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About tamarack

- Birthday 03/10/1946
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New Sharon, Maine
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Family, church, forestry, weather, hunting/fishing, gardening
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Met spring, true, but here March is 50/50 - 50% of months are transition and 50% are winter.
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Friday February 6 FROPA / WINDEX small event
tamarack replied to HoarfrostHubb's topic in New England
Or March 21, 1992. Lived in Gardiner then and got a 2.4" overnight surprise. 11.4" at PWM and 2 feet at Goose Rocks Beach (Kennebunkport). Several hours of 6"/hr for the 2-footer. First time I saw the word "Norlun". Some eentsy snow grains sailing by. I wonder if that RI band will crush Cumberland. -
Hope it warms up in late May - last year the pollination window for our apples and quinces was 9 days of rainy 40s. Fertilization was terrible.
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Or a freaky event like Feb 8, 1963. At 11 PM on 2/7 it was 30° and Tex Antoine forecast a low of 20. When the temp dropped to 25 at midnight we wondered. By 6 the next morning Central Park reported 5° and by 7 it had dropped to 2. The low was -2 that morning with a stiff NW breeze, and some forecasters were talking 5-10 below zero for the next morning and were explaining the bust was due to a very cold blob somehow slipped from above to ground level. (I understood none of that.) The cold disappeared as fast as it arrived; after an afternoon high of 16 on 2/8 the temp only got down to 11 on 2/9 and by 2/10 the day's temp was 40/30, with 1.1" RA on 2/11-12. Got down to -2 during the overnight, the 15th straight day with subzero minima. That tops the 14 days on Jan 15-28, 2003 for the longest run here. Checked my Fort Kent records, thinking that place would have much longer runs, but tops (and only one longer than 14 days) was 18 from Jan 16 thru Feb 2, 1982.
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Friday February 6 FROPA / WINDEX small event
tamarack replied to HoarfrostHubb's topic in New England
Beverly 1.3 ENE cocorahs report at 8:45 was 11.7". Light echoes overhead here, but nothing's making it thru the dry air - pretty much as was forecast. -
Average max doesn't climb above 32 until early March, though 5° AN would be >32 next week.
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Several years back I looked up states' records for 4 major parameters, hottest/coldest days and wettest/driest years. My data is dated - most recent record was set in 2012. That noted, my info has the 1930s holding 52 of the 200 total bests, 33 of the 100 temp extremes: 23 hottest, 10 coldest, 2 wettest (ID, WA) and 17 driest. 2nd most is the 1950s, with 5/2/10/9, respectively. Also noted was NNE holding 3 of the 5 hottest extremes in the 1910s. (SC & CA the other 2.) First 2 weeks of July 1911 were a north country furnace.
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Solid winter so far, a solid B- which would be the best since 2018-19. Sustained cold and pack plus the astronomical ratio that turned an 8-10" storm to nearly 20". Snowfall YTD is 115% of average, but GYX's 7-day offers only a trace for Saturday and nothing beyond. Maybe the mid-month mild-up can bring 'something' - haven't have a cutter since before Christmas.
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Agree. No matter how thick the ice, it's always cracking, which allows water to seep up into the snow layer when that snow is sufficiently heavy. Usually, the slush layer is only 1-2" but I've seen it change the entire snow layer when ice thickness is modest and snowfall is heavy. Then the re-freeze leaves the upper part of ice as less-rigid gray.
