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Go Native

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by Go Native

  1. Very mild and sunny here today. Was the warmest May ever recorded here and so far June has also been very mild. Still virtually no natural snow at most of our ski resorts. Tomorrow though they are forecasting the first really decent cold front of the winter that should bring some good snowfalls to the alpine areas.

  2. I'd use a grooved trowel for the mortar mix to lay the tiles on. Match the size of the grooves to the instructions on the mortar mix. You can get grouts for outdoors that work well. I'd suggest a flexible sanded grout and that you also use a grout sealer which will help stop discolouration of the grout.

    One of the main things to consider is that you'll more than likely have to cut some of the tiles Once you know the tile size you'll be using map out on a scale drawing, or lay them down to work how you want them fit. Generally it's best to arrange it to have the cut tiles butting up to the house.

  3. Next to the house? It's just it probably has a slight lean on it currently to ensure water doesn't flow back to the house. Just keep this in mind when laying the tiles to keep that lean. Some people forget this and lay the tiles completely level not allowing to water to run off properly.

  4. NOAA recently released this The chance of El Niño is 70% during the Northern Hemisphere summer and reaches 80% during the fall and winter.

     

    http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/ensodisc.html

     

    That was an early June forecast. This may have recently been updated and may well be up at 90% now. It's not just the Guardian reporting the 90% figure.

  5. From the research I've done on it generally most of Japan can expect warmer temps and slightly lower snowfall during an El Nino event. Hokkaido though is less effected and in fact the northern parts of Hokkaido usually have slightly lower temps than usual. This is for the winter period obviously. Summers are generally cooler across most of Japan during El Nino events.

     

    The following shows the effect on precipitation during Dec-Feb. Southern Japan generally has much lower precipitation whereas central and northern areas are not overly affected.

     

    nino34_logprcp_DJF0.png

     

    The following shows the effect on temperature during Dec-Feb. Most of Honshu generally experiences positive anomalies whilst far northern areas of Hokkaido are slightly cooler.

     

    nino34_temp_DJF.png

     

    It will all depend on the strength of the event and when it peaks.

  6. Some of the new slang back home I have no idea about.....Japanerisms are now entrenched....the uh-uh-uh's and bowing to everyone....in my local bar the barman gives me right funny looks :lol:

     

    When I came back to Australia there was talk of Hipsters. I had no idea what people were talking about. Still don't really.

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