bluewave Posted April 12, 2019 Share Posted April 12, 2019 Impressive range of extremes on the Plains last few days. https://mobile.twitter.com/iembot_abr/status/1116751907924660225 Del Rio has hit 107 degrees! April 10th is the 11th earliest date for the first 100 degree day of the year. In addition, 107 not only breaks the daily record high temperature of 102 set back in 1963, but also the monthly record high temperature for the entire month of April. https://www.weather.gov/abr/April112019BlizzardSummary Snowfall reports below are as of 2 PM CDT April 12, 2019 ...72 HOUR SNOWFALL REPORTS... Location Amount Time/Date Provider Clear Lake 26.3 in 1000 AM 04/12 COOP Watertown 1 W 25.0 in 0900 AM 04/12 COOP Roscoe 24.0 in 0700 AM 04/12 COOP Redfield 24.0 in 1250 PM 04/12 Emergency Mngr Hayti 1 W 22.3 in 0800 AM 04/12 COOP 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted April 15, 2019 Share Posted April 15, 2019 https://mobile.twitter.com/NWSChicago/status/1117611205160570886?ref_src=twsrc^google|twcamp^serp|twgr^tweet As of 9 pm, today's official snow total for Chicago (O'hare) was up to 5.3" making it the 2nd snowiest calendar day on record for so late in the season. This missed the record snowiest day for so late in the season by only 1 tenth of an inch! The record is 5.4" back on 4/16/1961 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
forkyfork Posted April 15, 2019 Share Posted April 15, 2019 nyc is running +3.2 for april so far. so much for that -nao 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted April 15, 2019 Share Posted April 15, 2019 22 minutes ago, forkyfork said: nyc is running +3.2 for april so far. so much for that -nao Notice how the 500 mb height anomalies aligned almost perfectly with the SST departures. The WAR/SE ridge has become our new default pattern. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
forkyfork Posted April 15, 2019 Share Posted April 15, 2019 how long until the next circulation change? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted April 16, 2019 Share Posted April 16, 2019 16 hours ago, bluewave said: Notice how the 500 mb height anomalies aligned almost perfectly with the SST departures. The WAR/SE ridge has become our new default pattern. So we should expect more winters like this until further notice lol. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted April 17, 2019 Share Posted April 17, 2019 On 4/15/2019 at 10:49 AM, forkyfork said: how long until the next circulation change? Good question. This SST animation says it all. https://mobile.twitter.com/Climatologist49/status/1117829120316981249 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tim Posted April 17, 2019 Share Posted April 17, 2019 ...not weather related on this beautiful april morning..but.. LETS GO ISLANDERS !! on to the second round.. 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rclab Posted April 17, 2019 Share Posted April 17, 2019 30 minutes ago, tim said: ...not weather related on this beautiful april morning..but.. LETS GO ISLANDERS !! on to the second round.. May not be weather related but it might answere Forkys question. As always ... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stormlover74 Posted April 18, 2019 Author Share Posted April 18, 2019 This weather blows Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
495weatherguy Posted April 18, 2019 Share Posted April 18, 2019 36 minutes ago, Stormlover74 said: This weather blows agreed awful 55 and cloudy on LI Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gravitylover Posted April 19, 2019 Share Posted April 19, 2019 7 hours ago, Stormlover74 said: This weather blows Better than rain. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted April 20, 2019 Share Posted April 20, 2019 Neighborhood slowly sinking in Seaford. They think it’s caused by water flowing underground. https://newyork.cbslocal.com/2019/04/19/seaford-sinking-homes-long-island/ SEAFORD, N.Y. (CBSNewYork) – Driveways are buckling, backyards are sinking, and garages are sliding off their foundations. Now homeowners in a Long Island community say they’re stuck paying the price, reportsCBS2’s Jennifer McLogan. It’s a beautiful residential neighborhood in Long Island, but now more than a dozen homeowners on Bowers Drive and Marilyn Drive believe their backyards, and structures on their properties, are slowly sinking – up to a foot in places. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NycStormChaser Posted April 21, 2019 Share Posted April 21, 2019 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CIK62 Posted April 22, 2019 Share Posted April 22, 2019 Hurricane buffs might be interested in this: >>>>>>"Florida knew Hurricane Michael was bad. Now, scientists reveal just how strong it was" (Source: Miami Herald and others, 4/19/19) With just a little over a month to the start of hurricane season, scientists have upgraded last year’s beast — Hurricane Michael — from a Category 4 to a rare Category 5. Michael, which devastated Florida’s Mexico Beach when it made landfall on Oct. 10, becomes the first hurricane to make landfall in the United States as a Cat 5 since Hurricane Andrew brought “destruction at dawn” to South Miami-Dade in August 1992. This figure, released Friday, represents a 5 mph increase over the operational estimate and nudges Michael into the Category 5 platform on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale at the time of its landfall. Michael was responsible for 16 deaths and caused about $25 billion in damage to the U.S. Cuba also was hit by Category 2 winds from Michael. Michael is only the fourth hurricane to hit the U.S. as a Category 5, according to the hurricane center. Before Andrew there was Hurricane Camille in 1969, which made landfall at Pass Christian, Mississippi, on Aug. 18, 1969, three days after hitting Cuba as a Category 2. The Labor Day Hurricane in September 1935, which hit the Florida Keys and particularly wreaked havoc on Islamorada, was the first since records were kept to land in the U.S. as a Cat 5. Michael is also the strongest hurricane landfall on record in the Florida Panhandle, the hurricane center reported. The hurricane center’s new analysis also revealed that Michael’s atmospheric pressure, a reliable measure of a storm’s intensity, was at 919 millibars at landfall in Mexico Beach. Meteorologists note that the lower a storm’s central pressure, the higher its winds. Michael’s central pressure at landfall is the third lowest on record for a U. S. hurricane since records began in 1900 — trailing only Camille, which went as low as 900 millibars, and the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935 at 892 millibars. Andrew in 1992, by comparison, recorded 922 millibars at its lowest reading. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted April 23, 2019 Share Posted April 23, 2019 https://mobile.twitter.com/bhensonweather/status/1119293305215422465 2018 is the first year on record with Category 5 storms in the Atlantic, East Pacific, Central Pacific, and West Pacific. https://mobile.twitter.com/burgwx/status/1119242805996597249 With Michael upgraded to a Cat 5, this means 3 consecutive years (2016-2018) had at least 1 category 5 hurricane in the Atlantic basin, the first time since 2003-2005. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted April 26, 2019 Share Posted April 26, 2019 I wish I was in the Midwest or upstate N.Y. More snow for them 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CIK62 Posted April 26, 2019 Share Posted April 26, 2019 Live on Staten Island? Read this article about spending a good part of 1 Billion$$$$ and 4 years time-- for a project no one knows for sure will save the area from a future Sandy. I am interested too, since this will probably raise the storm water level somewhere else---like CI. Water seeks its own level. More waterfront buyouts are probably coming anyway. https://ny.curbed.com/2019/4/25/18515213/staten-island-usace-seawall-climate-change-photo-essay Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uncle W Posted April 26, 2019 Share Posted April 26, 2019 NYC Spring temperature and precipitation...max temperature from 3/1 to 5/31...the 2010's should end up with the warmest decade average temperature...it might end up as the second wettest on record... year.....ave temp....precip"....max temp......snowfall 3/1 to end... 1869..........47.2......10.15......84......…..............0.8" 1870..........48.6......10.27......86...……...……….12.1" 1871..........52.2......12.61......92...……….………..2.1" 1872..........47.1........8.71......89...……….………..5.1" 1873..........47.1........9.94......87...……….………..0.4" 1874..........45.7......13.13......90...……….………….T 1875..........45.8........7.99......86...………….……28.8" 1876..........47.2......14.88......87...………….……..3.8" 1877..........47.7........9.24......88...………….……..6.5" 1878..........52.3........8.43......84...………….……….0 1879..........50.6........9.76......86...………….……12.8" 1880..........51.5........8.18......96...……..………..12.3" 1881..........48.4........9.96......93...……...……….11.1" 1882..........48.2........8.37......80...………………..3.3" 1883..........47.0........8.03......82...……………….20.6" 1884..........48.5......11.18......86...………………...2.3" 1885..........46.6........4.95......87...………………...4.1" 1886..........50.2......12.08......86...………………...2.0" 1887..........47.5........6.20......87...………………...7.0" 1888..........44.7......13.13......84...……………….22.3" 1889..........51.5......11.00......91...………………...4.0" 1890..........48.3......10.80......81...……………….17.3" 1891..........47.8........8.44......82...………………...2.1" 1892..........47.4........9.73......81...……………….13.0" 1893..........46.7......13.50......85...………………...6.6" 1894..........51.0........7.27......85...………………...1.0" 1895..........49.3........7.59......96...………………...4.0" 1896..........50.6........9.06......92...……………….33.5" 1897..........50.9......10.83......81...………………...3.3" 1898..........50.6......12.75......86...………………...4.5" 1899..........49.9........8.60......88...………………...4.8" 1900..........47.7........9.23......90...………………...5.8" 1901..........47.9......18.52......85...…………………..T 1902..........51.3........9.22......86...………………...6.5" 1903..........54.2........7.97......89...…………………..0 1904..........48.8........9.25......89...………………...5.4" 1905..........50.6........6.60......81...………………...1.8" 1906..........50.1......16.47......90...……………….11.5" 1907..........48.5......11.08......85...……………….19.1" 1908..........52.3......13.16......88...………………...3.5" 1909..........49.1......11.17......83...………………...4.3" 1910..........53.0........7.51......82...………………...1.3" 1911..........48.7........8.12......86...………………...4.0" 1912..........50.1......16.63......89...………………...4.5" 1913..........52.7......15.69......89...………………...2.8" 1914..........49.6......10.43......95...……………….21.5" 1915..........50.1........7.10......92...……………….17.9" 1916..........47.4......11.33......81...……………….28.8" 1917..........47.3......11.00......84...……………….18.2" 1918..........52.7......11.15......91...………………...3.2" 1919..........51.8......12.99......92...………………...2.7" 1920..........48.9......13.26......82...………………...5.3" 1921..........55.2......10.19......89...………………...0.1" 1922..........52.4......11.30......86...………………...3.9" 1923..........49.0........8.37......86...………………...8.1" 1924..........48.5......14.47......75...……………….11.6" 1925..........51.9........9.43......91...…………………..T 1926..........47.7........6.81......83...………………...1.2" 1927..........50.2........8.95......90...………………...0.3" 1928..........48.9........9.73......80...………………...5.7" 1929..........52.6......14.09......93...………………...0.2" 1930..........50.8........7.96......91...…………………..T 1931..........51.0......13.00......93...………………..1.8" 1932..........49.4......11.11......90...………………..0.6" 1933..........51.1......16.46......90...…………….….4.8" 1934..........50.4......13.11......90...………………..8.6" 1935..........51.0........5.06......89...………………..2.0" 1936..........52.5......11.72......92...………………..1.5" 1937..........50.4......10.90......93...………………..2.5" 1938..........52.9........8.96......89...………………..7.1" 1939..........51.1........9.93......96...………………..7.0" 1940..........47.5......17.80......83...………………..7.1" 1941..........52.5........7.70......96...………………19.2" 1942..........54.0........8.78......92...………………..2.7" 1943..........49.6......10.44......89...………………..7.1" 1944..........51.2......11.91......92...………………11.3" 1945..........55.3......11.23......86...………………...T 1946..........54.0......11.44......87...………………...T 1947..........49.4......11.63......86...………………..6.1" 1948..........51.1......14.35......87...………………..4.7" 1949..........53.3........9.49......92...………………..4.2" 1950..........47.9........7.05......82...………………..3.3" 1951..........52.6......12.99......90...………………..2.7" 1952..........52.0......13.83......83...………………..7.4" 1953..........53.6......18.31......90...………………..0.9" 1954..........51.7........9.05......85...………………..0.4" 1955..........53.5........8.32......90...………………..3.6" 1956..........48.1......10.01......89...……………....25.3" 1957..........52.7......10.17......87...………………..5.1" 1958..........50.8......12.58......82...………………16.1" 1959..........53.4........7.01......94...………………..7.3" 1960..........50.0........8.98......87...……………...18.5" 1961..........50.1......12.91......85...………………..1.2" 1962..........53.6........7.23......99...………………..0.2" 1963..........52.8........7.04......86...………………..2.8" 1964..........52.7........8.23......94...………………..6.0" 1965..........52.3........6.97......94...………………..4.0" 1966..........51.3........7.89......85...………………….T 1967..........47.5......13.50......81...……………...17.4" 1968..........52.6......14.67......82...………………..6.1" 1969..........53.8......10.39......97...………………..5.6" 1970..........51.6......11.00......93...………………..4.0" 1971..........50.8......10.99......85...………………..1.7" 1972..........51.1......16.86......86...………………..2.3" 1973..........53.1......16.16......86...………………..0.2" 1974..........52.8......13.88......92...………………..3.5" 1975..........51.3........9.74......93...………………..0.3" 1976..........53.2......10.56......96...………………..4.4" 1977..........55.2......12.87......92...………………..0.6" 1978..........50.7......14.26......90...………………..6.8" 1979..........54.9......14.67......94...………………….T 1980..........53.8......21.00......90...………………..4.6" 1981..........54.4........8.17......87...………………..8.6" 1982..........52.4......10.66......84...……………...10.3" 1983..........52.2......29.15......85...………………..0.8" 1984..........50.1......22.66......85...……………...11.9" 1985..........55.5........9.04......88...………………..0.2" 1986..........55.2........7.07......94...………………….T 1987..........54.1......12.28......97...………………..1.9" 1988..........52.5........9.57......91...………………….T 1989..........52.2......19.43......86...………………..2.5" 1990..........52.9......17.86......91...………………..3.7" 1991..........56.3......11.95......93...………………..0.2" 1992..........50.5........9.86......93...………………..9.4" 1993..........52.9......12.48......92...……………...11.9" 1994..........52.7......13.01......91...………………..8.1" 1995..........52.9........6.39......87...………………….T 1996..........50.7......12.78......96...……………...13.9" 1997..........51.0......11.09......83...………………..1.7" 1998..........54.6......19.07......87...………………..5.0" 1999..........53.0........9.98......89...………………..4.5" 2000..........53.9......11.34......93...………………..1.6" 2001..........52.5......11.32......92...………………..3.8" 2002..........53.6......10.63......96...………………….T 2003..........50.5......11.20......88...………………..7.5" 2004..........54.1......12.87......87...………………..4.8" 2005..........51.1......11.18......87...………………..6.9" 2006..........54.0......10.98......88...………………..1.4" 2007..........51.0......20.28......91...………………..6.0" 2008..........52.5......10.86......84...………………….T 2009..........53.1......11.61......92...………………..8.3" 2010..........57.1......16.69......92...………………….T 2011..........53.7......16.65......89...………………..1.0" 2012..........56.9........9.90......89............………...0 2013..........52.0......12.21......90...………………..7.3" 2014..........51.3......15.89......89...………………..0.1" 2015..........53.6........8.73......88...……………...18.6" 2016..........55.0........7.96......92...………………..0.9" 2017..........52.5......15.47......92...………………..9.7" 2018..........52.2......14.48......92...……………...17.1" 2019...……………………………………...……………..10.4" 1870-79.....48.4......10.50......92...……………….7.2" 1880-89.....48.4........9.31......96...……………….8.9" 1890-99.....49.2........9.86......96...……………….9.0" 1900-09.....50.1......11.27......90...……………….5.8" 1910-19.....50.3......11.20......95...………...……10.5" 1920-29.....50.5......10.66......93...……………….3.6" 1930-39.....51.1......10.82......96...……………….3.6" 1940-49.....51.8......11.48......96...……………….6.2" 1950-59.....51.6......10.93......94...……………….7.2" 1960-69.....51.7........9.78......99...……………….6.2" 1970-79.....52.5......13.10......96...……………….2.4" 1980-89.....53.2......14.90......97...……………….4.1" 1990-99.....52.8......12.45......96...……………….5.8" 2000-09.....52.8......12.23......96...……………….4.0" 2010-18.....53.8......13.11......92...……………….6.5" 2010-19 for snowfall... 1870- 2009..........51.0......11.32......95 1980- 2009..........52.9......13.19......96 Top ten warmest................coolest...............wettest....................driest 57.1 in 2010.....44.7 in 1888......29.15" in 1983......4.95" in 1885 56.9 in 2012.....45.7 in 1874......22.66" in 1984......5.06" in 1935 56.3 in 1991.....45.8 in 1875......21.00" in 1980......6.20" in 1887 55.5 in 1985.....46.6 in 1885......20.28" in 2007......6.39" in 1995 55.3 in 1945.....46.7 in 1893......19.43" in 1989......6.60" in 1905 55.2 in 1986.....47.0 in 1883......19.07" in 1998......6.81" in 1926 55.2 in 1977.....47.1 in 1873......18.31" in 1953......6.97" in 1965 55.2 in 1921.....47.1 in 1872......17.86" in 1990......7.01" in 1959 55.0 in 2016.....47.2 in 1876......17.80" in 1940......7.04" in 1963 54.9 in 1979.....47.2 in 1869......16.86" in 1972......7.05" in 1950 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted April 28, 2019 Share Posted April 28, 2019 Great extension of the existing Jones Beach beach bike path from Field 6 all the way to the West End. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stormlover74 Posted April 28, 2019 Author Share Posted April 28, 2019 I feel like I need to light a damn fire Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IrishRob17 Posted April 28, 2019 Share Posted April 28, 2019 2 minutes ago, Stormlover74 said: I feel like I need to light a damn fire Arson is a short word but a long sentence. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gravitylover Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 Yeah this having the heat running at the end of April thing is no good. I want to light a fire but just recently cleaned out the fireplace and don't feel like doing it again so soon. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
psv88 Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 2 hours ago, Stormlover74 said: I feel like I need to light a damn fire Yea this blows Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
doncat Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 Normal lows for most of us are still in the mid 40's, so having to still use heat is still common, at least in the am. It's been a pretty mild April, so I guess we got used to not using the heat for awhile. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uncle W Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 May usually has a few cold mornings when the heat is needed...I remember a cold day in June 1982 when the max was only 55...NYC has not had temperatures below 40 in May since 1978... NYC coldest May days...1961 and 1967 had temperatures in the mid to upper 40's for highs with rain late in the month...ice pellets were reported in late May 1961 at LGA... coldest minimums... 32 5/06/1891 34 5/05/1891 35 5/01/1880 35 5/09/1947 36 5/11/1913 36 5/10/1966 36 5/10/1947 36 5/09/1977 36 5/03/1874 36 5/01/1876 coldest max days... 43 5/3/1873 43 5/5/1891 44 5/7/1967 44 5/5/1917 44 5/9/1977 45 5/1/1917 45 5/2/1962 45 5/5/1978 45 5/6/1891 46 5/25/1967+ 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
doncat Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 ^^ The latest my station had a temp in the 30's was May 21st 2002 with a low of 39°. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IrishRob17 Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 13 hours ago, doncat said: Normal lows for most of us are still in the mid 40's, so having to still use heat is still common, at least in the am. It's been a pretty mild April, so I guess we got used to not using the heat for awhile. Yeah, people forget that it’s common to still need some heat. I always chuckle when people freak out about using the heat early/late in the season. It’s runs once or twice a day and people think that they are burning through cash like a deep winter cold snap in January. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rclab Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 3 hours ago, IrishRob17 said: Yeah, people forget that it’s common to still need some heat. I always chuckle when people freak out about using the heat early/late in the season. It’s runs once or twice a day and people think that they are burning through cash like a deep winter cold snap in January. Some of the low high temps we complain about know would have been window openers after a rough winter cold snap. As always ..... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stu Posted April 29, 2019 Share Posted April 29, 2019 I'm just looking for 48 hours without moisture. I sanded my large deck about two weeks ago and need to stain it. My stain requires 24 hours without moisture after applying it. We haven't had a forecast now, going back two weeks and continuing into this whole week where there were two dry days in a row forecast. I'm going to have to powerwash the thing again, which means I need three dry days to finish. One for wood to dry. One to stain. One for stain to dry completely. Now I know why everyone springs for composite decking! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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