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Non-Tech : Farming

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To: Jon Koplik who wrote (92)8/27/2000 8:47:22 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (1) of 4440
 
Some weather forecasting secrets of the Farmers' Almanac ... revealed !

August 27, 2000

Farmers' Almanac Keeps Secret

Filed at 1:52 p.m. EDT

By The Associated Press

LEWISTON, Maine (AP) -- Greenhouse gases and global climate changes do
not impress publishers of the Farmers' Almanac.

After 184 years, they have no plans to alter the almanac's weather forecasting
formula, which is based on sunspots, the position of the planets and tidal
action caused by the moon.

Using the formula, known to only two people, the almanac predicts another
moderate winter as a follow-up to last year's warmest winter on record.

``The winter of 2000-01 should get off to a late start and turn out to be
milder than average, even less severe than this last one,'' forecaster Caleb
Weatherbee writes in the almanac that hits newsstands Tuesday.

Editor Peter Geiger admitted that last year's prediction -- of a stormy
November and December to be capped by more than a foot of snow at year's
end in the Midwest and Northeast -- was way off the mark.

There actually was a dearth of snow. Portland, Maine, for example, recorded
its longest stretch of snowless days -- 305 -- before getting its first
measurable snowfall on Jan. 16.

The effects of La Nina likely were to blame for the late arrival of snow, said
Geiger, who noted that the almanac did better in predicting the biggest East
Coast snowstorm of the season on Jan. 24.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration also blamed La Nina
for making the winter the nation's warmest in the 105 years that records have
been kept.

The phenomenon of changing ocean temperatures known as La Nina and El
Nino, along with the controversy over whether greenhouse gases are causing
global warming, led to Weatherbee's declaration that he will stick by the
almanac's traditional formula for predicting the weather.

``Many people have asked us if we plan to alter the 'secret formula' used for
producing our annual weather forecasts. The answer is an unequivocal 'no,'''
Weatherbee writes in this year's almanac.

Although it isn't always right, the Farmers' Almanac, along with the Old
Farmer's Almanac published in neighboring New Hampshire, which is 24
years older, is used to plan outdoor weddings, cookouts and vacations.

The National Weather Service contends weather can't be predicted with any
certainty so far in advance.

But the Farmers' Almanac says its long-term predictions are right about 80
percent of the time.

For the record, Weatherbee predicts a wet fall to be followed by two big
December snowstorms, including one reaching as far south as Virginia. He
also predicts significant snow in the Rockies and in the Midwest and Great
Lakes states in December.

More snow is predicted during the winter, but overall the season will be mild,
Weatherbee predicted. Next summer will be hot, and it will be followed by a
fall drought, he added.

Copyright 2000 The New York Times Company
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