On Mon, 14 Jan 2019 18:33:55 -0800 (PST),
[email protected]
wrote:
the local radio station had a meteorologist guest, and asked about the song.
Nobody on the show that day knew the song, which did not help ..,
but he said it sounded like a line squall, and that seems reasonable to me. >As the sun goes down the air could cool from the top, and in a large flat area >in a "sultry Summer calm" the cooler, more dense air might not break through >for quite a while, so then when it does get started there would be a lot of energy available.
On a dark night I suppose there would be nothing to warn anyone until the wind hit the ship,
and then what they would see is that the ##!%&# weather went from calm to 100 knots.
Perhaps a google search might provide some explanation ?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_squall
" White squalls are rare at sea, but common on the Great Lakes .. "
John T.
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