It was difficult for any Magic Valley resident to sleep last night. Winds gusted up to 40 miles an hour, snow began to swirl and cover the roads just enough to make them a sheet of ice!
Every year when farmers begin to harvest grain, I begin to sneeze. It is part of living in Southern Idaho.
If harvest season is bothering you, check out these tips:
With temperatures reaching over 90 degrees in the Magic Valley it is time to be aware of home much your kids are in the sun and how much water they are really drinking.
So you say lightning scares you? Then Twin Falls, Idaho is the place for you. Google Maps has a little known feature that can display the amount of "county-level lightning hazard data" and it turns out, we don't see much (if any) in the greater Twin Falls area...
Temperatures heated up very quickly over the weekend. As temperatures rise there are a few things we all need to remember. Here are some quick safety tips to remember for Idaho's hot summer months:
Sometimes in southern Idaho we see snow in August, and sometimes we don't see snow until January. It looks like November 1st or 2nd could be the magically date for snow in the Magic Valley for 2014.
So throw your flowers away and grab your snow shovels. Winter is coming!
Yesterday was scary, crazy and in many ways unbelievable. Magic Valley residence that have lived here their entire lives have never seen flooding like we saw yesterday.
It's yard work season! Some yards are easy to care for, if you were smart and put in weed mat and rock, other yards can consume your entire weekend. Flower beds always seem like a great idea, until you have more weeds than bushes or flowers.
Here's the stunning time-lapse off a superstorm formation captured in Wyoming that I talked about on the Morning Show today. There's not much else to say about it. Watch it and you'll see what I mean.