Mar
31

Record Cool March Makes Woodburn Tulips Late To Their Own Festival

It’s a numbers game, really. And numbers are a funny thing.

Most of us want the numbers at the gas pump to go down.

And the numbers in our 401k plans to go up.

But if you’re a tulip grower in Oregon’s Willamette Valley?Then you want the number 60 (degrees) to come up early and often along with breaks in the clouds for some extended sunshine. That’s the… Read more

Mar
25

An Interview With “Rainbirds” Who Escape The Northwest Rainy Season

We all know about snowbirds, right? They’re  people who leave places like North Dakota and bitter cold and snow for somewhere warmer down south.

Well, here in the northwest we have our own version of those people: rainbirds!

And in my continuing series of Friday interviews, I’m talking with the couple you see here, Jack and Loett.

They’re from Fairview, Oregon, which is on the east… Read more

Mar
21

Northwest Winter 2010 Wrap-Up, Spring 2011 Forecast

It’s a classic spring photo: Maty, the dog, wearing her lei on the first day of Spring near Bend, Oregon. P-o-o-r Maty!

Shannon Mendiola tweeted this photo and says she wishes Central Oregon snow would stop now that it’s spring but she resigned herself to whatever comes: “it is what it is!”

If you live in Washington or Oregon that attitude may come in handy this spring.… Read more

Mar
20

Super-Moon Photo From Aloha, And Why The World Didn’t End

The clouds parted just in time for many of us in SW Washington and Oregon to catch a glimpse of the Super-Moon.

Gunnar Simonsen took this great shot from Aloha, Oregon with his Flip cam! I’ve heard those Flips are cool. Now I can see for myself.

But aside from trying to enjoy the biggest looking moon in almost 20 years, were you worried… Read more

Mar
18

Part 2 – An Interview With Portland State Geologist Scott Burns: “Earthquake Outlook For Western Oregon and SW Washington

This is the second of a two part interview with the expert I call if I have questions about earthquakes, tsunamis or northwest mudslides.

Portland State Geology Professor Scott Burns has some serious credentials, like being former Vice President of the IAEG (International Association of Engineering Geologists). But I like him because he takes complicated subjects and puts them in plain English.

In part one of this interview, I asked… Read more

Mar
17

Part 1 – An Interview With Portland State Geologist Scott Burns: “Is The Northwest Next For A Major Earthquake And Tsunami?”

Want to know who I call first about earthquakes, tsunamis and northwest mudslides?

You’re looking at him–in his rock room. It’s Portland State Geology Professor (and former Geology Department Chair) Scott Burns. I didn’t choose to interview him because of his Bachelor degree, Masters or Ph.D. but instead because he’s great at helping the rest of us understand the earth in plain English.

Here’s part… Read more

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KOIN Local 6 - PinPoint Weather - Bruce Sussman