C10 WEATHER Washington area today The Capital Weather Gang’s forecast
A pretty good chance of showers and storms on Sunday. Probably enough clouds to keep the temperature in the middle 80s. A little more humid than Friday or Saturday. Rain can not be ruled out Sunday night, but it’s less likely. A reasonably cool night (low 70s in the city.)
For the latest updates, visit the Capital Weather Gang blog:
washingtonpost.com/capitalweathergang
The Region Today Today’s Pollen Index
Mold Trees Weeds Grass Absent
Absent Absent
Harrisburg Hagerstown
82/65 82/66
Baltimore 83/68
Washington 86/70
Richmond Charlottesville
84/63 86/68
Norfolk 84/71
Blue Ridge
•Today, partly sunny, shower or thunderstorm. High 71-85. Wind south- southeast 3-6 mph. •Tonight, partly cloudy, evening shower or thun- derstorm. Low 59-63. Wind light, variable. •Monday, partly sunny, thunderstorm. High 77-89.
Boating Forecast »
Virginia Beach 83/69
Recreational Forecast Atlantic beaches
•Today, variably cloudy, showers, thunderstorm. High 81-86. Wind south- east 6-12 mph. •Tonight, mostly cloudy, showers, thunderstorm. Low 67- 71. Wind south 4-8 mph. •Monday, partly sunny, showers, thunderstorm. High 81-87.
Upper Potomac River: Today, vari-
ably cloudy, showers, thunderstorms. Wind south 5-10 knots. Waves 1 foot. Lower Potomac and Chesapeake Bay: Today, variably cloudy, showers, thunderstorms. Wind southeast 5-10 knots. Waves 1 foot on the lower Potomac, Chesapeake Bay. River Stages: The river stage at Little Falls will be 2.6 feet today, holding steady Monday. Flood stage at Little Falls is 10 feet.
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Annapolis 83/71
Ocean City 83/69
Dover 84/68
Absent
Ultra-Violet Index Air Quality Index
6 out of 11+, High
Yesterday’s main offender: Today: Moderate
Particulates, 65 The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Philadelphia 83/69
North
KEY» Temperature
100s°+ 90s° 80s° 70s° 60s° 50s° 40s° 30s° 20s° 10s° 0s° -0s°
-10s°+ Precipitation
Showers Rain T-Storms Flurries Snow Ice
Nation
City Today Albany, NY
Albuquerque 88/67/t Anchorage 67/57/pc Atlanta 98/76/t
78/64/pc 79/67/sh 89/66/t 68/57/s 94/77/t
Austin 104/70/s 104/75/s Baltimore 83/68/t Billings, MT
86/70/t 90/58/s 85/57/s
Birmingham 102/77/pc 99/80/t Bismarck, ND 88/63/t 89/59/pc Boise 91/59/s
92/59/s
Boston 76/62/pc 76/64/pc Buffalo 78/63/t
84/69/pc
Burlington, VT 80/62/pc 79/64/sh Charleston, SC 88/75/t 90/74/t Charleston, WV 90/66/t 95/67/pc Charlotte 89/70/t
92/72/t
Cheyenne, WY 94/62/t 87/59/t Chicago 87/67/s
89/72/pc
Cincinnati 94/69/pc 97/69/pc Cleveland 84/65/t
88/71/s
Dallas 108/78/s 105/82/s Denver 94/65/t Des Moines
93/62/t 88/69/pc 89/75/t
Detroit 84/66/pc 89/71/s El Paso
92/71/pc 98/71/s
Fairbanks, AK 81/60/s 85/59/s Fargo, ND
Hartford, CT 78/64/sh 80/66/t Honolulu 90/75/s
88/67/t 89/61/pc 90/76/pc
Houston 101/75/s 101/76/s Indianapolis 90/69/s Jackson, MS
104/77/pc 101/77/s
Jacksonville, FL 94/75/t 93/76/t Kansas City, MO 91/71/pc 96/75/s Las Vegas
101/78/pc 103/81/s 92/72/pc
Tomorrow City Today Little Rock
Los Angeles Tomorrow Louisville 94/75/pc
102/78/pc 103/79/s 74/62/pc 76/62/pc 99/75/pc
Memphis 100/80/pc 103/83/s Miami 92/79/t Milwaukee 80/69/s Minneapolis 88/72/pc Nashville 98/74/pc
100/76/s
New Orleans 98/81/pc 93/79/t New York City 82/71/sh 83/73/t Norfolk 84/71/t
87/72/t
Oklahoma City 102/74/s 104/74/s Omaha 88/70/pc 91/75/t Orlando 94/76/t Philadelphia 83/69/t Phoenix 101/82/t Pittsburgh 83/64/t
94/77/t 84/71/t 104/84/t 87/66/pc
Portland, ME 76/58/s 72/60/pc Portland, OR
77/58/pc 84/58/pc
Providence, RI 78/63/pc 79/64/pc Raleigh, NC Reno, NV
Richmond 86/68/t Sacramento 91/53/s St. Louis
82/68/t 91/71/t 92/56/s 94/56/s 90/70/t 89/55/s
92/74/pc 97/79/s
St. Thomas, VI 91/82/s 91/79/sh Salt Lake City 91/63/pc 93/65/s San Diego
70/64/pc 71/66/pc
San Francisco 67/51/pc 67/52/pc San Juan, PR 88/80/s 87/80/t Seattle 74/55/pc 78/56/pc Spokane, WA 80/56/pc 86/59/s Syracuse 76/63/sh Tampa 92/79/t Wichita 96/73/s
82/66/pc 92/79/t
100/75/s NOTE: These are the predicted high/low temperatures and forecasts, through 5 p.m. Eastern time.
92/79/pc 87/72/pc 91/73/t
S
KLMNO Today Thunderstorms
86° 70°
Wind south 6-12 mph
American Forecast
FOR NOON TODAY
Seattle Portlan
Seattl Seattle Portland Sacramento Sacramento San Francisc Los Angele
Fronts Cold
Warm Stationary
Pressure Centers
High Low Key » s-Sunny, pc-Partly Cloudy, c-Cloudy, r-Rain, sh-Showers, t-Thunderstorms, sf-Snow Flurries, sn-Snow, i-Ice. World City Today
Addis Ababa 68/59/t 68/59/t Amsterdam 71/58/pc Athens 96/78/s Auckland 59/54/r Baghdad 118/77/s
Bangkok 92/80/pc 91/78/t Beijing 90/74/pc Berlin 81/66/pc Bogota 67/46/t Brussels 74/52/pc
82/73/t
Tomorrow City Today Lisbon 85/67/pc
68/54/sh 99/80/s 63/55/r 116/78/s
85/77/pc 75/57/t 66/47/t
72/51/sh
Buenos Aires 49/36/s 53/34/pc Cairo 103/79/s 103/78/s Caracas 83/74/t Copenhagen 73/63/sh
70/57/sh
Dakar 89/77/pc 88/80/pc Dublin 64/50/pc Edinburgh 65/52/pc Frankfurt 83/64/t Geneva
82/63/t 79/67/s
Ho Chi Minh City 87/77/r 87/77/t Hong Kong
Islamabad 98/78/t Istanbul 90/78/pc Jerusalem 91/68/s Johannesburg 68/41/s Kabul 100/57/s
94/83/t
64/50/pc 61/52/pc 79/56/sh 76/58/t
Ham., Bermuda 86/78/r 90/77/pc Helsinki 72/63/pc
89/82/sh 89/81/pc 100/82/t 91/78/s 90/66/s 69/42/s 102/61/s
Kingston, Jam. 90/80/sh 89/80/sh Kolkata
96/82/t
Lagos 84/74/pc 82/74/pc Lima 68/56/pc 70/57/pc
Yesterday’s extremes (Continental U.S. only)
High: 106° China Lake, Calif. Low: 30° Bodie State Park, Calif.
SOURCES:
AccuWeather.com; Walter Reed Army Medical Center (pollen data) ; Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments; American Lung Association; National Weather Service.
London 73/57/pc Madrid 97/66/s Manila 84/78/t Mexico City
Montreal 79/61/s
Tomorrow 87/65/s
73/57/pc 98/67/s 85/78/t
79/52/t 77/53/s 79/64/pc
Moscow 92/70/pc 93/69/pc Mumbai 88/82/r Nairobi 74/54/sh New Delhi
89/82/r 76/53/c
89/81/t 91/80/t
Oslo 69/51/sh 69/52/sh Ottawa
74/61/s
Paris 76/58/pc 76/56/s Prague 83/60/s
74/60/t
Rio de Janeiro 78/68/s 75/68/r Riyadh 104/82/s 102/83/pc Rome 86/66/s Santiago 51/37/sh
86/65/s 58/33/s
San Salvador 86/74/t 85/73/t Sarajevo
82/53/sh
Seoul 88/76/sh Shanghai 96/85/s Singapore 88/79/t Stockholm 77/63/sh Sydney 68/43/s Taipei 95/79/s Tehran 87/71/s
91/52/s 91/71/r 97/85/t 87/79/t
70/60/sh 59/45/s 94/80/s 86/71/s
Tokyo 92/80/pc 88/77/pc Toronto 74/65/t Vienna 87/69/s Warsaw 82/62/s Yerevan 98/59/s
The world (excluding Antarctica)
High: 118° Sharjah, United Arab Emirates Low: -7° Summit Station, Greenland
83/69/pc 89/68/s 88/65/s 98/60/s
Rise Set
81/67/pc Los Angeles Los Angeles Phoenix Phoenix Dalla
Houston Mo
HoustoHouston Monterre Monterrey nterrey Dallas Dallas Atlanta Atlant New Orleans New OrleanOrleans ew Atlanta
Charlesto Tampa
Miami Miami
Charleston Tampa
Charleston Tamp
San Francisco San Francisco Portland Calga Calgary Calgary Winnipe Helena
Salt City
Salt La
Lake City
Lake Ci
ke Denver Denver Denve St. Loui St. Louis St. Louis Helena
Rapid City
Rapid Ci
City ChicagChicago Columbus Columbus Chicago Winnipeg Winnipeg
Mpls.-Mpls.- St. Pau
St. Paul Mpls.-
St. Paul Ottaw Ottawa ttawa Boston Boston Bosto New Yor Washingto New York ew York Philadelphia Washington Washington Philadelphia Monday Thunderstorms
87° 72°
Wind south 6-12 mph Tuesday Partly sunny
91° 76°
Wind south 8-16 mph
Wednesday Thunderstorms
95° 77°
Wind southwest 6-12 mph Thursday Thunderstorms
94° 72°
Wind northwest 8-16 mph
SUNDAY, AUGUST 1, 2010
News, traffi c, weather. Now.
POSTLOCAL
postlocal.com
Official weather data Reagan
Temperature High Low
Normal Record high
Record low
Precipitation Past 24 hours Total this month Normal month to date Total this year Normal to date
Relative humidity Max. Min.
86° at 3:32 p.m. 71° at 6:00 a.m. 88°/70°
103° in 1954 52° in 1895
None 5.17” 3.66” 18.77” 22.82”
68% at 6:00 a.m. 36% at 3:00 p.m.
Barometric pressure High Low
Temperature trend
40° 60° 80° 100° 120°
PAST TEN DAYS
0" 1" 2" 3" 4" 5" 6"
Normal TODAY TEN-DAY FORECAST
Precipitation almanac, 2009 - 2010 Actual
29.97” 29.90”
Actual and f or ecast
THROUGH 5 P.M. YESTERDAY BWI
Dulles
85° at 3:00 p.m. 63° at 5:19 a.m. 88°/64°
98° in 1999 50° in 1997
None 4.09” 3.57” 22.09” 24.45”
86% at 4:00 a.m. 38% at 3:00 p.m.
29.97” 29.89”
Normal Record
85° at 4:00 p.m. 65° at 1:01 a.m. 87°/66°
102° in 1954 54° in 1997
None 4.36” 3.85” 23.52” 24.59”
81% at 5:00 a.m. 42% at 1:00 p.m.
29.96” 29.90”
Apparent Temperature:
85°
(Comfort index com- bines temperature and humidity.)
Cooling
degree days An index of fuel con- sumption indicating how many degrees the average tempera- ture rose above 65 for the day. If a day’s average temperature were 75, there would be 10 ‘degree days’ for the date. Saturday ............ 14 This month....... 566 This season .... 1279 Normal to yesterday ........ 896 Last season ...... 778
J A S O N D J F M A M J
Today’s tides High tides are in bold face Washington 12:22 a.m. 7:23 a.m. 12:41 p.m. 7:16 p.m. Annapolis Ocean City Norfolk
none
Point Lookout 12:13 a.m. 5:37 a.m. 11:54 a.m. 6:49 p.m. Moon phases
Aug 3 Last Quarter
Aug 9 New
Aug 16 First Quarter
Solar system
Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus 6:09 a.m.
8:19 p.m.
11:09 p.m. 12:23 p.m.
8:26 a.m. 9:29 p.m.
9:56 a.m. 10:17 p.m.
10:32 a.m. 10:36 p.m.
10:40 p.m. 10:46 a.m.
10:26 a.m. 10:42 p.m.
10:30 p.m. 10:32 a.m.
Aug 24 Full
4:05 a.m. 9:33 a.m. 3:46 p.m. 10:45 p.m. 6:08 a.m. 12:23 p.m. 6:41 p.m.
1:42 a.m. 7:51 a.m. 2:09 p.m. 8:31 p.m.
Zoo, U-Md. researchers stay busy with bees
by Martin Weil
Struggling for survival, show- ing themselves off and even con- tributing to the national defense, bees have produced a fair bit of buzz this summer in two loca- tions in the Washington area. On Connecticut Avenue NW,
the National Zoo is trying to maintain its hive in the face of many obstacles that burden pre- sent-day beekeeping. In College Park, on the campus of the University of Maryland, re- searchers are eyeing the flight of the bumblebee to glean tips for designing tiny aerial robots. The flying robots, researchers said, might safely gather infor- mation in dangerous environ- ments such as the battlefield. According to a news release from the university’s A. James Clark School of Engineering, re- searchers at Maryland have even built a small-scale wind tunnel to study in detail how bees keep fly- ing amid strong gusts. The idea, said biologist and re- searcher Jason T. Vance, is to “identify mechanisms that enable insects’ robust flight perform- ance” and find the aspects of bee
flight that can be used in “micro air vehicles.”
At the zoo, staff members have tried again this year to set up a honeybee colony. Such efforts in the past have had what the zoo described as “varied success.” The exhibit is designed to al- low visitors to “get up close,” zoo entomologist Donna Stockton said in a news release. But over the years, problems have arisen. Varroa mites attacked. Worker bees brought back pesticides. Outsider bees made off with the colony’s wax and honey. “Sometimes it’s a challenge to
start and keep a colony,” Stockton said. Nevertheless, she said, “we learn something new about these important insects and are grate- ful to share the experience with our visitors.”
Earlier this year, as happens
when good beekeeping increases bee populations, half of the bees took off with their queen. A new queen emerged, raising
keepers’ hopes. As of a few days ago, a zoo spokeswoman said, “the bees are still here.” But they have been “invaded by hive bee- tles and are under siege,” she said.
weilm@washpost.com
SKYWATCH Perseid showers will light up skies this month
by Blaine P. Friedlander Jr.
Special to The Washington Post W
ith apologies to singer Hayley Williams, you won’t have to pretend that
airplanes in the night sky are like shooting stars. See real meteors the night of Aug. 12/13 when the annual Perseid shower peaks. Perseid viewers will enjoy a rela- tively dark sky, because the waxing crescent moon officially sets at 9:22 p.m. Aug. 12, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory. The International Meteor Or-
ganization suggests observing these shooting stars after mid- night, but any time after dark should suffice to catch a few. As- tronomers vary on how many me- teors viewers might see — barring clouds and weather permitting, about 50 to 100 an hour. The light pollution above the District, how- ever, is far from ideal. So grab a cool drink, set up a lawn chair, look up and count. Meteors are nothing more than space dust left from comet trails. On the orbit around the sun, Earth punches through these comet trash trails, and the dust strikes our planet’s upper atmosphere
and burns up. And when the dust burns, a beautiful show of shoot- ing stars is created. Comet Swift- Tuttle, discovered independently by Lewis Swift and Horace Tuttle in July 1862, produces the Perseid shower. (Tuttle eventually became an astronomer with the U.S. Naval Observatory and is buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Falls Church.) At sunset Sunday, enjoy a plan-
etary triangle of Venus, Saturn and Mars low on the western hori- zon. As effervescent as ever, Venus serves as the brightest planet (neg- ative fourth magnitude) of the trio. Saturn and Mars will be to the up- per left of Venus. Be patient trying to find them. Our neighboring red planet and the large ringed planet are very dim (first-magnitude ob- jects), and you’ll need to catch them after dusk. The waxing cres- cent moon makes a pass at the trio the evening of Aug. 13.
Within a week, the triangle be- comes tighter. Saturn will be to the upper right, and Mars to the upper left, of Venus. Before long, Saturn appears to scoot away. By the end of August, the triangle is over. Jupiter rises before 11 p.m. in the east-northeast. By mid-August, the large, gaseous planet rises at 10 p.m. At month’s end, the planet as- cends the heavens at about 9 p.m.
It is a negative second-magnitude (very bright) object.
Down-to-earth events:
Aug. 5 — “Postcards from the Galactic Center,” a lecture by John Hewitt from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, at a University of Maryland Observatory open house in College Park. Telescope viewing, weather permitting. 9 p.m. 301-405-6555;
astro.umd. edu/openhouse. Aug. 14— Enjoy a Saturday Star Party with Sean O’Brien, staff as- tronomer of the Albert Einstein Planetarium, at Sky Meadows State Park near Paris, Va. Parking: $4. Arrive before dark. 8 to 11 p.m. 540-592-3556.
nasm.si.edu/ events/skywatching. Andromeda rising and possible
leftover Perseid meteors at “Ex- ploring the Sky” in Rock Creek Park, hosted by the National Cap- ital Astronomers and the National Park Service. Meet near the Nature Center in the field south of Mili- tary and Glover roads NW. 8:30 p.m.
nps.gov/rocr/planyourvisit/ expsky.htm. Stay near and gaze afar at a star
party hosted by the Astronomical Society of Greenbelt and held at the Northway Fields Park observa- tory in Greenbelt. 8:45 p.m. green-
beltastro.org. Aug. 15 — “Sidewalk Astrono- my,” hosted by the Astronomical Society of Greenbelt, at the Roose- velt Center in Greenbelt near Cres- cent Road and Centerway. 9 p.m.
greenbeltastro.org. Aug. 20 — Astronomer Nelly Mouawad talks about “Mercury af- ter Messenger” at an open house at the University of Maryland Obser- vatory in College Park. Scan the heavens afterward, weather per- mitting. 9 p.m. 301-405-6555;
astro.umd.edu/openhouse. Aug. 28 — Enjoy the waning summer heavens at a star party hosted by the Astronomical Soci- ety of Greenbelt at the observatory at Northway Fields Park in Green- belt. 8:30 p.m.
greenbeltastro.org. Sept. 3-7— The Almost Heaven Star Party, hosted by the Northern Virginia Astronomy Club, will be held in Spruce Knob, W.Va. It is one of the premier dark-sky sites in the East. Talk about telescopes, attend lectures and gaze upward. Benefit from a glorious sky and civilized amenities such as hot showers, meal service and Inter- net access. For information and registration, go to
novac.com.
Blaine Friedlander can be reached at
PostSkyWatch@gmail.com.
Stores see benefits to leaving their doors open and the A/C on doors from C1
sult of the store overworking it earlier in the week. In addition to being a father of three, a hus- band and a small-business own- er, Moline has trained to be a U.S. Green Building Council LEED Accredited Professional, so he can recommend and implement green-building practices in com- mercial interiors. “I’m not a sandals-and-granola
guy,” Moline, a former Marine, added. His interests are primari- ly clean air and energy independ- ence, he said. In New York, retailers who
drain the grid by air condition- ing city sidewalks can be fined. Moline and others would like to see a similar policy in the Wash- ington area, or at least a public awareness campaign. “We need to . . . get the word
out: A closed door is a good thing,” said Joan Kelsch, Arling- ton County’s green buildings program manager. The county’s Environment and
Energy Conservation Commis- sion discussed the issue during a public meeting Monday. “It is a pet peeve of mine,” Bob Coyne, 50, a biologist from Ar- lington, told the commission. “It’s a terrible and unnecessary waste of energy when air streams out into the street.” The commission decided to write to the Arlington Chamber of Commerce and to the county, advising them to start outreach campaigns and include closed doors as a criterion in county rec- ognitions of energy-efficient re- tailers. “We can’t fine them as of now,”
Kelsch said, “but we can encour- age, incentivize, educate.”
When Kelsch sees “irksome” open-door retailers, she goes in- side and tells owners and con- sumers about the wasted energy. “The more electricity we use, the more coal we have to burn, and that creates a lot of air pollu- tion,” Kelsch said.
“Unless it’s raining or snowing, we keep the doors open. It’s just
more inviting.” — John Zittrauer, Lacoste store supervisor
On a recent afternoon, a walk down M Street in Georgetown was a mix of tropical heat and cool breezes flowing past doors held open by wooden yoga blocks, door-mounted doorstops, traditional rubber wedges and decorative rocks. “Unless it’s raining or snow-
ing, we keep the doors open,” said John Zittrauer, supervisor at the Lacoste apparel store. “It’s just more inviting.” Uyanga Bold, working at the
Sisley clothing store, said, “It lets people know we’re open.” The scent of minty watermel-
ons filtered through the open doors of Lush. The cosmetics company touts biodegradable and eco-friendly packaging, and according to Shama Alexander, environmental officer for the company’s North American op- erations, it has considering in-
stalling on-site industrial com- post systems in its stores and up- grading to more efficient energy and water systems. Still, she said, “The issue of closing the doors has been a highly debated topic.” Lush products can melt, so
managers decide how to control store temperatures, Alexander explained. But an open door is also a good invitation to shop- pers, she added, directly affect- ing store traffic. Ryan Wolfe, general manager of the Thunder Burger & Bar, agreed. “It’s just a marketing blast of cool air,” he said. At the climate-controlled restaurant, anything that could open was open to M Street: the wooden front door, the shutters, the win- dows. Kelsch suggests that instead, stores simply post signs advertis-
ing their cool air. Having two sets of doors —
one set that opens to a vestibule and another that opens to the outdoors— is another option, said Christopher Conway, an energy auditor and president of Conway Green Construction, based in Bristol, Va. Keeping the front set of doors open and the second set of doors closed helps the store look open and inviting.
Lululemon Athletica in
Georgetown has two sets of dou- ble doors. “We get the best of both worlds: Save the Earth and get people inside,” said Wendy Christensen, assistant manager of the yoga-inspired athletic life- style store.
But last week, as temperatures climbed past 90, both sets of doors were open wide.
tamural@washpost.com
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