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SACRUS

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  1. 75 so far fo their high. misty cloudy onshore flow keeping it lower liekly.
  2. EWR has only hit 100 or more on two days in Sep 9/3, 9/4 (1954, 1993) Came close in with either 99 or 98 in 18,15, 10, 83 most recently.
  3. We'll see if the ridge tends more east once past the 16/17th as Jun/Jul and a warmer / humid progression evolves. Next week looks marvelous with a imuch needed dry out if it evolves as forecasted.
  4. Looks heat free for the next 10 days or more. Perhaps a similar progression from early periods in Jun and Jul before western heat pushes east north first, as we close the last 7 - 10 days of Aug. Or it could see a day or two of low 90s and if the wetter pattern resumes with any future tropical influences.
  5. Western track has kept the focus of the remnants of Debby west into PA, saving additional flooding Fri into sat. Mos of that additional 1 - 1.75 comes later today and Thu (tomorrow AM)
  6. Monthly rainfall totals TTN: 5.54 LGA: 4.03 ISP: 3.94 NYC: 3.54 EWR: 3.53 JFK: 2.47
  7. 73/71 cloudy, 4.10 in the bucket. Cloudy onshore SSE flow keeping it in the 70s with scattered showers. Last time the temp didn't reach 80 was Jun 28th for many. Thu the same as Debby slowly drifts north. Fri Debby/remnants are centered into VA and heading NNE through C/E PA keeping the brunt of additional rains focused into PA. Sat will dry out and clear up, warming back near normal. Sun (8/11) begins a stretch of very nice , drier, near normal allowing the area to dry out. Looking mainly dry and sunny. Heat capped to the west through mid month. Warming and next potential heat after 8/17 and beyond.
  8. Highs: EWR: 94 TEB: 93 BLM: 93 TTN: 92 New Brnswck: 92 PHL: 91 LGA: 91 NYC: 90 ACY: 90 JFK: 87 ISP: 84
  9. Records: Highs: EWR: 97 (2001) NYC: 97 (1955) LGA: 95 (2018) JFK: 91 (2010) Lows: EWR: 54 (1934) NYC: 56 (1869) LGA: 57 (1994) JFK: 57 (1994) Historical: 1890 - Thunderstorms left four inches of hail covering the ground in Adair County and Union County in Iowa. The hail drifted into six foot mounds, and in some places remained on the ground for twenty- six days. (The Weather Channel) 1918 - Unusually hot weather began to overspread the Atlantic Coast States, from the Carolinas to southern New England. The temp- erature soared to an all-time record high of 106 degrees at Washington D.C., and Cumberland and Keedysville hit 109 degrees to establish a state record for Maryland. Temperatures were above normal east of the Rockies that month, with readings much above normal in the Lower Missouri Valley. Omaha NE reached 110 degrees. (David Ludlum) 1959 - A bucket survey showed that thunderstorms dropped 16.70 inches of rain on parts of Decatur County IA. The total was accepted as Iowa's 24 hour rainfall record. (The Weather Channel) 1959: Hurricane Dot crossed Kauai in the Hawaiian Islands producing sustained winds of 105 mph with gusts to 125 mph. Over 6 inches of rain fell with over 9 inches on the big island of Hawaii. The sugar cane crop on Kauai sustained $2.7 million in damages. 1986 - Evening thunderstorms produced wind gusts to 100 mph at Winner SD damaging two hundred homes. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1987 - Afternoon thunderstorms deluged Milwaukee, WI, with 6.84 inches of rain, including more than five inches in two hours, breaking all previous rainfall records for the city. Floodwaters were four feet deep at the Milwaukee County Stadium, and floodwaters filled the basement of the main terminal at the airport. Flooding caused 5.9 million dollars damage, and claimed the life of one person. Death Valley, CA, reported a morning low of 97 degrees. A midday thunderstorm deluged Birmingham AL with nearly six inches of rain in one hour. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Severe thunderstorms produced large hail and damaging winds in Pennsylvania and New York State. A cold front crossing the northwestern U.S. produced wind gusts to 66 mph at Livingston MT. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Thunderstorms developing ahead of a cold front produced severe weather from northwestern Texas to the Southern Appalachians, and in the northeastern U.S. There were 136 reports of large hail or damaging winds during the day and evening. Thunderstorms in the Southern Plains Region produced tennis ball size hail northwest of Buffalo OK, and wind gusts to 100 mph at Pampa TX. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 1993: Virginia experienced its worst tornado outbreak ever as 18 tornadoes ripped through the state in 5 hours. The most devastating tornado caused severe damage in the historic part of Petersburg. The storm then moved on to Pocahontas Island and into Colonial Heights. There, the storm ripped apart a WalMart store, killing three people and injuring nearly 200. The F4 twister was the first known violent tornado in Virginia history. It killed a total of 4 people and injured 246 along its 12-mile path. Total damages were near $50 million.
  10. Highs: EWR: 94 TEB: 93 BLM: 93 TTN: 92 New Brnswck: 92 PHL: 91 LGA: 91 NYC: 90 ACY: 90 JFK: 87 ISP: 84
  11. Atlantic ridge proving stronger than forecast and Debby pumping heights slowed the fronts progression.
  12. 90 / 73 here EWR: 90 New Brnswck: 90 LGA: 88 NYC: 87
  13. Hope and we'll need it to dry out. Heat capped till after mid month out west.
  14. Contrast 18,19,20 to the past 3 years for eastern areas and LGA specifically with heat. Believe LGA had more 90 degree days or equaled EWR those 3 then a large disparity with prevailing onshore flow
  15. 81 / 76 some high clouds but otherwise partly sunny. Warm today ahead of the deluge, upper 80s and some warmer spots could sneak in a 90. Later today front comes south and the boundary will get hung up as Debby fuels a southerly flow of moisture into the area with heavy long down pours. Tue - Thu 2 - 5 inches of rain, more in some spots. Fri - Sat Debby comes north before finally exiting Sun with additional rain, currently looking to focus west of the area. Beyond there trough into the northeast through mid month before we see warmer air return after mid month. Could see seasonal trend with ridge along the coast. trough into the MW/GL and ridge west. Overall humid/wet next 5 days with records rains fall possible. 8/6 - 8/11 : Humid, rain, Debby - floods 3 - 6 inches of rain or more 8/12 - 8/15 : Near normal - drier Beyond there : gradual warm up / more humid heat west expands east later in the period.
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