Jump to content

Damage In Tolland

Members
  • Posts

    109,226
  • Joined

Everything posted by Damage In Tolland

  1. It’s like you are the Biden of weather here on the board. Not a good look . Time to step out?
  2. https://x.com/extremetemps/status/1811548301386260576?s=46&t=dhcbvkjmRcyBVQtDxJ3lRg
  3. July 11 and the usual suspects trying to end what is shaping up to be our hottest and most humid summer on record for all of NE. Folks are beyond desperate . Deez dews getting to them . So far June and July in top 3. Lol
  4. Can make out a ponytail and O hanging out the side
  5. Cloud be one of those but goes from the 1st -31st
  6. Lol .. I caught that earlier too. It’s a match made in heaven
  7. Most of C/N VT destroyed? Did Ineedsnow get ahold of your phone? Would you move to Dewey Hill Road?
  8. Your station was offline fir awhile this morning
  9. Dendy no power. Must have gotten ripped station offline
  10. Not one piece of guidance supports that slight mild down over NE
  11. Glad you are here and hopefully you are stranded there for weeks at least after the washout . Enjoy!
  12. Even the sticky ponies to necks enjoy this wx . They all come around
  13. I get it almost every year. I always have thought bear or bobcat vomit. It’s powdery though. So I’m wondering if it’s a fungus . Surely others have seen this
  14. Man .. Middlebuey , VT is under the gun. That area might get wiped either by wind or flood or both. Whoa!
  15. I periodically find this in various areas of flowerbeds every summer. I’ve typically thought it was from an animal vomiting but I’m wondering if it’s some kind of fungus or mushroom. Does anyone else get this and know what it is?
  16. Mud pack on roof lasts longer than snow pack ?
  17. The moisture holds at the river and then squirts back the dry attempt .
  18. I could see that in W parts of SNE late tomorrow . Like 67-70
  19. Monday looks like it could be a big severe day for all of New England . There’s an EML .
  20. No whoosh for you! 10 more day Details... A bermuda high continues to sit over the western Atlantic directing warm and moist air into New England along with periodic disturbances leading to wet and occasionally stormy weather. All the while, we see no real relief in sight from the heat and humidity in the form of any strong cold fronts to dry out the airmass. Put another way, there is no big "whoosh" in the forecast (a term some have coined for the feeling when a robust cold front swoops through and drops dewpoints from the 70s to the 40s).
×
×
  • Create New...