Sunday, February 24, 2013
The National Weather Service has issued a freezing fog advisory for the Hudson area effective until 9 a.m. on Sunday. The fog may not be dense, but it could freeze on surfaces and make them extremely slippery.
The National Weather Service has issued a freezing fog advisory for the Hudson area valid until 9 a.m. on Sunday. The fog may not be dense, but it could freeze on surfaces and make them extremely slippery. The following is the full text of the National Weather Service freezing fog advisory: ...FREEZING FOG COULD CREATE SLIPPERY SPOTS TONIGHT... .LIGHT WINDS... LINGERING LOW LEVEL MOISTURE... AND PERIODS OF CLEAR SKIES WILL LEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF FOG ACROSS THE AREA TONIGHT. ALTHOUGH THE FOG IS NOT EXPECTED TO BECOME DENSE... IT COULD FREEZE ONTO SURFACES GIVEN EXPECTED LOW TEMPERATURES FROM AROUND 5 TO 10 ABOVE ZERO. TRAVEL COULD BECOME HAZARDOUS WHERE FREEZING FOG OCCURS... PARTICULARLY ON UNTREATED SURFACES AFTER 10 PM CST. A …
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
A blanket of dense fog has covered the area and commuters are urged to leave early and take some extra time on the roads this morning.
A blanket of dense fog has covered the area and visibility is down to less than a quarter mile. Commuters are urged to leave early, take some extra time and be patient on the roads this morning. The National Weather Service has issued the following dense fog advisory: ... DENSE FOG ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM CDT THIS MORNING... * VISIBILITY... A QUARTER MILE OR LESS. * IMPACTS... DENSE FOG WILL CREATE HAZARDOUS TRAVELING CONDITIONS DUE TO SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCED VISIBILITY. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... A DENSE FOG ADVISORY MEANS VISIBILITIES WILL FREQUENTLY BE REDUCED TO LESS THAN ONE QUARTER MILE. IF DRIVING... SLOW DOWN... USE YOUR HEADLIGHTS... AND LEAVE PLENTY OF DISTANCE AHEAD OF YOU. && More Information ... AREAS …
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Dense fog caused visibility problems for pilots at the 22nd Annual Hudson Hot Air Affair, yet people made the most of the event.
It's said that if you build it—or in this case inflate it—they will come. "We estimate that we have about 10,000 people who come to Hudson every February for the Hot Air Affair," said Evy Nerbonne, president of the Hudson Hot Air Affair, the largest winter hot air balloon festival in the Midwest. Those 10,000 people made their way to Hudson with a goal of seeing dozens of multicolored works of art soar through the sky. However, the weather prevented that from happening on the morning of Saturday, Feb. 5, 2011. "The weather hasn't really cooperated with us this morning," said Travis Vencel, a hot air balloon pilot. "We need visibility of about three miles so we can see where we're going." Vencel and other pilots had to keep their hot-air …
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E.P. Rock Elementary School
340 13th St S, Hudson, WI
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yomammy
3:18 pm on Wednesday, October 24, 2012
I would prefer the term "thick" fog .... Dense is highly insensitive to differently abled fog.   more ›