Jump to content

SACRUS

Members
  • Posts

    11,623
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by SACRUS

  1. 90 / 73 here EWR: 90 New Brnswck: 90 LGA: 88 NYC: 87
  2. Hope and we'll need it to dry out. Heat capped till after mid month out west.
  3. 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
  4. 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.
  5. Records: Highs: EWR: 102 (1944) NYC: 101 (1944) LGA: 100 (1955) JFK: 96 (2019) Lows: EWR: 57 (1951) NYC: 56 (1951) LGA: 57 (1972) JFK: 60 (1959) Records: 1843 - A spectacular cloudburst near Philadelphia turned the small creeks and streams entering the Delaware River into raging torrents. As much as sixteen inches of rain fell in just three hours. Flooding destroyed thirty-two county bridges, and caused nineteen deaths. It is believed that several small tornadoes accompanied the torrential rains, one of which upset and sank more than thirty barges on the Schuylkill River. (David Ludlum) 1875: Several tornadoes moved across northern and central Illinois. One of the stronger tornadoes touched down in Warren and Knox County where it destroyed 25 homes and killed two people. Another in a series of tornadoes touched down near Knoxville and moved east into northern Peoria County. This estimated F4 tornado injured 40 people and was described by eyewitnesses as looking like a "monstrous haystack." 1961 - The temperature at Ice Harbor Dam, WA, soared to 118 degrees to equal the state record established at Wahluke on the 24th of July in 1928. The afternoon high of 111 degrees at Havre, MT, was an all-time record for that location. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - Severe thunderstorms raked eastern South Dakota. The thunderstorms spawned half a dozen tornadoes, produced softball size hail at Bowdle, and produced wind gusts to 90 mph south of Watertown. Hot weather continued in eastern Texas. Afternoon highs of 100 degrees at Houston and 106 degrees at Waco equalled records for the date. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather from Indiana and Lower Michigan to Pennsylvania and New York State during the day. Thunderstorms in Michigan produced wind gusts to 80 mph at Ashley, Hastings and Lennon. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather in Oklahoma, and from Iowa to the Upper Ohio Valley, with 216 reports of large hail or damaging winds between early Saturday morning and early Sunday morning. Thunderstorms moving across Iowa around sunrise produced extremely high winds which caused ten million dollars damage to crops in Carroll and Greene Counties. Thunderstorm winds at Jefferson IA reached 102 mph. Afternoon thunderstorms produced tennis ball size hail at Bay Mills, WI. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)
  6. Highs: PHL: 94 EWR: 92 TTN: 92 New Brnswck: 92 LGA: 91 TEB: 90 NYC: 90 ACY: 90 JFK: 89 BLM: 88 ISP: 88
  7. Highs: PHL: 94 EWR: 92 TTN: 92 New Brnswck: 92 LGA: 91 TEB: 90 NYC: 90 ACY: 90 JFK: 89 BLM: 88 ISP: 88
  8. Triple M warning Mosquito, Mold and Mildew next 10 days
  9. Noon Roundup: 90/62 here EWR: 89 New brnswck: 89 ACY: 88 PHL: 88 NYC: 88 JFK: 88 TEB: 87 TTN: 87 BLM: 87 ISP: 87 LGA: 86
  10. Debbie over the Pan Hadle - clear and heating up here ahead of a very rainy and cloudy period
  11. Anyone able to post the Top 5 wettest Augusts months? EWR, NYC, LGA, TTN, JFK, PHL? For NYC 18 inches in 2011 was number 1 for August.
  12. 15 - 19 inches in Savannah or between Savannah and Charleston on latest, truly historic tremendous impacts to the large port regions Jacksonville - Savannah - Charleston
  13. Has the are in the 5-7 half Tue PM - Fri AM , then Sat-Sun Am
  14. Aug rain totals so far: LGA: 1.95 EWR: 1.82 JFK: 1.64 NYC: 1.42 ISP: 1.14 TTN: 0.95 PHL: 0.77
  15. 75 73 warm and humid. Driest and hottest day through Wed (8/14), Mid 90s, some warmer spots may tough upper 90s (97). Warm and humid, but clouds and showers return/begin tomorrow in what will be one of the wettest stretches in August since 2011. As tropical flow along a hung up boundary and then Debby;s remnants push >5 inch totals and as much as 9-10 inches in spots. Overall humid and rainy through Sat (8/10). Beyond Debby near normal and heat capped out west. Beyond mid month to the final 1/3 of the month western heat expanding north. Could be one of the wettest August.
  16. Track is meandering near GA/SC, Even slower with Debby / Debby's remnants northward movement.
  17. Records: Highs: EWR: 100 (1993) NYC: 100 (1944) LGA: 99 (1944) JFK: 93 (2006) Lows: EWR: 58 (1945) NYC: 55 (1874) LGA: 62 (1964) JFK: 57 (1964) Historical: 1882 - A vivid aurora was visible from Oregon to Maine, down the east coast as far as Mayport FL, and inland as far as Wellington KS. Observers at Louisville KY noted merry dancers across the sky, and observers at Saint Vincent, MN, noted it was probably the most brilliant ever seen at that location. (The Weather Channel) 1930 - The temperature at Moorefield, WV, soared to 112 degrees to establish a state record, having reached 110 degrees the previous day. Widespread drought after April of that year caused some towns to haul water for domestic use, and many manufacturing plants were barely operational. (The Weather Channel) 1961 - Spokane, WA, reached an all-time record high of 108 degrees. Kalispell, MT, set an all-time record with a reading of 105 degrees. (The Weather Channel) 1980 - A record forty-two consecutive days of 100 degree heat finally came to an end at the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport. July 1980 proved to be the hottest month of record with a mean temperature of 92 degrees. There was just one day of rain in July, and there was no measurable rain in August. There were 18 more days of 100 degree heat in August, and four in September. Hot weather that summer contributed to the deaths of 1200 people nationally, and losses from the heat across the country were estimated at twenty billion dollars. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel) 1987 - A cold front brought relief from the heat to a large part of the Midwest, while hot weather continued in the south central and eastern U.S. Morning thunderstorms in Nebraska deluged the town of Dalton with 8.71 inches of rain, along with hail three inches in diameter, which accumulated up to four feet deep near the town of Dix. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 1988 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather from eastern Iowa to Lower Michigan during the afternoon and evening hours, producing golf ball size hail and spawning several tornadoes. A thunderstorm at Maquoketa, IA, produced wind gusts to 75 mph. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 1989 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather from eastern Nebraska and northeastern Kansas to the Great Lakes Region, with 150 reports of large hail or damaging winds during the afternoon, evening, and nighttime hours. Thunderstorms produced tennis ball size hail at Claremont, MN, and wind gusts to 75 mph at Milwaukee, WI. Thunderstorms representing what once was Hurricane Chantal produced five inches of rain at Grant, MI, and deluged Chicago, IL, with more than three inches of rain in three hours. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 2008: Severe storms moved across northern Illinois and Indiana with tornadoes and stiff winds reported. With tornado sirens blaring, the game at Wrigley Field between Cubs and Astros was stopped as fans were told to evacuate to the lower concourse. Passengers at O’Hare International Airport were evacuated to lower levels of buildings as well. An estimated 350 flights were canceled.
×
×
  • Create New...