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2 hours ago, bluewave said:

The 18th was the 5th latest freeze on record for FOK.

Data for May 18, 2023 through May 18, 2023
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
State
Name
Station Type
Lowest Min Temperature 
NY MONTGOMERY ORANGE COUNTY AP WBAN 28
NY PORT JERVIS COOP 29
NY WESTHAMPTON GABRESKI AP WBAN 29
NY CARMEL 4N COOP 30
CT MERIDEN MARKHAM MUNICIPAL AP WBAN 30
NJ CHARLOTTEBURG RESERVOIR COOP 31
CT DANBURY MUNICIPAL AP WBAN 31
CT GUILFORD COOP 31
NY SHRUB OAK COOP 33
CT GROTON NEW LONDON AP WBAN 33
NY UPTON COOP - NWSFO NEW YORK COOP 33
NY BRIDGEHAMPTON COOP 34
CT NEW HAVEN TWEED AP WBAN 34
NY ST. JAMES COOP 35
CT NORWICH PUBLIC UTILITY PLANT COOP 35
NY SHIRLEY BROOKHAVEN AIRPORT WBAN 35
NJ CALDWELL ESSEX COUNTY AP WBAN 36
NY WEST POINT COOP 36
NJ CANOE BROOK COOP 37
NY SYOSSET COOP 37
NY RIVERHEAD RESEARCH FARM COOP 37
CT IGOR I SIKORSKY MEMORIAL AIRPORT WBAN 38
NY ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP WBAN 38
NY WESTCHESTER CO AP WBAN 39
NY ORIENT POINT STATE PARK COOP 39
NJ TETERBORO AIRPORT WBAN 40
NJ TETERBORO AIRPORT COOP 40
NY CENTERPORT COOP 40
NY FARMINGDALE REPUBLIC AP WBAN 41
NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 42
NY MOLLOY CERCOM COOP 42
NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 43
NJ HARRISON COOP 43
NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 44
NY MONTAUK AIRPORT WBAN 45
NY LAGUARDIA AIRPORT WBAN 46

Thanks, Chris, what's their latest freeze on record-- May 31st I think?

and wow 42 degrees is VERY cold for JFK on May 18th!

 

 

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9 hours ago, jm1220 said:

The heat index makes it feel just as bad if not worse on LI now with the southerly winds in the summer and regular 75+ dews. In Aug if anything the seabreeze just makes it feel worse here. 92F with a 76 dewpoint is 105 heat index, 96/71 is 104 heat index. So both in terms of actual heat are just as bad. The worst places in a heat wave now are probably the north shore of LI/much of NYC that still heat up before the seabreeze kicks in and still terrible humidity, and less chance of the T-storms that often fire inland and die before reaching the coast. 

Like Bluewave says though it's only a matter of time before we get a big heat dome here like the rest of the country's seen where we all likely get well over 100 and some places like EWR reach 110. 

Definitely-- I remember 2010 when we had 3 100+ degree days on the south shore but it was nice and dry and the heat really did not feel bad at all because it was so nice and dry!

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2 minutes ago, LibertyBell said:

Thanks, Chris, what's their latest freeze on record-- May 31st I think?

and wow 42 degrees is VERY cold for JFK on May 18th!

 

 

5-22-02 was their latest freeze.

 

Frost/Freeze Summary for WESTHAMPTON GABRESKI AP, NY
Each section contains date and year of occurrence, value on that date.
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Year
Last
Value
First
Value
Season Length
2002 05-22 (2002) 32 10-15 (2002) 31 145
2016 05-20 (2016) 32 10-11 (2016) 31 143
2008 05-20 (2008) 31 10-07 (2008) 31 139
2003 05-19 (2003) 32 10-03 (2003) 29 136
2023 05-18 (2023) 29 11-04 (2023) 32 169
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9 minutes ago, bluewave said:

5-22-02 was their latest freeze.

 

Frost/Freeze Summary for WESTHAMPTON GABRESKI AP, NY
Each section contains date and year of occurrence, value on that date.
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Year
Last
Value
First
Value
Season Length
2002 05-22 (2002) 32 10-15 (2002) 31 145
2016 05-20 (2016) 32 10-11 (2016) 31 143
2008 05-20 (2008) 31 10-07 (2008) 31 139
2003 05-19 (2003) 32 10-03 (2003) 29 136
2023 05-18 (2023) 29 11-04 (2023) 32 169

wow in our warmest winter on record.... and even after that big heatwave in April!

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Records:

 

Highs:

EWR:  92 (2017)
NYC: 87 (2001)
LGA: 87 (2001)
JFK: 79 (2008)


Lows:

 

EWR: 40 (1950)
NYC: 31 (1930)
LGA: 36 (1971)
JFK: 34 (1967)


Historical:

1880: Several tornadoes affected parts of central and southwest Illinois. One tornado of F4 intensity touched down near Jerseyville and killed one person along the 18-mile path. Another F4 tornado passed just north of Carlinville and lifted near Atwater, destroying 50 buildings. Six people died in Christian County by an F5 tornado, which tracked from 9 miles southwest of Taylorville to near Sharpsburg. 

1899 - Two women and one son lived to tell the story of being picked up by a tornado and carried more than a fourth of a mile, flying far above the church steeples, before being gently set down again. The young boy and one of the ladies said they had the pleasure of flying alongside a horse. The horse "kicked and struggled" as it flew high above, and was set down unharmed about a mile away. (The Weather Channel)

1908 - Severe thunderstorms spawned eighteen tornadoes over across the Central Gulf Coast States claiming the lives of 310 persons. The state of Mississippi was hardest hit. A tornado near Hattiesburg MS killed 143 persons and caused more than half a million dollars damage. Four violent tornadoes accounted for 279 of the 310 deaths. The deadliest of the four tornadoes swelled to a width of 2.5 miles as it passed near Amite LA. The tornado also leveled most of Purvis MS. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel)

1987 - Showers and thunderstorms produced heavy rain in the Middle Atlantic Coast Region. Up to seven inches of rain drenched Virginia in three days. Morgantown WV received 4.27 inches in 24 hours, and flooding was reported in south central West Virginia. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

1988 - Low pressure produced high winds and severe thunderstorms in the Southern Plains Region. Strong thunderstorm winds destroyed two mobile homes at Whitt TX injuring two persons. Winds associated with the low pressure system gusted to 70 mph at Guadalupe Pass TX. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

1989 - Twenty cities in the central U.S. reported record high temperatures for the date. Russell KS was the hot spot in the nation with a reading of 101 degrees. Evening thunderstorms produced severe weather from Colorado to Wisconsin. Hail four and a half inches in diameter was reported at Sargeant NE. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

1990 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather from the Southern High Plains to north central Kansas. Thunderstorms spawned ten tornadoes, including one which injured four persons and caused 1.5 million dollars damage at Shattuck OK. Thunderstorms also produced softball size hail at Wheeler TX, wind gusts to 85 mph southwest of Arnett OK, and 13.45 inches of rain near Caldwell TX, which resulted in the worst flooding in recent memory for that area. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

 

2003: The temperature soared to a maximum of 70 degrees in Juneau, Alaska. This is the earliest record of 70-degree reading to occur in Juneau. 

2010 - An EF-4 tornado up to 1.75 miles wide travels 149.25 miles through Mississippi, the widest and fourth longest path in Mississippi history. It left behind major destruction to businesses, churches and homes, four fatalities in Yazoo City and ten fatalities across the state,

2010: April Tornado Outbreak- During a significant severe weather outbreak across the South on April 22-25, 142 tornadoes raked the region, including 77 on April 24 alone. Ten died from the long-track tornado that swept across Mississippi on April 24. A long-lived twister left a trail of destruction extending over 149 miles from Louisiana through Mississippi, resulting in 10 deaths and 75 injuries. This EF4 storm, which grew to a width of 1.75 miles, sported the fourth longest track in Mississippi history. This storm destroyed part of Yazoo City, Mississippi. The Swiss Reinsurance Company estimated insured damages with this outbreak at $1.58 billion. Click HERE for more information from the NWS Office in Jackson, Mississippi.

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13 minutes ago, bluewave said:

Big temperature swings over the next week. Highs near 70° today dropping to the 30s tonight. Then the first possible 90° readings of the season for the warm spots in NJ next week. With the caveat that the back door will have to be far enough northeast to allow a SW flow and near full sun. 
 

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676CEDF8-9272-4D1E-970C-D2F613B83065.thumb.png.f4510bbbdb0f2e686057a5c3284ee301.png

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That second highs map to me for Tue says SE wind which keeps it cool east of the city. So it looks like there’ll be some kind of front around or strong onshore flow. Low 70s is still perfectly fine though if we get sun and avoid stratus from the onshore flow. 

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4 minutes ago, jm1220 said:

That second highs map to me for Tue says SE wind which keeps it cool east of the city. So it looks like there’ll be some kind of front around or strong onshore flow. Low 70s is still perfectly fine though if we get sun and avoid stratus from the onshore flow. 

Yes even sunny and 50s is fine lol

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9 minutes ago, LibertyBell said:

I do and rain prevents it from happening.  I use a garden hose for all my watering needs.

I'd just prefer not to spend hours a week walking around with a garden house and/or sprinkler.  Not to mention increasing my water bill.

Mother nature does it better and more effectively when she cooperates.

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8 minutes ago, MANDA said:

I'd just prefer not to spend hours a week walking around with a garden house and/or sprinkler.  Not to mention increasing my water bill.

Mother nature does it better and more effectively when she cooperates.

It was hard to do any gardening in most of April because everything was soggy and wet.  I wish we had our normal rainfall patterns of the 80s and 90s when we got like 1 inch of rain every 10 days or so-- this is my ideal.  No 2 inch or 3 inch rainstorms, just an inch of rain (preferably at night) maybe 3 times a month.

 

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1 hour ago, MANDA said:

I'd just prefer not to spend hours a week walking around with a garden house and/or sprinkler.  Not to mention increasing my water bill.

Mother nature does it better and more effectively when she cooperates.

that's an issue with having the wrong plants

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3 minutes ago, Dark Star said:

I would think fear of flooding basements is a higher priority to planting vegetables for some?

Not wanting dry weather for weeks or a drought doesn't mean we have to have the other extreme in flooding. We're just talking about a normal 1"/week

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2 hours ago, LibertyBell said:

Plus it's really hard to do anything with so much sogginess everywhere.  It also promotes dangerous bugs who spread disease (like mosquitoes and ticks.)

 

Everything in New Jersey bites...

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1 hour ago, LibertyBell said:

The cold is more of  a problem than lack of rainfall for those-- we already have way too much rain.

I grow those myself-- peppers need hot weather to grow well.

 

Tomatoes do very well in the heat, but I've found that peppers don't like it too hot. They often slow down during very hot periods in the summer. I usually get my best crop of peppers during the early fall when it has cooled off. 

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