In the Sanctuary City of Seattle its legal to walk around nude

Land topography. If you really wanted to know. :dunno:

Apparentky these dopers think there are several mountain ranges separating the Coast from the eastern parts of their states. Reminds me of many of the Chinese living in the Bay area, and many New Yorkers for that matter, who think Fly Over Country is populated by Mad Max style anarchy and roving Mexican bandit gangs and tumbleweeds.
 
Translation: I'm going to rub brown shoe polish on my face and go rape women.

I hope a SF cop shoots you in your fat ass, Hater. :thup:
black like me.
black-like-me-cover.png


great book.
 
What state sells the most sunglasses?


AI Overview


While definitive sales data by state is difficult to come by, All About Vision and The Seattle Times reported that The Seattle Times found that Seattle, Washington buys about 50% more sunglasses per capita than the national average. While Seattle itself buys a significant number of sunglasses, All About Vision states that The Seattle Times reported that Ray-Ban sunglasses, the most popular, are sold more in Washington than in any other U.S. state. Louisiana and California are also mentioned as being in the top three.


There are something like 20 Sunglass Huts in Oregon alone.
 
Apparentky these dopers think there are several mountain ranges separating the Coast from the eastern parts of their states.

In Oregon there is the COAST RANGE and the CASCADES. Technically speaking there is the Western Cascades and the High Cascades but that's a bit more informal.

So there's TWO, TWO, TWO ranges between the Coast and the Basin and Range provinces and the High desert.


 
Yup. That pretty sums up a lot of Florida!

Frankly, no matterr where you go, there is something wrong about the place.

Either it's weather, being prone to flooding, being prone to seemingly endless drizzle, being prone to earthquakes, being too hot, being too cold, being too crowded, being too lonely, etc.

You can whine about it, or get on with life and enjoy the good things about the place. I choose the latter, and find there are good things about most anyplace I go, including Florida. One thing about Florida, the weather is always changing! :grin:
 
What state sells the most sunglasses?


AI Overview


While definitive sales data by state is difficult to come by, All About Vision and The Seattle Times reported that The Seattle Times found that Seattle, Washington buys about 50% more sunglasses per capita than the national average. While Seattle itself buys a significant number of sunglasses, All About Vision states that The Seattle Times reported that Ray-Ban sunglasses, the most popular, are sold more in Washington than in any other U.S. state. Louisiana and California are also mentioned as being in the top three.


There are something like 20 Sunglass Huts in Oregon alone.
Heh. People here tend to be blinded by the Sun when it DOES finally come out!
 
In Oregon there is the COAST RANGE and the CASCADES. Technically speaking there is the Western Cascades and the High Cascades but that's a bit more informal.
Oregon has coastal ranges, the Cascades, the Siskiyous, and part of the Chocolate range (they call it the Blue range).
So there's TWO, TWO, TWO ranges between the Coast and the Basin and Range provinces and the High desert.
Three. Oregon also has a gap in the Cascades call the Gorge, exposing Portland to an icing convergence zone during the winter, and increased thunderstorm activity in the summer. The Gorge happens to contain some of the prettiest waterfalls I've seen.

Looks like you don't know much about the PNW at all, Gunky.
 
Random letters ignored.
So why don't their precipitation numbers stay high? Weren't you claiming 10 out of every 14 days?
It doesn't rain hard, but it does rain a lot. This is typical of marine airflow in the area. Some people tend to call it the Pineapple Express, since that flow originates from the direction of Hawaii (set up by a low that tends to park itself over Alaskan waters during that time of year). It's relatively "warmer" air (which is why warm fronts are common in the area), but still chilly after it's long trip across the sea.

During summer, this marine flow tends to get blocked later in the year by a high pressure area that tends to park itself over Utah.

Someday you should learn what a Hadley cell is.

You seem to be fighting against the data, not me. Explain.
What "data"?
 
Oregon has coastal ranges, the Cascades, the Siskiyous, and part of the Chocolate range (they call it the Blue range).

Please do keep up. We were talking about the ranges between the coast and the Eastern part of the state. Obviously there are many additional ranges. The Steens, the Wallowas, the Blue Mtns. Blah blah blah.

Three. Oregon also has a gap in the Cascades call the Gorge, exposing Portland to an icing convergence zone during the winter, and increased thunderstorm activity in the summer. The Gorge happens to contain some of the prettiest waterfalls I've seen.

Looks like you don't know much about the PNW at all, Gunky.

LOL. LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL
 
In Oregon there is the COAST RANGE and the CASCADES. Technically speaking there is the Western Cascades and the High Cascades but that's a bit more informal.

So there's TWO, TWO, TWO ranges between the Coast and the Basin and Range provinces and the High desert.

the Coast range isn't between the coast and the eastern parts of those states, weirdo.
 
Oregon has coastal ranges, the Cascades, the Siskiyous, and part of the Chocolate range (they call it the Blue range).

Three. Oregon also has a gap in the Cascades call the Gorge, exposing Portland to an icing convergence zone during the winter, and increased thunderstorm activity in the summer. The Gorge happens to contain some of the prettiest waterfalls I've seen.

Looks like you don't know much about the PNW at all, Gunky.

In Portland you can drive along the Willamette's west side and be ice free and look across the river at the ice and snow on the east side close to the Gorge.
 
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