Submitted by doggyfishbird t3_zzr9d1 in Maine

I’ve heard from early on, years ago really, that the gulf of maine was warming more quickly than any other place in the oceans. Now I’m hearing that our forrest’s are at risk and that New England in general is warming faster than most the rest of the U.S. Thus the surreal weather patterns we are experiencing now. Thoughts, insights, evidence?

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oldncrusty68 t1_j2d8pk6 wrote

Seems like the weather is improving to me but I’m just sick of winter so..

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AlternativeWay4729 t1_j2da83m wrote

  1. Change on a decadal time scale: Read Maine's Climate Future. https://climatechange.umaine.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/439/2020/02/Maines-Climate-Future-2020-Update-3.pdf

  2. Change on an annual/biannual time scale: Begin to understand El Niño/La Niña https://www.pmel.noaa.gov/elnino/what-is-el-nino

  3. Change on a daily/weekly timescale: Understand and track the jet stream: https://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/isobaric/250hPa/orthographic=-70.70,49.95,598/loc=-1.418,50.936

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thatgirlblowitdown t1_j2dla9c wrote

I have nothing scientific to add but as a native Mainer I can see how it has changed, the weather patterns. A 50 degree day in December isn’t a gift it’s a warning

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Ebomb1 t1_j2domch wrote

We're not going to run out of water like the southwest, or burn completely down like the west in general. But climate stress is going to change our species composition, affect biodiversity, create opportunities for pests and invasive species, change the hydrological regime, and affect agriculture and resource extraction (fishing, timber) and touristry (wintersports, sportfishing).

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Tronbronson t1_j2dpsdz wrote

Top comment is actually a list of historical climate data and trends from the university of Maine, which is why we use reddit, and not google. Unfortunately you and the person below you actively participate in making reddit the shitty place you call it out to be. Thanks for your input

edit: Lmao mans deleted his whole account

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TheBookShopOfBF t1_j2dt1pe wrote

The governor's climate plan should always get a mention in these kinds of threads:

https://www.maine.gov/climateplan/

Maine Won't Wait is pretty good as actual plans to address climate change go. A good mix of reduction in consumption (I'd advocate for more), increase in renewable production, and mitigation efforts.

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New-Work-139 t1_j2e7hkz wrote

Cool climate, rocky coast, lots of fresh water and forest. Maine looks better than most IMO.

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Literallydead_1 t1_j2e7vq7 wrote

Just said this myself. After my house got a cold all Xmas vaca, I was so grateful to air out the house. Then, of course, reality made its way &I realized I'm not so grateful, but more concerned. So worried for our upcoming generations. Everyone should be, especially us younger adults.

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cuntlicker90210 t1_j2ecb46 wrote

It has changed only be a fool wouldn't see it, first we got ticks 20 years ago, then you people. Out of the 2 evils the ticks are the lesser

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alienwarezftw t1_j2eg5pd wrote

I just hope we’re not ouright banning gas cars. I’m still concerned our electric grid needs a total revamp with more security before I plan on switch over

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Psychological-Bear-9 t1_j2ei942 wrote

I've seen it just in my life. I'm only 30 and when I was a kid I remember having white Halloweens. Now it's NYE and we're looking at highs of 55 next week. Not normal.

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Alphatron1 t1_j2emzca wrote

Crabs from Maryland are moving up to Maine

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Nervous_Somewhere710 t1_j2eu2kj wrote

I feel like our climate went to shot once Nestle bought out Poland Springs and started pumping gallons of our ground water a year….

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Antnee83 t1_j2ezpqd wrote

I have no love for them, but three things:

  1. Nestle doesn't own them anymore

  2. What the hell does pumping groundwater have to do with climate change

  3. The actual amount they pumped was infinitesimally small compared to what's in the water table

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houndshmix t1_j2f011h wrote

Reminding people that it’s not a dilemma, it’s an imminent disaster.

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salmonellasangre t1_j2fb67d wrote

I grew up in California but just moved to Maine this year so I thought it was laughable when I heard people talking about Maine being in a drought. "What are you talking about? It rains every week! We get rain like twice a year in Southern California!" But then I went to a blueberry farm and they told us all about how much rain their crops need and how little it rained in comparison to past years and how much of a hit they took and I get it now.

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justlikethewwdove t1_j2fndmg wrote

Southern Maine and SE NH had a wicked bad wildfire outbreak in 1947. The worst of it was in Lyman and Waterboro where a huge percentage of homes were charred to ashes. We're not totally immune to it and that sort of thing becoming more common is definitely not out of the question around here, especially in an extreme 2.5C+ increase scenario. In the Midwest they're already seeing huge dust storms in Iowa and extreme wildfires in western Ontario (which gave us most of our sun-blotting wildfire smoke in summer 2021). The arid zone is slowly inching east and while it won't overtake the continent anytime soon there's definitely a small risk of increasing droughts in the humid zone.

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digitalambie t1_j2frgp5 wrote

Even my winters growing up in West Virginia were colder and snowier than the ones I'm experiencing in Maine now. The wind storms of the past ~5-6 years also give me anxiety between the power outages and the trees falling.

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