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June In Southern New England...............


Mr Torchey

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You came down big time from your aspirations. You were adamant about sunny breaks and temps in the mid 70s at least.
As I left Tolland the sun was peeking out..As I hit 91 in Windsor..plenty of blue patches and sunny breaks started..Sun in and out at the office which is 4-5 miles south of BDL.... I won't be shocked if the 9:00am ob is 70 :scooter:
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ryan, is there always such a big difference between BDL and HFD in these set-ups?

Not always but sometimes for sure. There's some cooler and drier air advecting down the valley (notice CEF is only 66) which probably explains part of the difference.

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Socked in with fog here and 64F. When I walk outside I see the thick mist blowing through the air almost like a drizzle.

As I left Tolland the sun was peeking out..As I hit 91 in Windsor..plenty of blue patches and sunny breaks started..Sun in and out at the office which is 4-5 miles south of BDL.... I won't be shocked if the 9:00am ob is 70 :scooter:

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63/63 with a NE wind and a gray sky that was totally smooth in Ayer. May as well have been 23/23 after a major ice storm in January given this weather pattern. It really is pretty interesting what is going on from a purely meteorological perspective. The NAO is not overwhelmingly negative, but has been heretofore nonetheless. … This has contributed to an episode of confluence N of Maine around the backside of a weak “50/50 low”. That has built a bit of a sfc +pressure anomaly in that region, not too dissimilar to what sets up during our winter storms actually, where that causes NE incursive damming…not allowing warm fronts to gain any latitude N of NYC.

What is a blessing to winter weather zealots is an utter menace in summer. The only way to really get this out of here is to break it all down.. That high up N needs to dismantle, and the trough that is anomalously slow in its eastward migration needs to clear our longitude. In other words, forget any hope of clearing on the front side of that trough… We need to reset the system with a NW backside house cleaning. Or in the least a quasi cleaning.

I for one cannot wait to get this out of here. This is the 3rd system that has done this during this young warm season. Without all the satellite technologies and obs you’d think there was a closed low on the MA it is so bad.

If you loop this image you can clearly see the llv wedge penetrating S of LI! http://weather.cod.edu/satrad/index.php

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HAH ...Its not pretty, but given our alternatives I take it. The alternative in this case would be 80s and miserably muggy probably.

Just got to bide out time until after about August 15th when some genuine early Fallish pleasant fropas can come through.

For now.....any wx pattern that can stave off the heat is welcome.

64 and fog FTW. :thumbsup:

61, locked in the fog and mist here @2k. Another perfect summer day.

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This is what we would be looking at if the confluence weakened and everything managed to shift north a bit:

Trenton, NJ: 09:53Calm5.00Mostly Cloudy with HazeSCT009 BKN110 80 74 29.74 1006.3

No thanks. :)

Now if my alternative was something like 80/52 ....I'd consider it.

63/63 with a NE wind and a gray sky that was totally smooth in Ayer. May as well have been 23/23 after a major ice storm in January given this weather pattern. It really is pretty interesting what is going on from a purely meteorological perspective. The NAO is not overwhelmingly negative, but has been heretofore nonetheless. … This has contributed to an episode of confluence N of Maine around the backside of a weak “50/50 low”. That has built a bit of a sfc +pressure anomaly in that region, not too dissimilar to what sets up during our winter storms actually, where that causes NE incursive damming…not allowing warm fronts to gain any latitude N of NYC.

What is a blessing to winter weather zealots is an utter menace in summer. The only way to really get this out of here is to break it all down.. That high up N needs to dismantle, and the trough that is anomalously slow in its eastward migration needs to clear our longitude. In other words, forget any hope of clearing on the front side of that trough… We need to reset the system with a NW backside house cleaning. Or in the least a quasi cleaning.

I for one cannot wait to get this out of here. This is the 3rd system that has done this during this young warm season. Without all the satellite technologies and obs you’d think there was a closed low on the MA it is so bad.

If you loop this image you can clearly see the llv wedge penetrating S of LI! http://weather.cod.e...atrad/index.php

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