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Villages Anti-Rain Zone

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  #46  
Old 05-28-2025, 04:02 PM
MorTech MorTech is offline
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Originally Posted by Bjeanj View Post
Today is 5/27 and those clouds around 5:00 PM seemed to split and miss us in Santiago. What the heck! I was looking forward to a good rain!

Maybe OP has something there …
It rains more in Ocala and Leesburg than TV.
I will text god and open a bug report.
  #47  
Old 05-28-2025, 04:06 PM
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Originally Posted by Pugchief View Post
I anticipated that response, but I expected it from someone else....
God knows that in TV there are lots of gas carts that emit lots of carbon dioxide and water that feeds the plant life in the area.. God reroutes rain clouds to other surroundings that need it more.

It's just sound logic.
  #48  
Old 05-29-2025, 01:27 PM
biker1 biker1 is offline
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In all likelihood, much more sensible heat flux comes off the residential and commercial roofs, and roads and parking lots than is given off by heat pump condensers. If it was still virgin land there would be more latent heat flux. Land use changes can have an impact on the local weather but I doubt there is much impact on the annual precipitation totals.

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Originally Posted by dougawhite View Post
I'm not a meterologist, but I have hypothesized that because of the high density of air conditioner units in The Villages blowing hot air skyward all day (especially hot days) that we create a constant upward flow of warm dry air that impacts how approaching storms hold onto their water as they pass through. Warm rising air holds more water, keeping it from falling from the passing clouds. Any meteorologist have an idea?
  #49  
Old 05-29-2025, 07:23 PM
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Nice rain today. I'm predicting the start of the rainy season.
  #50  
Old 05-30-2025, 05:02 AM
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Default Whoooaa Whoaaaa

It's the Indians in New Eastport..they are performing anti-rain dances every week just to dry up the villages...SMH.
  #51  
Old 06-03-2025, 05:44 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dougawhite View Post
I'm not a meterologist, but I have hypothesized that because of the high density of air conditioner units in The Villages blowing hot air skyward all day (especially hot days) that we create a constant upward flow of warm dry air that impacts how approaching storms hold onto their water as they pass through. Warm rising air holds more water, keeping it from falling from the passing clouds. Any meteorologist have an idea?
Don't look outside................Conspiracy theories might be impacted.
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