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SACRUS

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  1. Records: Highs: EWR: 95 (2005) NYC: 94 (1952) LGA: 93 (1952) Lows: EWR: 49 (1985) NYC: 46 (1963) LGA: 50 (1985) Historical: 1823: A strong category 1 or low category 2 hurricane struck near New Orleans, Louisiana and went toward Baton Rouge. Its strongest impacts occurred west of New Orleans. 1922 - The temperature at El Azizia in Libyia soared to 136 degrees to estbalish a world record. To make matters worse, a severe ghibi (dust storm) was in progress. (The Weather Channel) 1928 - Hurricane San Felipe crossed Puerto Rico resulting in the highest winds, the heaviest rains, and the greatest destruction in years. The hurricane produced much damage in the Virgin Islands, and later hit the Bahamas and Florida. (David Ludlum) 1984 - Hurricane Diana, after making a complete loop off the Carolina coast, made landfall and moved across eastern North Carolina. Diana deluged Cape Fear with more than eighteen inches of rain, and caused 78 million dollars damage in North Carolina. (Storm Data) 1987 - Showers and thunderstorms produced heavy rain in the northeastern U.S. Flooding was reported in Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Greenwood NY received 6.37 inches of rain. A dike along a creek at Prattsburg NY gave way and a two million dollar onion crop left on the ground to dry was washed away. The prolonged rains in the eastern U.S. finally came to an end late in the day as a cold front began to push the warm and humid airmass out to sea. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Hurricane Gilbert smashed into the Cayman Islands, and as it headed for the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico strenghtened into a monster hurricane, packing winds of 175 mph. The barometric pressure at the center of Gilbert reached 26.13 inches (888 mb), an all-time record for any hurricane in the Carribean, Gulf of Mexico, or the Atlantic Ocean. Gilbert covered much of the Gulf of Mexico, producing rain as far away as the Florida Keys. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Unseasonably cool weather prevailed over the Central Plains Region, with a record low of 29 degrees at North Platte NE. Unseasonably warm weather prevailed across the Pacific Northwest, with a record high of 96 degrees at Eugene OR. Thunderstorms over south Texas produced wind gusts to 69 mph at Del Rio, and two inches of rain in two hours. (National Weather Summary) 2008: Hurricane Ike made landfall as a Category 2 storm near Galveston, Texas. 2017: The NWS Office in Reno, Nevada, issued their first tornado warning since July 21st, 2014.
  2. 72 / 70 rain moved through front should clear later this pm with clearing skies, droppimg dew points and humidity. Thu (9/14) - Sun (9/17) looks very nice with Lee well east this weekend aside from E-LI the area looks very nice. Near normal upper 70s / near 80. 850 temps do rise from Lee so perhaps Sat or sun low 80s and a bit more humid. Overall odd upper flow with trough moving through 9/18-19 and cut off ULL west and south and east coast ridging building over. SO its overall warmer , perhaps more humid and dpending on fronts or ULL near by it could be a bit wet. Warm close to the Sep overall
  3. EWR: 10/2/19 : 96 latest 90 is Oct 17, 1938 latest 80 is Nov 15, 1993
  4. 9/13 EWR: 87 TEB: 87 ACY: 86 New Bnswck: 85 BLM: 85 PHL: 85 TTN: 84 LGA: 83 ISP: 83 NYC: 82 JFK: 81
  5. 86 / 62 here - gorgeous day.
  6. Records: Highs: EWR: 95 (1961) NYC: 94 (1961) LGA: 94 (1961) Lows: EWR: 47 (1958) NYC: 46 (1917) LGA: 52 (1967) Historical: 1857: The SS Central America sinks during a hurricane, killing 425 lives. Fourteen tons of gold was aboard the ship as well. 1977 - Thunderstorms deluged the Kansas City area with torrential rains in the early morning hours, and then again that evening. Some places were deluged with more than six inches of rain twice that day, with up to 18 inches of rain reported at Independence MO. Flooding claimed the lives of 25 persons. The Country Club Plaza area was hardest hit. 2000 vehicles had to be towed following the storm, 150 of which had to be pulled out of Brush Creek, which runs through the Plaza area. (The Kansas City Weather Almanac) 1979 - Hurricane Frederick smashed into the Mobile Bay area of Alabama packing 132 mph winds. Winds gusts to 145 mph were reported as the eye of the hurricane moved over Dauphin Island AL, just west of Mobile. Frederick produced a fifteen foot storm surge near the mouth of Mobile Bay. The hurricane was the costliest in U.S. history causing 2.3 billion dollars damage. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel) 1987 - Showers and thunderstorms produced heavy rain which caused flooding in North Carolina, West Virginia, Virginia and Pennsylvania. Parts of Virginia received 3 to 4 inches of rain in just two hours early in the day. Later in the day, three to five inch rains deluged Cumberland County of south central Pennsylvania. Evening thunderstorms produced seven inches of rain at Marysville PA, most of which fell in three hours time. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - An afternoon tornado spawned a tornado which skipped across northern sections of Indianapolis IN damaging roofs and automobiles. It was the first tornado in central Indiana in September in nearly forty years of records. Hurricane Gilbert plowed across the island of Jamaica, and by the end of the day was headed for the Cayman Islands, packing winds of 125 mph. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Snow whitened the mountains and foothills of northeastern Colorado, with eight inches reported at Buckhorn Mountain, west of Fort Collins. Two to three inches fell around Denver, causing great havoc during the evening rush hour. Thunderstorms produced severe weather in the Southern Plains Region between mid afternoon and early the next morning. Thunderstorms produced hail three inches in diameter at Roswell NM, and wind gusts greater than 98 mph at Henryetta OK. Thunderstorms also produced torrential rains, with more than seven inches at Scotland TX, and more than six inches at Yukon OK. (National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1999: Hurricane Floyd, a Category 4 storm with top winds of 145 mph, was making residents along the U.S. East Coast very nervous as it steamed steadily westward. Floyd was once forecast to strike Florida but turned away. Instead, Floyd hit the Bahamas at peak strength, causing substantial damage. It then paralleled the East Coast of the United States, causing massive evacuations and costly preparations from Florida through the Mid-Atlantic States.
  7. 72 / 67, partly sunny and should remain mostly rain free outside some isolated showers this pm. Low / mid 80s in the warm spot. Trough pushes front through Wed (9/13) with a round of storms in the PM. Beyond there Thu (9/14) and through the weekend looking very nice, near normal and drying out. Lee stays east and NNW flow keeps it dry and near normal the weekend. Beyond there after mid month warmer as ridge develops east. Overall warmer close of the month. Could become mre humid with southerly flow and any tropical or stalled fronts could keep it wet and warm. Lee on the visible https://cdn.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES16/ABI/SECTOR/eus/02/GOES16-EUS-02-1000x1000.gif
  8. 9/11 EWR: 85 New Bnswck: 84 TEB: 84 PHL: 84 ACY: 83 BLM: 83 TTN: 83 LGA: 82 JFK: 82 NYC: 82 ISP: 81
  9. Miami style dytime heating and new line forming a more west
  10. Quicklu up to 83 with more breaks of sun in the last 1.5 hours.
  11. Records: Highs: EWR: 99 (1983) year of late season extremes NYC: 99 (1983) - park tied EWR - old days LGA: 96 (1983) Low: EWR: 47 (1932) NYC: 43 (1917) LGA: 51 (1967) Historical: 1900: The remnants of the Great Galveston Hurricane were located over central Iowa on this day. Eastern Nebraska, northwest Iowa, and southern Minnesota show four-plus inches of rain from this storm. 1949 - An early snowstorm brought 7.5 inches to Helena MT. In Maine, a storm drenched New Brunswick with 8.05 inches of rain in 24 hours, a state record. (The Weather Channel) 1961 - Very large and slow moving Hurricane Carla made landfall near Port Lavaca TX. Carla battered the central Texas coast with wind gusts to 175 mph, and up to 16 inches of rain, and spawned a vicious tornado which swept across Galveston Island killing eight persons. The hurricane claimed 45 lives, and caused 300 million dollars damage. The remnants of Carla produced heavy rain in the Lower Missouri Valley and southern sections of the Upper Great Lakes Region. (David Ludlum) (Storm Data) 1976 - Up to five inches of rain brought walls of water and millions of tons of debris into Bullhead City AZ via washes from elevations above 3000 feet. Flooding caused more than three million dollars damage. Chasms up to forty feet deep were cut across some roads. (The Weather Channel) 1986 - Thunderstorms caused flash flooding and subsequent river flooding in central Lower Michigan. Up to 14 inches of rain fell in a 72 hour period, and flooding caused 400 million dollars damage. (Storm Data) 1987 - Late afternoon and evening thunderstorms produced large hail and damaging winds in Texas, and spawned three tornadoes. Thunderstorm winds gusted to 70 mph at Goodnight TX. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Snow blanketed parts of the Central Rocky Mountain Region and the Central Plateau, with ten inches reported at Mount Evans in Colorado. Smoke from forest fires in the northwestern U.S. reached Pennsylvania and New York State. Hurricane Gilbert, moving westward over the Carribean, was packing winds of 100 mph by the end of the day. (National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Nine cities in the north central U.S. reported record low temperatures for the date, including Havre MT with a reading of 23 degrees. Livingston MT and West Yellowstone MT tied for honors as the cold spot in the nation with morning lows of 17 degrees. Thunderstorms produced hail over the Sierra Nevada Range of California, with two inches reported on the ground near Donner Summit. The hail made roads very slick, resulting in a twenty car accident. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 2011: Hurricane Erin was off the coast of New Jersey and New York on this day.
  12. 73 / 72 has 2.57 inches of rain last night from the long running storms. Lots of lightning and thunder. Cloudy today and more of the same. Southerly flow with storms =/ clouds. When and when the sun comes out it warms up quickly but temps near 80. A it of a break tomorrow between the trough before widespread storms come through with the frontal passage wed (9/13). Thu (9/14) Fri (9/150 drier, very pleasant refresh to dry things out. Eyes on Lee as he gives New England coastal ME / Canadian coast a pass. Pending on that track, clouds and humid for Sat. Beyond that near normal before ridging builda back east the last portion of Sep with an overall warm close to the month.
  13. 18Z GFS is a double New England whammy Lee then Nigel a week later.
  14. Lightning is very frequent in CNJ/Coastal NJ
  15. 9/10 PHL: 84 ISP: 82 ACY: 82 EWR: 81 New Brswck: 81 TEB: 80 LGA: 80 JFK: 80 TTN: 80 BLM: 79 NYC: 77
  16. Great question as the normal sites havent reported rainfall since Friday. Mabe they'll update soon. New Brunswck site is also down.
  17. The Ridge also overforecast and rain further east this weekend.
  18. 70 / 67 rain and cloudy. What a difference from Labor day weekend. Rain looks locked in or a few more hours. Not sure of any realu substantive clearing today and ma be locked in the 70s. More showers Mon drier Tue before trough comes through Wed (9/13) with more storms rain. Dry and sun by Thu (9/14) and looking like a very nice weekend 9/16 - 9/17. Lee stay right . Beyond there ridging into the east in the beyond for perhaps a late season / early fall warmth.
  19. 8/9 PHL: 91 ACY: 89 EWR: 88 LGA: 88 New Brnswck: *87 TEB: 86 BLM: 86 TTN: 85 JFK: 84 ISP: 84 NYC: 84
  20. Similar to yesterday storms firing in same spots in CNJ. Rain and storms here .
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