Patrick,

I hope you will reconsider your behavior during thunderstorms. The facts 
don't support your lackadaisical view of lightning.
 http://www.lightningsafety.noaa.gov/
Lightning is the number one weather related killer in Colorado. Even when 
folks are not killed by a lightning strike, it can alter and diminish the 
remainder of their life.
http://www.lightningsafety.com/nlsi_lls/fatalities_us.html 
Living at 9000ft, your risk of lightning strike is enhanced over the 
Colorado state average.

Lightning is NOT at all predictable where it will strike. As a NWS 
forecaster giving presentations on the subject, I used to say "lightning is 
very powerful but very lazy." It will always find the easiest path to 
discharge. Yes the probabilities are greatest for higher elevations during 
the afternoon hours, but that doesn't mean probabilities are zero for lower 
elevations during the morning or evening.

Be safe out there!
Joe in GJT

On Sunday, July 9, 2017 at 2:15:29 PM UTC-6, Deacon Patrick wrote:

> Ha, George! If I followed that advice I'd not go on rides from April 
> through September. Grin. Fortunately, lightening is predictable in what it 
> like to hit. Stay low 'cause it likes to aim high. Don't straddle anything 
> steel, er, because it is attracted to conductiv ... ZAP! CRACK! CRISP! Grin.
>
> With abandon,
> Patrick
>
> On Sunday, July 9, 2017 at 1:27:06 PM UTC-6, George Schick wrote:
>>
>> Long as you're not out in it during one of those thunderstorms, that is. 
>> Lightning, especially at those altitudes, can be very lethal and it can 
>> strike a long way from where the storm appears to be.
>>
>>
>> On Sunday, July 9, 2017 at 1:45:03 PM UTC-5, Deacon Patrick wrote:
>>>
>>> Yesterday was hot for around here. 84˚F at 9,000 feet. Riding home the 
>>> thunderclouds that had been building since noon broke loose. Unlike most 
>>> storms, this one didn’t drop the temperature into the 40’s or 50’s. It 
>>> stayed in the upper 70’s. I left my rain jacket in my bag and delighted in 
>>> the wet soaking my cotton shirt, cooling me off. Combined with the 
>>> delicious scents of rain, ozone, flashing lightening and rumbling thunder 
>>> coming down and mixing with earth, sage, flowers, pine, and aspen, it was a 
>>> veritable feast.
>>>
>>> This morning, the sun was out, the ground moist and pocked , fresh and 
>>> giving off the smell of summer loam of long decay, pine, and growth in the 
>>> warmth. Pockets of air still cool from the moist night air tantalized as at 
>>> rode through them, lingering by slowing my pedaling.
>>>
>>> After weeks of hot and dusty grit, these two rides were spectacularly 
>>> refreshing.
>>>
>>> With abandon,
>>> Patrick
>>>
>>> www.CredoFamily.org
>>> www.MindYourHeadCoop.org
>>>
>>>
>>>

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