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As Valley temperatures rise, combating climate change through smart design reaches critical mass
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February was colder than average, warmer than normal
Camden Gagnon of Goffstown uses his driver for the first time this season at the Beaver Meadow driving range which just opened up for the season on Thursday, March 11, 2021. Asked why he traveled all the way from Goffstown, Gagnon replied, “it was the only place open.” GEOFF FORESTER Monitor staff
Camden Gagnon of Goffstown uses his iron for the first time this season at the Beaver Meadow driving range which just opened up for the season on Thursday, March 11, 2021. Asked why he traveled all the way from Goffstown, Gagnon replied, “it was the only place open.” GEOFF FORESTER Monitor staff
Feeling frazzled? These soothing hot springs let you unwind Jennifer Barger © Photograph by Kris Wiktor, Alamy Stock Photo F4PYDX Woman relaxing in hot spring pool Conundrum Hot Springs near Aspen Colorado
You can spot the puffs of steam about a hundred yards up the trail from Idaho’s Jerry Johnson Hot Springs, the kind of ethereal gray mist that might engulf a fantasy movie dragon or wizard. Hikers and day-trippers head to this section of the Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forest for a sort of natural magic: a soak in bubbling hot springs rock pools surrounded by clumps of cedar trees, craggy mountains, and, in summertime, blankets of wildflowers.
Feeling frazzled? These soothing hot springs let you unwind
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Been thinking about rising sea levels
Published March 3, 2021
There is a difference between the damage caused by hurricanes and the effects of rising sea levels yet the two get twisted together every time there is a great storm over North Carolina. I’ve been thinking about this since the 2020 hurricane season ended with only one named hurricane crossing our coast.
There are at least three organizations to which we ought pay attention for our hurricane facts: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA); Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPPC); and, for world stuff, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). My reading of the data from these three has convinced me that, for over a century, our state has averaged slightly less than one hurricane a year. Until our scientists have enough data to prove otherwise, we should have a state emergency plan, and then plan/budget for about one hurricane each year. If we don’t spend the hurricane money in one year, l
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