MJO812 Posted January 9, 2023 Share Posted January 9, 2023 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SouthBuffaloSteve Posted January 9, 2023 Share Posted January 9, 2023 Hey guys I’m back from vacation! What I miss???!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cny rider Posted January 14, 2023 Share Posted January 14, 2023 Grim discussion in the long range from Binghamton: Our region continues to see a lack arctic high pressure systems overall. These high pressure systems would have the potential to shift the storm track further south, more favorably for snow. The MJO looks to move into phases 2 and 3 which promote warmer temperatures in mid to late January and storm tracks from the southwest into the Great Lakes similar to this upcoming week. So the possibility of the least snowiest January on record at Binghamton (current snow 0.4 and the record 6.8 inches in 1973) continues to be very real. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted January 23, 2023 Author Share Posted January 23, 2023 Nice little surprise event here today. 4.1" which brings me over 160" on the year. Next storm in middle of week looks a little messy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted January 23, 2023 Author Share Posted January 23, 2023 We should have some chances the next few weeks with the upcoming pattern. If anyone wants to join discord and from great lakes/upstate NY pm me or post here for invite. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PerintonMan Posted January 23, 2023 Share Posted January 23, 2023 11 hours ago, BuffaloWeather said: We should have some chances the next few weeks with the upcoming pattern. If anyone wants to join discord and from great lakes/upstate NY pm me or post here for invite. I'd appreciate a Discord invite so I can see the discussion. Thanks! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted January 23, 2023 Author Share Posted January 23, 2023 10 minutes ago, PerintonMan said: I'd appreciate a Discord invite so I can see the discussion. Thanks! check pms. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thunderbolt Posted February 6, 2023 Share Posted February 6, 2023 Earthquake in Buffalo? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted February 6, 2023 Author Share Posted February 6, 2023 3 hours ago, thunderbolt said: Earthquake in Buffalo? 3.8, I was on way back from bathroom and almost fell. The shaking was intense I thought it was a sonic boom or something. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thunderbolt Posted February 6, 2023 Share Posted February 6, 2023 1 hour ago, BuffaloWeather said: 3.8, I was on way back from bathroom and almost fell. The shaking was intense I thought it was a sonic boom or something. I’m glad you’re safe brother what the hell is going on with the earth these days Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Buckeyes_Suck Posted February 9, 2023 Share Posted February 9, 2023 Sooooo boring these days. I want another 60+ event. Oh wait, we got one, wind. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted February 22, 2023 Author Share Posted February 22, 2023 Finally some active weather moving into New York! Everyone here went to discord. If anyone would like an invite in the Ontario/New York corridor send me a PM for invite link. We have a really active ontario crew in our channel now, as our weather is pretty similar to theirs. We're up to 77 members that joined. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Syrmax Posted March 13, 2023 Share Posted March 13, 2023 Looks liKe RAIN for ROC with 18" for KSYR. Daayum. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ericjcrash Posted March 13, 2023 Share Posted March 13, 2023 RIP to this thread. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted March 15, 2023 Share Posted March 15, 2023 Any good pics ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted March 16, 2023 Author Share Posted March 16, 2023 On 3/15/2023 at 7:39 AM, MJO812 said: Any good pics ? lots in discord Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted March 16, 2023 Share Posted March 16, 2023 3 hours ago, BuffaloWeather said: lots in discord Okay Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheClimateChanger Posted March 29, 2023 Share Posted March 29, 2023 Always interesting to do this exercise... looked at changes in March average high temperatures from 1871-1900, compared to the most recent complete 13 years (2010-2022) in the Great Lakes subforum. Decided to do the same to a few spots in our subforum. Buffalo, New York 1874-1900: 37.3F 2010-2022: 43.4F (+6.1F) Rochester, New York 1872-1900: 37.6F 2010-2022: 44.6F (+7.0F) Erie, Pennsylvania 1874-1900: 40.3F 2010-2022: 45.2F (+4.9F) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1875-1900: 47.6F 2010-2022: 50.8F (+3.2F) Keep in mind at Pittsburgh, this is comparing downtown records (elevation: 780-800 feet) to airport records (elevation: 1200 feet), and about 15 miles northwest, which hides a lot of the warming trend. Based on the numbers, the March climate in Buffalo and Rochester during the late 19th century is about on par with recent (2010-2022) March weather in International Falls [37.4F mean] and Duluth, Minnesota [37.1F mean] and just about 2.5-3F warmer than Caribou, Maine [34.8F] - which is to say the 19th century March climate in Buffalo and Rochester is significantly closer to the modern March climate in Caribou, Maine than it is to the current climate at either location. I think this last point kind of serves to bring home the scope of the changes we are creating. Often times, this reality is lost in the focus on the numbers. But when you point to a concrete modern equivalent for those numbers, it really showcases how dramatically things have changed. Places like Duluth, International Falls and Caribou, Maine are thought of as unbelievably cold. Yet, many cities in in the lower Great Lakes saw comparable early spring temperatures to what those locations experience today. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheClimateChanger Posted March 29, 2023 Share Posted March 29, 2023 7 minutes ago, TheClimateChanger said: Always interesting to do this exercise... looked at changes in March average high temperatures from 1871-1900, compared to the most recent complete 13 years (2010-2022) in the Great Lakes subforum. Decided to do the same to a few spots in our subforum. Buffalo, New York 1874-1900: 37.3F 2010-2022: 43.4F (+6.1F) Rochester, New York 1872-1900: 37.6F 2010-2022: 44.6F (+7.0F) Erie, Pennsylvania 1874-1900: 40.3F 2010-2022: 45.2F (+4.9F) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1875-1900: 47.6F 2010-2022: 50.8F (+3.2F) Keep in mind at Pittsburgh, this is comparing downtown records (elevation: 780-800 feet) to airport records (elevation: 1200 feet), and about 15 miles northwest, which hides a lot of the warming trend. Based on the numbers, the March climate in Buffalo and Rochester during the late 19th century is about on par with recent (2010-2022) March weather in International Falls [37.4F mean] and Duluth, Minnesota [37.1F mean] and just about 2.5-3F warmer than Caribou, Maine [34.8F] - which is to say the 19th century March climate in Buffalo and Rochester is significantly closer to the modern March climate in Caribou, Maine than it is to the current climate at either location. I think this last point kind of serves to bring home the scope of the changes we are creating. Often times, this reality is lost in the focus on the numbers. But when you point to a concrete modern equivalent for those numbers, it really showcases how dramatically things have changed. Places like Duluth, International Falls and Caribou, Maine are thought of as unbelievably cold. Yet, many cities in in the lower Great Lakes saw comparable early spring temperatures to what those locations experience today. Another way to look at this is to compare locations today to places in the south in the past. Pittsburgh's average March high from 2010-2022 at 50.8F, is 0.6F warmer than Washington, D.C.'s average March high from 1872-1900 [50.2F]. By comparison, Washington, D.C.'s average March high in the most recent 13 years has been 57.6F. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted March 29, 2023 Author Share Posted March 29, 2023 4 hours ago, TheClimateChanger said: Always interesting to do this exercise... looked at changes in March average high temperatures from 1871-1900, compared to the most recent complete 13 years (2010-2022) in the Great Lakes subforum. Decided to do the same to a few spots in our subforum. Buffalo, New York 1874-1900: 37.3F 2010-2022: 43.4F (+6.1F) Rochester, New York 1872-1900: 37.6F 2010-2022: 44.6F (+7.0F) Erie, Pennsylvania 1874-1900: 40.3F 2010-2022: 45.2F (+4.9F) Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1875-1900: 47.6F 2010-2022: 50.8F (+3.2F) Keep in mind at Pittsburgh, this is comparing downtown records (elevation: 780-800 feet) to airport records (elevation: 1200 feet), and about 15 miles northwest, which hides a lot of the warming trend. Based on the numbers, the March climate in Buffalo and Rochester during the late 19th century is about on par with recent (2010-2022) March weather in International Falls [37.4F mean] and Duluth, Minnesota [37.1F mean] and just about 2.5-3F warmer than Caribou, Maine [34.8F] - which is to say the 19th century March climate in Buffalo and Rochester is significantly closer to the modern March climate in Caribou, Maine than it is to the current climate at either location. I think this last point kind of serves to bring home the scope of the changes we are creating. Often times, this reality is lost in the focus on the numbers. But when you point to a concrete modern equivalent for those numbers, it really showcases how dramatically things have changed. Places like Duluth, International Falls and Caribou, Maine are thought of as unbelievably cold. Yet, many cities in in the lower Great Lakes saw comparable early spring temperatures to what those locations experience today. Many of these recording stations were different back then. Buffalos was right on the lakeshore before 1940 and much cooler than the location it is now (airport) Rochester and Syracuse changed locations too. Not sure about Erie. Any data pre 1940 needs to be tossed at least for Buffalo, not sure when ROC and SYR moved. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheClimateChanger Posted April 13, 2023 Share Posted April 13, 2023 On 3/29/2023 at 1:46 AM, BuffaloWeather said: Many of these recording stations were different back then. Buffalos was right on the lakeshore before 1940 and much cooler than the location it is now (airport) Rochester and Syracuse changed locations too. Not sure about Erie. Any data pre 1940 needs to be tossed at least for Buffalo, not sure when ROC and SYR moved. Not much of a change over the six Marches with overlapping records at the two sites. The downtown site had a mean maximum of 36.7, versus 37.6 at the airport. Buffalo Downtown March 1939: 36.9 1940: 33.0 1941: 32.4 1942: 42.1 1943: 38.3 1944: 37.2 6-year average: 36.7 Buffalo Niagara International Airport March 1939: 38.0 [+1.1] 1940: 32.3 [-0.7] 1941: 34.5 [+2.1] 1942: 42.4 [+0.3] 1943: 39.8 [+1.5] 1944: 38.5 [+1.3] 6-year average: 37.6 [+0.9] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheClimateChanger Posted April 13, 2023 Share Posted April 13, 2023 9 minutes ago, TheClimateChanger said: Not much of a change over the six Marches with overlapping records at the two sites. The downtown site had a mean maximum of 36.7, versus 37.6 at the airport. Buffalo Downtown March 1939: 36.9 1940: 33.0 1941: 32.4 1942: 42.1 1943: 38.3 1944: 37.2 6-year average: 36.7 Buffalo Niagara International Airport March 1939: 38.0 [+1.1] 1940: 32.3 [-0.7] 1941: 34.5 [+2.1] 1942: 42.4 [+0.3] 1943: 39.8 [+1.5] 1944: 38.5 [+1.3] 6-year average: 37.6 [+0.9] Also, there was no change to the annual mean temperature [less than a 0.1F increase]. So the annual means are directly comparable between the sites with no adjustments needed. The airport has mean high temperatures about 2 degrees warmer than downtown, but mean low temperatures about 2 degrees cooler than downtown. Buffalo Airport Buffalo Downtown Difference 1939 56.1 54.4 1.7 1940 53.7 52.1 1.6 1941 57.4 54.8 2.6 1942 56.3 53.7 2.6 1943 54.8 52.8 2 Avg 55.66 53.56 2.1 Buffalo Airport Buffalo Downtown Difference 1939 38.5 41 -2.5 1940 36.7 39.1 -2.4 1941 39.2 41.8 -2.6 1942 39.5 41 -1.5 1943 37.7 38.7 -1 Avg 38.32 40.32 -2 Buffalo Airport Buffalo Downtown Difference 1939 47.3 47.7 -0.4 1940 45.2 45.6 -0.4 1941 48.3 48.3 0 1942 47.9 47.3 0.6 1943 46.3 45.7 0.6 Avg 47 46.92 0.08 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheClimateChanger Posted April 13, 2023 Share Posted April 13, 2023 Given there was essentially no change to the annual means from the site change, this is a particularly interesting analysis: Last year with annual mean below 44: 1917 [43.7F] Last year with annual mean below 45: 1926 [44.3F] Last year with annual mean below 46: 1943 [45.6F] Last year with annual mean below 47: 1996 [46.9F] Last year with annual mean below 48: 2014 [47.2F] I think it's safe to say it's impossible at this point for Buffalo to have an annual mean below 46F, and probably not too far off before we can say the same thing for 47F. Already been 27 years since the last sub-47F annual mean; however, it was only a couple of tenths warmer just 9 years ago. So I don't know if it can be completely ruled out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted April 13, 2023 Author Share Posted April 13, 2023 3 hours ago, TheClimateChanger said: Not much of a change over the six Marches with overlapping records at the two sites. The downtown site had a mean maximum of 36.7, versus 37.6 at the airport. Buffalo Downtown March 1939: 36.9 1940: 33.0 1941: 32.4 1942: 42.1 1943: 38.3 1944: 37.2 6-year average: 36.7 Buffalo Niagara International Airport March 1939: 38.0 [+1.1] 1940: 32.3 [-0.7] 1941: 34.5 [+2.1] 1942: 42.4 [+0.3] 1943: 39.8 [+1.5] 1944: 38.5 [+1.3] 6-year average: 37.6 [+0.9] A degree is a massive difference in that timeframe Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted April 13, 2023 Author Share Posted April 13, 2023 3 hours ago, TheClimateChanger said: Also, there was no change to the annual mean temperature [less than a 0.1F increase]. So the annual means are directly comparable between the sites with no adjustments needed. The airport has mean high temperatures about 2 degrees warmer than downtown, but mean low temperatures about 2 degrees cooler than downtown. Buffalo Airport Buffalo Downtown Difference 1939 56.1 54.4 1.7 1940 53.7 52.1 1.6 1941 57.4 54.8 2.6 1942 56.3 53.7 2.6 1943 54.8 52.8 2 Avg 55.66 53.56 2.1 Buffalo Airport Buffalo Downtown Difference 1939 38.5 41 -2.5 1940 36.7 39.1 -2.4 1941 39.2 41.8 -2.6 1942 39.5 41 -1.5 1943 37.7 38.7 -1 Avg 38.32 40.32 -2 Buffalo Airport Buffalo Downtown Difference 1939 47.3 47.7 -0.4 1940 45.2 45.6 -0.4 1941 48.3 48.3 0 1942 47.9 47.3 0.6 1943 46.3 45.7 0.6 Avg 47 46.92 0.08 This data is flawed. 5 yrs isn’t nearly enough data to justify a conclusion. It’s clearly colder along lakeshore than at airport. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BuffaloWeather Posted April 13, 2023 Author Share Posted April 13, 2023 3 hours ago, TheClimateChanger said: Given there was essentially no change to the annual means from the site change, this is a particularly interesting analysis: Last year with annual mean below 44: 1917 [43.7F] Last year with annual mean below 45: 1926 [44.3F] Last year with annual mean below 46: 1943 [45.6F] Last year with annual mean below 47: 1996 [46.9F] Last year with annual mean below 48: 2014 [47.2F] I think it's safe to say it's impossible at this point for Buffalo to have an annual mean below 46F, and probably not too far off before we can say the same thing for 47F. Already been 27 years since the last sub-47F annual mean; however, it was only a couple of tenths warmer just 9 years ago. So I don't know if it can be completely ruled out. We’ve discussed on our discord about the urban heating effect at Buffalo. Check out some of the overnight lows in summer this year and see if you see anything fishy. Love this kind of data Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted April 21, 2023 Share Posted April 21, 2023 Greetings from the Catskills Nice and cool up here 47 will be the low tonight Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted April 22, 2023 Share Posted April 22, 2023 Loud thunder and lightning starting up here in the Catskills. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cny rider Posted April 23, 2023 Share Posted April 23, 2023 That was a nice line that went through last evening. I saw there was a TOR warning south of Oneonta. Did anything get confirmed? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted April 24, 2023 Share Posted April 24, 2023 On 4/23/2023 at 9:17 AM, cny rider said: That was a nice line that went through last evening. I saw there was a TOR warning south of Oneonta. Did anything get confirmed? I was in Roscoe on Saturday . Alot of damage from falling trees. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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