Rained all evening - picked up .17" so far.
Imagine if this was winter...nearly 1" of QPF in Baltimore and still raining to nothing at all north of Harrisburg. At least this happened during the fall.
Gorgeous day here at the beach.
There's no chance of snow anytime soon. With that reality, I'm ready to embrace the warmth of next week. If it's not going to snow I'd rather it be sunny and 68 then sunny and 43 with a cool breeze.
Did our regular ride from Rehoboth up to Cape Henlopen this morning. Tough ride heading up there into the wind but it was a "breeze" coming back down the coast.
Meanwhile...here in beautiful Rehoboth Beach, DE it's currently mostly sunny, a bit brisk but a mild 63. Truly feels like a late spring morning and seems weird not to see the boardwalk shops lined up with vacationers eating breakfast.
Speaking of 60s...
#February9th is just one of two days (the other being February 2) left in the year with a sub-60°F record high at @millersvilleu. There had been three until December 30, 2022. Can two of those three days be eliminated in the same winter season? We'll find out in the next 12 hrs!
Up to 56 here and rising pretty quickly at 12:40pm - also have some sun here as well.
If they get snow down south I say good for them. They've had a lot of crappy winters recently.
My team (the people in this thread) left me down last night. I was at the gym and missed all of the MU talk. I did see his lengthy discussion and the short and sweet recap was this - if we actually do get any precip from the ULL, it's gonna rain!
I would be very surprised. To me the progressive pattern points to a system escaping out to sea.
Let's be completely honest and argue that the system comes farther north...where is the cold source outside some super wound up low that pulls cold down from above?
100% correct - a "big" deal snow back in the 70s and 80s locally was the 3-6", 4-8" type snowfalls. They seemed to be major events back then. Lately it seems like we can't buy those types of snows much. It' either a coating-3" or so or something much bigger.