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September 2023


Stormlover74
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20 minutes ago, SnoSki14 said:

Looks like Euro went in this direction too

Also pretty remarkable how our supposed endless summer just sort of ended. Looks quite cool (highs at least) moving forward. 

It wouldn't surprise me if the models continue to come in a bit wetter. Widespread 1-3" rainfall amounts look like a good bet. Some higher amounts up to 5-6" would also not surprise me. Considering how much rain some areas have had recently flooding is going to be a concern so I would expect the NWS to eventually issue flood watches. 

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9 minutes ago, Rtd208 said:

It wouldn't surprise me if the models continue to come in a bit wetter. Widespread 1-3" rainfall amounts look like a good bet. Some higher amounts up to 5-6" would also not surprise me. Considering how much rain some areas have had recently flooding is going to be a concern so I would expect the NWS to eventually issue flood watches. 

There will likely be a tropical connection too so I agree on locally much higher amounts. I think we need another full day of model runs before we know exactly what will happen. 

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The next 8 days are averaging   63degs.(58/68) or -3.

Gone are the 80's for October as GFS  struggles with 75 the next 16 days now.

3" still possible through 'Saturday>>> Monday AM' period.

Reached 79 here yesterday at 5:30pm.

Today:   72-75, wind ne., few clouds, 60 tomorrow AM.

61*/64%RH) here at 7am.     63* at 9am.     67* at Noon.      73* at 3pm.      76* at 4pm.     Reached 77* at 5pm.

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50 minutes ago, bluewave said:

Models starting to converge on the wetter coastal hugger tucked in track. The CMC came east and the Euro west. So a compromise of about 65% of what CMC had and about 35% Euro. So two swings and a miss so far from the Euro with tropical tracks. 

Checked a few of this pages comments and agreed... imo, EC-GFS may not be doing too well in the longer ranges with qpf here in the NYC subforum with overall GEPS seeming to be better allowing soaker 1"+ up to I90. Not a done deal north of I84 but sure looks like a somewhat nasty 5-7 day period Sat 23rd-Fri 29th.  Spot 4-6" NJ-LI/e PA seem probable. Rainouts of MLB games possible NYC, PHL, DCA meaning some might be doubled up on a day or not played at all depending on MLB impacts.

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5 minutes ago, wdrag said:

Checked a few of this pages comments and agreed... imo, EC-GFS may not be doing too well in the longer ranges with qpf here in the NYC subforum with overall GEPS seeming to be better allowing soaker 1"+ up to I90. Not a done deal north of I84 but sure looks like a somewhat nasty 5-7 day period Sat 23rd-Fri 29th.  Spot 4-6" NJ-LI/e PA seem probable. Rainouts of MLB games possible NYC, PHL, DCA meaning some might be doubled up on a day or not played at all depending on MLB impacts.

I know you have been a supporter of having the CMC on your side when making a forecast. I would have to say the model is the most Improved since recent upgrades. I wish we had a east coast storm statistical storm tracker which would score the models solely on forecasting the most accurate track. These Northern Hemispheric skill scores don’t tell us much about which model get our storm tracks right. But the skill on a hemispheric scale is great for temperature and teleconnection forecasts. 

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5 hours ago, SnoSki14 said:

Looks like Euro went in this direction too

Also pretty remarkable how our supposed endless summer just sort of ended. Looks quite cool (highs at least) moving forward. 

It wasn't even an endless summer anyway in terms of heat/above normal temps. Outside of a hot stretch during Labor Day week, the last month has been quite comfortable and actually fall-like in the morning a lot of days. One of the best late summer stretches in years at least for those of us who prefer not to have swamp ass.

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Just now, kat5hurricane said:

It wasn't even an endless summer anyway in terms of heat/above normal temps. Outside of a hot stretch during Labor Day week, the last month has been quite comfortable and actually fall-like in the morning a lot of days. One of the best late summer stretches in years.

That was a solid 7+ days of record setting temperatures that will skew the month well above normal (+2) against the warmer averages. 

And in the city lows are still struggling to drop below 60 so yes its been a very warm stretch. A few cooler days won't change that. 

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23 minutes ago, guinness77 said:

You guys would know better than me…NWS has rain starting by 8am on Saturday…looking at the models, this seems to be a little early on the predictions, no? 

Models have sped up the timing and as stated above, there's a 2nd piece now for Sunday showing up.   

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8 minutes ago, SnoSki14 said:

That was a solid 7+ days of record setting temperatures that will skew the month well above normal (+2) against the warmer averages. 

And in the city lows are still struggling to drop below 60 so yes its been a very warm stretch. A few cooler days won't change that. 

The other 4 boroughs besides Queens have dipped below 60.

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18 minutes ago, SnoSki14 said:

That was a solid 7+ days of record setting temperatures that will skew the month well above normal (+2) against the warmer averages. 

And in the city lows are still struggling to drop below 60 so yes its been a very warm stretch. A few cooler days won't change that. 

I live not far from LaGuardia which is considered one of the hot spots for morning lows and there have been many cool mornings, not just a few cool days. August had many beautiful, low humidity days.

It was the Labor Day week stretch with the real hot days and that's been it for the most part for REAL summer weather in the last 4-5 weeks. Pretty close to normal temps but with much lower humidity than we've been accustomed to in recent years.

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32 minutes ago, kat5hurricane said:

It wasn't even an endless summer anyway in terms of heat/above normal temps. Outside of a hot stretch during Labor Day week, the last month has been quite comfortable and actually fall-like in the morning a lot of days. One of the best late summer stretches in years at least for those of us who prefer not to have swamp ass.

The first two weeks of the month were endless summer as they they were one of the warmest on record. Since the 15th we have been pretty close to average against the warmer 91-20 climate normals. 

Time Series Summary for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Rank
Ending Date
Mean Avg Temperature Sep 1 to Sep 14
Missing Count
1 1961-09-14 81.4 0
2 2023-09-14 79.0 0
3 1983-09-14 77.2 0
4 2015-09-14 76.9 0
5 1947-09-14 76.4 0


 

Time Series Summary for WESTCHESTER CO AP, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Rank
Ending Date
Mean Avg Temperature Sep 1 to Sep 14
Missing Count
1 1961-09-14 77.8 0
2 1983-09-14 74.6 0
3 2023-09-14 74.5 0
4 2015-09-14 73.7 0
5 2016-09-14 72.9 0


 

Time Series Summary for ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Rank
Ending Date
Mean Avg Temperature Sep 1 to Sep 14
Missing Count
1 2023-09-14 75.9 0
2 1983-09-14 74.1 0
3 2015-09-14 73.9 0
4 1980-09-14 73.1 0
5 2016-09-14 72.7 0
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13 minutes ago, bluewave said:

The first two weeks of the month were endless summer as they they were one of the warmest on record. Since the 15th we have been pretty close to average against the warmer 91-20 climate normals. 

Time Series Summary for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Rank
Ending Date
Mean Avg Temperature Sep 1 to Sep 14
Missing Count
1 1961-09-14 81.4 0
2 2023-09-14 79.0 0
3 1983-09-14 77.2 0
4 2015-09-14 76.9 0
5 1947-09-14 76.4 0


 

Time Series Summary for WESTCHESTER CO AP, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Rank
Ending Date
Mean Avg Temperature Sep 1 to Sep 14
Missing Count
1 1961-09-14 77.8 0
2 1983-09-14 74.6 0
3 2023-09-14 74.5 0
4 2015-09-14 73.7 0
5 2016-09-14 72.9 0


 

Time Series Summary for ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Rank
Ending Date
Mean Avg Temperature Sep 1 to Sep 14
Missing Count
1 2023-09-14 75.9 0
2 1983-09-14 74.1 0
3 2015-09-14 73.9 0
4 1980-09-14 73.1 0
5 2016-09-14 72.7 0

Yes but that was skewed heavily by Labor Day week being near record breaking warmth. The 2nd week of September and beyond was back closer to normal where it's been highs in the 70s for the most part.

We're also in a climate now where "old normal" temps feel relatively cool because it's been so hot, especially due to the humidity, in recent years.

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10 minutes ago, kat5hurricane said:

Yes but that was skewed heavily by Labor Day week being near record breaking warmth. The 2nd week of September and beyond was back closer to normal where it's been highs in the 70s for the most part.

We're also in a climate now where "old normal" temps feel relatively cool because it's been so hot, especially due to the humidity, in recent years.

The 2nd week of the month was still pretty warm. But in our new warmer climate wasn’t as extreme as week 1.


 

Data for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Date
Max Temperature 
Min Temperature 
Avg Temperature Departure 
2023-09-01 79 60 -4.3
2023-09-02 83 59 -2.6
2023-09-03 92 66 5.7
2023-09-04 93 72 9.4
2023-09-05 95 78 13.7
2023-09-06 97 77 14.5
2023-09-07 96 76 13.8
2023-09-08 92 73 10.5
2023-09-09 88 73 8.9
2023-09-10 81 70 4.2
2023-09-11 85 72 7.5
2023-09-12 87 69 7.3
2023-09-13 83 71 6.7
2023-09-14 81 63 2.0
2023-09-15 74 58 -3.6
2023-09-16 79 60 0.2
2023-09-17 79 56 -1.4
2023-09-18 70 62 -2.5
2023-09-19 77 59 -0.1
2023-09-20 78 58 0.3
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62 / 50 off a low of 50.  Last mainly clear and dry day for a bit.  Pattern is kind of stuck up into the east the Atlantic ridge is anchored east of Bermuda acting to slow any front and forcing cut off / ULL under the ridge. Whats it mean - a likely very wet period the next week to 10 days before overall warmer period sets into early October.  Wouldnt shock me to see 5 - 10 inches of rain 9/23 - 10/1 in spots.  Check those gutters, drains, sump pumps and streets.

 

Here's the initiation of the ST system off the old frontal boundary east of Georgia

 

GOES16-EUS-02-1000x1000.gif 

 

 

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18 minutes ago, bluewave said:

The 2nd week of the month was still pretty warm. But in our new warmer climate wasn’t as extreme as week 1.


 

Data for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Date
Max Temperature 
Min Temperature 
Avg Temperature Departure 
2023-09-01 79 60 -4.3
2023-09-02 83 59 -2.6
2023-09-03 92 66 5.7
2023-09-04 93 72 9.4
2023-09-05 95 78 13.7
2023-09-06 97 77 14.5
2023-09-07 96 76 13.8
2023-09-08 92 73 10.5
2023-09-09 88 73 8.9
2023-09-10 81 70 4.2
2023-09-11 85 72 7.5
2023-09-12 87 69 7.3
2023-09-13 83 71 6.7
2023-09-14 81 63 2.0
2023-09-15 74 58 -3.6
2023-09-16 79 60 0.2
2023-09-17 79 56 -1.4
2023-09-18 70 62 -2.5
2023-09-19 77 59 -0.1
2023-09-20 78 58 0.3

With two full days of astronomical summer left, Newark is sitting in 10th place for astronomical summer. One caveat, realize the dates can vary by about a day in either direction, but this analysis uses the period June 21 to date for ease of comparison. Prior to 2005, only two warmer astronomical summers are noted (1993 & 1983). While it's in 10th place out of 124 years of data, it is only in third place out of the past three years and seventh place of the past 14 years. 

So very warm historically - as I noted, it would have been 3rd warmest prior to 2005 - but only about on par for the past decade and a half. And possibly with it being only the 3rd warmest since 2021, it may be a cool astronomical summer in the current climate.

image.png.97d5e78a00b1d8e671f91772b66cf181.png

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Records:

 

Highs:

EWR: 90 (1940)
NYC: 95 (1895) - very hot late septemeber heatwave peaks tomorrow
LGA: 89 (1940)



Lows:

EWR: 39 (1946) - first sub 40 record low since May 30
NYC: 40 (1871)
LG: 43 (1956)

Historical:

 

1894 - A heavy chicken house, sixteen by sixteen feet in area, was picked up by a tornado and wedged between two trees. The hens were found the next day sitting on their eggs in the chicken house, with no windows broken, as though nothing had happened. (The Weather Channel)

 

1894: A late season severe weather outbreak occurred across northwest Iowa, south central Minnesota and southwestern Wisconsin during the late evening hours. Several communities were impacted by this outbreak with an estimated 55 to 65 deaths, and in additional 300 injuries. The strongest tornado was an estimated F5, which tore through the counties of Kossuth, Hancock, Winnebago in Iowa, and Faribault in Minnesota.

 

1924: A couple of tornadoes, one rated F4 and the other F5, tore paths of devastation through Eau Claire, Clark, and Taylor Counties in Wisconsin. The death toll was 18 and 50 people were injured.

1938 - A great hurricane smashed into Long Island and bisected New England causing a massive forest blowdown and widespread flooding. Winds gusted to 186 mph at Blue Hill MA, and a storm surge of nearly thirty feet caused extensive flooding along the coast of Rhode Island. The hurricane killed 600 persons and caused 500 million dollars damage. The hurricane, which lasted twelve days, destroyed 275 million trees. Hardest hit were Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Long Island NY. The ""Long Island Express"" produced gargantuan waves with its 150 mph winds, waves which smashed against the New England shore with such force that earthquake-recording machines on the Pacific coast clearly showed the shock of each wave. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)

1954 - The temperature at Deeth, NV, soared from a morning low of 12 degrees to a high of 87 degrees, a record daily warm-up for the state. (The Weather Channel)

1987 - Tropical Storm Emily, which formed in the Carribean the previous afternoon, caused considerable damage to the banana industry of Saint Vincent in the Windward Islands. Unseasonably hot weather continued in Florida and the western U.S. Redding CA and Red Bluff CA, with record highs of 108 degrees, tied for honors as the hot spot in the nation. (The National Weather Summary)

1988 - Thunderstorms produced high winds and locally heavy rain in the southwestern U.S. One thunderstorm in west Texas produced wind gusts to 86 mph at Dell City completely destroying an airport hangar. A Cessna 150 aircraft housed within the hangar was flipped over and snapped in two. Thunderstorms produced large hail in east central Utah, while snow blanketed some of the higher elevations of the state. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

1989 - Hurricane Hugo slammed into the South Carolina coast about 11 PM, making landfall near Sullivans Island. Hurricane Hugo was directly responsible for thirteen deaths, and indirectly responsible for twenty-two others. A total of 420 persons were injured in the hurricane, and damage was estimated at eight billion dollars, including two billion dollars damage to crops. Sustained winds reached 85 mph at Folly Beach SC, with wind gusts as high was 138 mph. Wind gusts reached 98 mph at Charleston, and 109 mph at Shaw AFB. The biggest storm surge occurred in the McClellanville and Bulls Bay area of Charleston County, with a storm surge of 20.2 feet reported at Seewee Bay. Shrimp boats were found one half mile inland at McClellanville. (National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

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10 minutes ago, TheClimateChanger said:

With two full days of astronomical summer left, Newark is sitting in 10th place for astronomical summer. One caveat, realize the dates can vary by about a day in either direction, but this analysis uses the period June 21 to date for ease of comparison. Prior to 2005, only two warmer astronomical summers are noted (1993 & 1983). While it's in 10th place out of 124 years of data, it is only in third place out of the past three years and seventh place of the past 14 years. 

So very warm historically - as I noted, it would have been 3rd warmest prior to 2005 - but only about on par for the past decade and a half. And possibly with it being only the 3rd warmest since 2021, it may be a cool astronomical summer in the current climate.

image.png.97d5e78a00b1d8e671f91772b66cf181.png

It’s the first time since 1983 with the warmest annual temperature occurring in September without tying with an earlier month.

 

Monthly Highest Max Temperature for NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP, NJ
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Year
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Season
2023 93 90 91 96 91 97 M 97
2022 88 98 96 102 101 93 76 102
2021 89 96 103 97 99 91 84 103
2020 69 86 93 96 94 89 79 96
2019 80 90 93 99 94 93 96 99
2018 84 94 96 98 96 98 82 98
2017 87 94 99 98 93 92 86 99
2016 83 96 91 99 98 94 87 99
2015 82 91 93 98 97 98 81 98
2014 83 88 92 96 93 95 79 96
2013 85 94 96 101 91 96 89 101
2012 88 92 99 104 95 92 81 104
2011 87 92 102 108 98 88 88 108
2010 92 95 98 103 98 98 79 103
2009 93 87 89 91 95 86 77 95
2008 82 87 99 98 91 92 79 99
2007 86 94 96 97 95 92 89 97
2006 83 94 95 98 101 85 82 101
2005 88 84 97 101 102 94 81 102
2004 88 92 97 91 92 87 76 97
2003 88 81 95 95 93 82 78 95
2002 97 90 96 100 100 91 86 100
2001 87 94 95 97 105 88 83 105
2000 78 94 96 93 92 88 82 96
1999 83 90 99 103 99 88 76 103
1998 74 90 94 98 93 92 79 98
1997 74 86 97 101 97 86 88 101
1996 88 99 92 91 92 92 78 99
1995 82 90 97 104 98 91 85 104
1994 92 95 102 99 95 92 78 102
1993 82 93 102 105 100 100 82 105
1992 79 98 90 97 95 90 83 98
1991 88 93 97 102 96 95 82 102
1990 94 83 92 98 93 91 88 98
1989 79 89 96 99 97 97 80 99
1988 74 94 101 101 99 86 81 101
1987 79 98 96 97 97 87 75 98
1986 80 95 94 100 90 89 85 100
1985 89 92 89 94 97 94 80 97
1984 77 89 97 95 93 88 82 97
1983 85 84 96 98 97 99 84 99
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