Ah, spring breezes on the Great Plains

21 thoughts on “Ah, spring breezes on the Great Plains”

  1. We have these problems, too, Susan – but as far as I know we don’t have such a BRILLIANT wind-map ! Wish we did, that’s for sure.

      1. Oh, it is ! I suppose that the USA climate people think it worth the money because of your subjectivity to twisters – would you agree ?

        1. This particular map is a personal art project, not produced by meteorologists. The data that drives it comes from them, but the map is not their creation. (See the info on the map’s home page.) That’s why it’s so beautiful. It’s intended to be art.

  2. Have never seen this particular wind map so thanks for that link. As far as your noted wind affiliations with the Great Plains, I was stationed at Clinton-Sherman AFB (since closed) in western Oklahoma for about three years in the early sixties and it was my first exposure to the winds you reference. They were unrelenting and it was remarkable to me that most, if not all, trees grew at about a 30 degree angle in the direction of the yearly prevailing winds. So even when the winds weren’t blowing which was like two days a year, it “looked” like it was blowing. Experienced my first big dust storm there also and boy that was something for this ole Arkansas boy to behold. 🙂

    1. I lived in Okla. City most of my life, so I know exactly what you’re talking about. This map shows I wasn’t exaggerating when I joked about our dust, wind, cold, or whatever coming all the way from Canada. Obviously it does, at least sometimes.

    1. You can buy prints of some of the maps on their website. But they wouldn’t be the same as a live one, which is what I’d want. They have saved, somehow, some of their past live maps in a gallery. The ones with hurricanes are truly frightening.

  3. Very nice, and I agree about it being similar to art. Wouldn’t it be neat if its creator(s) would combine it with temperatures and show them in colors?

    One more thought: why is it that maps like these show nothing outside our borders? There are other countries, I just know there are.

    1. The artist probably didn’t have easy access to the necessary data from other countries, or it was compiled differently, or perhaps not compiled at all. Doesn’t surprise me at all given that this is a personal project and not a product of a government agency or large corporation.

      I don’t know if I’d like color on the map. I wonder if it would distract from simply admiring the beauty of the sweeps and swirls and eddies themselves. And lose some of its hypnotic effect. Still, if the colors were soft enough to not spoil the overall hypnotic, tranquil effect, it could be mesmerizing.

      1. No, I don’t think it’s the artist’s lack of resources because most of the other weather maps, both internet and television, also stop at the U.S. borders. Are we afraid we might give away something for free? My real suspicion is some kind of pact with Canada and Mexico designed to protect the weather operations in those countries from competition. Just a guess on my part.

    1. LOL. Yep, it probably should be, but that would make such a hash of the Northeast. Although I suppose the Congressional anomaly would actually extend across the entire country …

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