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Southwest Florida is projected to lead the nation over the next
ten years in percentage population, total personal income and
new job growth. Phenomenal growth has sparked an exciting new
sense of energy and opportunity in a place that can only be
described as Paradise.
Southwest Florida's mean annual temperature is 75 degrees. Even
though summer highs may reach the 90's, the Gulf of Mexico dishes
up delightful breezes, and brief afternoon showers cool and
wash the area. |
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Climate
(in Fahrenheit degrees)
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Jan
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Feb
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Mar
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Apr
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May
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June
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July
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Aug
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Sept
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Oct
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Nov
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Dec
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| High |
77
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76
|
82
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86
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88
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90
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91
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92
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91
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87
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83
|
78
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| Low |
53
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52
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57
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61
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66
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70
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72
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72
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72
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66
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60
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55
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Rainfall
(in inches)
|
|
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1.9
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2.0
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2.3
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1.7
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4.5
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7.8
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8.0
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8.5
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9.2
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4.0
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1.2
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1.4
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Gulf
Water Temperature (in Fahrenheit degrees)
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|
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66
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66
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71
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77
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82
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86
|
87
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87
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86
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81
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73
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68
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Watch
For the Elusive 'Green Flash'
From the Naples Daily News
Twilight is a time like no other.
Watching people on the beach watch the sun go down can be as interesting
as observing the colors and shapes on the horizon. I know of no other
natural phenomenon in Naples that produces applause and cheers from
throngs of onlookers. The observance of day's end seems almost instinctive,
a throwback to some tribal ritual of long ago.
People watch the sunsets for different reasons. Over the years viewers
in Naples have squinted into thousands of sunsets attempting to see
the elusive "green flash," sometimes successfully. I am
one of those who have been unsuccessful.
Until a few years ago I had always assumed that the flash was a local
oddity, something on the order of the "swamp gas" sightings
over the Everglades. However, it is actually a worldwide occurrence,
even appearing in the dictionary with the following definition: a
momentary green appearance of the uppermost part of the sun's disk
that results from atmospheric refraction when the sun sinks below
or rises above the horizon.
The December issue of the magazine Astronomy devotes an article to
the green flash and related optical illusions. Here is the gist of
it.
Sunlight is bent as it travels through the Earth's atmosphere-with
some colors being bent more than others. Red is bent the least, followed
in increasing order by orange, yellow, green, blue and violet. As
the light rays are bent, the colors become separated. Sometimes when
the light is bent in a certain way, it forms a rainbow. Sometimes,
under different circumstances, it creates images such as the green
flash.
When the sun is near the horizon, its light must pass through more
of the atmosphere before reaching our eyes, so the light rays are
bent much more than when the sun is high in the sky. The result is
that, near the horizon, there is a stack of overlapping images of
the sun, with the red one at the bottom and the violet at the top.
We normally don't see the blue or the violet images because they are
scattered into the atmosphere, causing the entire sky to be blue.
Water vapor in the air usually absorbs the orange and yellow rays.
This leaves the faint green image and the overpowering red image which
penetrates a cloudy or dusty sky far better than any other color.
When the red image sinks below the horizon an irregularly shaped patch
of green remains above for an instant, producing the flash. Some connoisseurs
say that a yellow or orange sun produces the best green flashes. Usually
it is all over in a second or so.
In order for the flash to be seen, the atmosphere must be extremely
clear and the horizon must be distant, well defined and flat. A view
looking out over water is best.
Don't stare at the sun too long before it sets or you may see a false
green afterimage on the retina of your eyes. You can create a bogus
green flash by raising and lowering your head behind an artificial
horizon such as a concrete wall just before sundown.
Some observers on boats have reported seeing the flash more than once
during the same sunset as they slowly rocked back and forth on heavy
swells. Admiral Byrd once observed the green color for 35 minutes
as the sun rolled along the horizon in the Antarctic. These and other
tales are in the Handbook of Unusual Natural Phenomena at the local
public library. A classic description of the flash is in the January
1960 issue of Scientific American.
Even, if you don't manage to see it, it is great sport to watch for
the green flash. Sometimes the water looks so glassy and otherworldly
just after the sun sets it seems you could walk out and look over
the edge to take another peek at the rim of the sun where the green
should have been. If you don't see it, there's always tomorrow. |
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