hundreds of swarming flesheaters that would attack fast, undectectably, and leave my legs and arms finely pierced. The only reason I knew had been bitten was from finding little balls of dried blood on my skin. Unpleasant? YES!!! Especially when in the tee box setting up for a drive or trying to putt. Maybe this is why I really enjoy Fall golf! Oh,,, so what about my score? Score? Score? You don't need my stinkin' score!!! And that's pretty much what it was - a "stinking" score. Ahh, but more practice is in my future - and that's not all bad - it IS golf, ya know!
CRAZY, HAZY SKIES
Did you notice a bit of a muted sunrise the last few mornings? Wildfires in Sasketchewan are producing enough sky-filling smoke to haze up our atmosphere, helping to create a more reddish-orange solar disk (sun) and a more diffuse light around sunrise. If the evening skies are clear, you'll notice a little more dramatic sunset as well.
Til next time,
Erik
George Carlin's "The Planet Is Fine" :
We're so self-important. So self-important. Everybody's going to save something now. "Save the trees, save the bees, save the whales, save those snails." And the greatest arrogance of all: save the planet. What? Are these bleeping people kidding me? Save the planet, we don't even know how to take care of ourselves yet. We haven't learned how to care for one another, we're gonna save the bleeping planet?
I'm getting tired of that bleep. Tired of that bleep. I'm tired of bleeping Earth Day, I'm tired of these self-righteous environmentalists, these white, bourgeois liberals who think the only thing wrong with this country is there aren't enough bicycle paths. People trying to make the world save for their Volvos. Besides, environmentalists don't give a bleep about the planet. They don't care about the planet. Not in the abstract they don't. Not in the abstract they don't. You know what they're interested in? A clean place to live. Their own habitat. They're worried that some day in the future, they might be personally inconvenienced. Narrow, unenlightened self-interest doesn't impress me.
Besides, there is nothing wrong with the planet. Nothing wrong with the planet. The planet is fine. The PEOPLE are bleeped. Difference. Difference. The planet is fine. Compared to the people, the planet is doing great. Been here four and a half billion years. Did you ever think about the arithmetic? The planet has been here four and a half billion years. We've been here, what, a hundred thousand? Maybe two hundred thousand? And we've only been engaged in heavy industry for a little over two hundred years. Two hundred years versus four and a half billion. And we have the CONCEIT to think that somehow we're a threat? That somehow we're gonna put in jeopardy this beautiful little blue-green ball that's just a-floatin' around the sun?
The planet has been through a lot worse than us. Been through all kinds of things worse than us. Been through earthquakes, volcanoes, plate tectonics, continental drift, solar flares, sun spots, magnetic storms, the magnetic reversal of the poles...hundreds of thousands of years of bombardment by comets and asteroids and meteors, worldwide floods, tidal waves, worldwide fires, erosion, cosmic rays, recurring ice ages...And we think some plastic bags, and some aluminum cans are going to make a difference? The planet...the planet...the planet isn't going anywhere. WE ARE!
We're going away. Pack your bleep, folks. We're going away. And we won't leave much of a trace, either. Thank God for that. Maybe a little styrofoam. Maybe. A little styrofoam. The planet'll be here and we'll be long gone. Just another failed mutation. Just another closed-end biological mistake. An evolutionary cul-de-sac. The planet'll shake us off like a bad case of fleas. A surface nuisance.
You wanna know how the planet's doing? Ask those people at Pompeii, who are frozen into position from volcanic ash, how the planet's doing. You wanna know if the planet's all right, ask those people in Mexico City or Armenia or a hundred other places buried under thousands of tons of earthquake rubble, if they feel like a threat to the planet this week. Or how about those people in Kilauea, Hawaii, who built their homes right next to an active volcano, and then wonder why they have lava in the living room.
The planet will be here for a long, long, LONG time after we're gone, and it will heal itself, it will cleanse itself, 'cause that's what it does. It's a self-correcting system. The air and the water will recover, the earth will be renewed, and if it's true that plastic is not degradable, well, the planet will simply incorporate plastic into a new pardigm: the earth plus plastic. The earth doesn't share our prejudice towards plastic. Plastic came out of the earth. The earth probably sees plastic as just another one of its children. Could be the only reason the earth allowed us to be spawned from it in the first place. It wanted plastic for itself. Didn't know how to make it. Needed us. Could be the answer to our age-old egocentric philosophical question, "Why are we here?" Plastic...bleephole.
So, the plastic is here, our job is done, we can be phased out now. And I think that's begun. Don't you think that's already started? I think, to be fair, the planet sees us as a mild threat. Something to be dealt with. And the planet can defend itself in an organized, collective way, the way a beehive or an ant colony can. A collective defense mechanism. The planet will think of something. What would you do if you were the planet? How would you defend yourself against this troublesome, pesky species? Let's see... Viruses. Viruses might be good. They seem vulnerable to viruses. And, uh...viruses are tricky, always mutating and forming new strains whenever a vaccine is developed. Perhaps, this first virus could be one that compromises the immune system of these creatures. Perhaps a human immunodeficiency virus, making them vulnerable to all sorts of other diseases and infections that might come along. And maybe it could be spread sexually, making them a little reluctant to engage in the act of reproduction.
Well, that's a poetic note. And it's a start. And I can dream, can't I? See I don't worry about the little things: bees, trees, whales, snails. I think we're part of a greater wisdom than we will ever understand. A higher order. Call it what you want. Know what I call it? The Big Electron. The Big Electron...whoooa. Whoooa. Whoooa. It doesn't punish, it doesn't reward, it doesn't judge at all. It just is. And so are we. For a little while."
Lightning Safety
Jun 20, 2008 | 10:46 AM PST
Category:
Weather

THAT'S SOME HOT STUFF
It's pretty,,, AND pretty deadly. When out on weather talks at schools and community events I'm always asked about Lightning and Lightning Safety. Well, as I always say "The best way to be safe is to be prepared". I also say "Common sense is ANYTHING but common!" So, when it comes to lightning, it's actually a matter of being prepared AND using common sense.
First of all, here's a bit of lightning trivia. Only the width of a pencil a lightning bolt can burn at 10 times hotter than the surface of the sun. That's a whopping 50-55,000 degrees fahrenheit. Lightning is nothing more than a spark - it allows the equalization of the electrical charge between the clouds and the ground. And thunder? Well, that's the sound of the air that surrounds the lightning bolt explosively heating to the extreme temperature of the lightning bolt.
Now, for safety. Lightning is a true killer. I was working in Iowas when a young boy in my area was killed by something called a "bolt from the blue". He was getting the mail at the end of a long rural driveway after morning storms had been gone for more than 15 minutes. He was still struck by lightning even though the storms were miles away. He never made it back up the driveway with the mail. As its name implies, the sky can be blue with storms either approaching or leaving an area and being up to 10 miles away. Lightning can still leave the parent storm and head miles in any direction, leaving you unsafe even though the storms are nowhere near you.
Safety around lightning is such an important issue that the National Weather Service sponsors "Lightning Safety Week" every year. It's next week and I've included a link to the safety and information page. 8 people have already been killed by lightning in 2008 after a lightning death toll of 45 in 2007.
Be Prepared: Know when the weather will turn bad in your area. Use common sense: Don't be outside or in a lightning prone area when the storms roll thru.
Erik
http://www.lightningsafety.noaa.gov/
p>
Lightning Safety
Jun 20, 2008 | 10:46 AM PST
Category:
Weather

THAT'S SOME HOT STUFF
It's pretty,,, AND pretty deadly. When out on weather talks at schools and community events I'm always asked about Lightning and Lightning Safety. Well, as I always say "The best way to be safe is to be prepared". I also say "Common sense is ANYTHING but common!" So, when it comes to lightning, it's actually a matter of being prepared AND using common sense.
First of all, here's a bit of lightning trivia. Only the width of a pencil a lightning bolt can burn at 10 times hotter than the surface of the sun. That's a whopping 50-55,000 degrees fahrenheit. Lightning is nothing more than a spark - it allows the equalization of the electrical charge between the clouds and the ground. And thunder? Well, that's the sound of the air that surrounds the lightning bolt explosively heating to the extreme temperature of the lightning bolt.
Now, for safety. Lightning is a true killer. I was working in Iowas when a young boy in my area was killed by something called a "bolt from the blue". He was getting the mail at the end of a long rural driveway after morning storms had been gone for more than 15 minutes. He was still struck by lightning even though the storms were miles away. He never made it back up the driveway with the mail. As its name implies, the sky can be blue with storms either approaching or leaving an area and being up to 10 miles away. Lightning can still leave the parent storm and head miles in any direction, leaving you unsafe even though the storms are nowhere near you.
Safety around lightning is such an important issue that the National Weather Service sponsors "Lightning Safety Week" every year. It's next week and I've included a link to the safety and information page. 8 people have already been killed by lightning in 2008 after a lightning death toll of 45 in 2007.
Be Prepared: Know when the weather will turn bad in your area. Use common sense: Don't be outside or in a lightning prone area when the storms roll thru.
Erik
http://www.lightningsafety.noaa.gov/
p>
Coney Island In Minnesota
Jun 19, 2008 | 12:17 PM PST
Category:
Weather
FIRE UP THE WAYBACK MACHINE

On a recent trip to Waconia to see a movie I was made aware of a former island paradise that litterally used to be called "Paradise Island". It lies in the midst of Lake Waconia and was renamed "Coney Island" in the late 1800s. It was quite the tourist destination in its day for folks from Minneapolis and St. Paul. They would board a train that would drop them off at the shore of Lake Waconia. From there they's board a steam ferry that would take them to the island. At their disposal was a private resort hotel complete with all the luxury ammenities.
From the City of Waconia history page: "Paradise Island, later changed to Coney Island in 1884 by Lambert Naegele , was considered the paradise of the northwest. Development on the island started after Naegele’s purchase with the first full season at the resort in 1885. This was a successful season and sparked further growth on the island. After the ice melted on the lake, construction of another resort started along with a boarding house, several cottages, and a boathouse. Two large steamships traveled back and forth to the island. Many of the residents of Minneapolis and St. Paul were frequent visitors to the resorts."
This was such a hot spot that the University of Minnesota Goper Football Team held pre-season practice sessions on the island in the early 1900s. I'm sure that for an underweight lineman beat up and broken down that an island practice arena was like an early "Alcatraz". Freedom from the grind was at least a long and difficult swim away!
Now it's nothing but a dense forest of large trees and crumbling foundations. I can only imagine the sound the wind makes when it settles upon what used to be Coney Island. Can you hear the screams and laughter of playing children where the old swimming beach used to be? Is the sound of the dining room piano still audible? When the chilling winds of Autumn blow through does the whistle and yelling of a former Gopher football coach bounce off the overgrowth?
I think the story of Coney Island is just another great example of all of the local and regional history to explore as Minnesota celebrates its 150th birthday. For more tidbits of Minnesota state history click on this link: http://mn150years.wordpress.com/category/day-in-histor
y/ .
Always seeking the past,
Erik
THE MYSTERIOUS "CHASKA PALM"
May 23, 2008 | 10:32 AM PST
Category:
Weather

Okay, I need something cleared up. Can ANYONE tell me about the Palm tree in Chaska, just north of the "bend" on Highway 41. It's on the west side of the road in the entrance to a business. Last year when I first saw it I did a double take and nearly drove into a ditch. I thought, "Wow. That palm isn't gonna make it thru the winter" thinking it was surely a fresh planting - or transplant. Karen Scullin and I have even spoken about it in wonder.
I thought WHY would anyone plant a Palm tree in MINNESOTA. it's a pure and evil case of palmocide - that's the killing of a plam tree. But get this. Someone must know something - and perhaps it's been there for quite some time - doing just FINE in the winter. I think this because about a week ago I drove passed it - seeking it out to gather its post-winter status. Sure enough - dead as a tropical doornail! Brown and wilted, it looked like an unfortunate victim of the latitude. BUT WAIT A MINUTE! I just drove past it 3 days ago and it looked GREAT. It was tall, green, swaying in the breeze like a good palm should. What happened? I'm truly perplexed by this one. I even drove back to see if there was fresh dirt around the bottom of it indicating it folly to a rich person who plants a new living palm in the same space year after year. I DUNNO!!!
So, help me out Mr. or Mrs. Twin Cities. What's up. Is it the same palm that made it thru the winter? How did it recover so quickly? Really, I don't want this to be the cause of sleepless nights. Contact me with a comment if you know the "bark" on this tree!!!
From Cloud9,
Erik
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