Geotechnical Engineer. Weather enthusiast. NWS COOP Observer. Skywarn Spotter. University of South Carolina Alum. Go Gamecocks!

Joined April 2015
2,454 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
8.9” snow depth avg accumulation either drifts up to 16”. Amazing storm last night. @NWSColumbia
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A STANLEY CUP CHAMPION SURGE
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MVP 🗣 MVP 🗣 MVP 🗣
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A STORM THAT COULDN'T BE WEATHERED🌪️ The Carolina Hurricanes have won the Stanley Cup for the first time in 20 years ‼️
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Stronger than the rest
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THE CUP IS COMING BACK TO RALEIGH!!!
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6h
THE CAROLINA HURRICANES HAVE WON THE STANLEY CUP FOR THE SECOND TIME IN FRANCHISE HISTORY! 🏆🏆
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There she comes. 🌧️
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Cells popping to my SE.
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The sounds of a hot and humid day in the South.
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Welcome Home, Coach Schnall!
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ALL TIED UP
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LET'S GOOOOOOOOO
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Jun 9
BREAKING: South Carolina is set to hire Coastal Carolina head baseball coach Kevin Schnall as its next HC, @PeteNakos and @jcshurburtt report. on3.com/college/south-caroli…
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THE ALIEN LANDS AT MSG 👽 WEMBY AND THE SPURS WIN ONE IN NEW YORK 😳
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Pretty sunset.
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Fireflies (Lightning Bugs) are out. First time seeing them this year.
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It’s Game Day in #CFB27 See the full reveal tonight at 8 PM ET 🔗: youtube.com/live/4hdImodqQks
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Two hundred years ago, a squirrel might've traveled for dozens of miles through Tennessee's forests without ever touching the ground. Folk lore even claimed a squirrel could travel from the Atlantic to the Mississippi without touching the dirt floor. Among those forests stood the American chestnut, growing up to 100 feet tall with a trunk diameter of 5-10 feet. It was one of the most common and important trees in the eastern United States—feeding wildlife, feeding people, and shaping entire ecosystems. Then a fungal blight arrived. Within a few decades, somewhere between 3-4 billion trees were gone. Today, most people in Tennessee couldn't recognize a mature American chestnut in a photo. That's a remarkable thing when you consider how common the tree once was. The lesson is simple: The American chestnut reminds us that stewardship must begin long before something becomes rare.
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