LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 02:05 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 02:05 PM 1 hour ago, SACRUS said: Records: Highs: EWR: 92 (2002) NYC: 92 (2002) LGA: 89 (2002) JFK: 86 (2003) Lows: EWR: 26 (1943) NYC: 29 (1928) LGA: 31 (1943) JFK: 32 (2014) Historical: 1849: Charleston, South Carolina recorded their latest freeze ever with a temperature of 32 degrees while 6 inches of snow fell at Wilmington, North Carolina. Snow fell as far south as Milledgeville, Georgia. A damaging hard freeze occurred from Texas to Georgia devastating the cotton crop. 1851: "The Lighthouse Storm" of 1851 struck New England on this date. Heavy gales and high seas pounded the coasts of New Hampshire and eastern Massachusetts. The storm arrived at the time of a full moon, and high tide was producing unusually high storm tides. The storm was so named because it destroyed the lighthouse at Cohasset, Massachusetts. Two assistant lighthouse keepers were killed there when the structure was swept away by the storm tide. 1851 - The famous "Lighthouse Storm" raged near Boston Harbor. Whole gales and gigantic waves destroyed Minot Light with its two keepers still inside. The storm resulted in great shipping losses and coastal erosion. (David Ludlum) 1880 - A tornado near Marshall, MO, carried the heavy timbers of an entire home a distance of twelve miles. (The Weather Channel) 1933 - Franklin Lake, NH, was buried under 35 inches of snow. (Sandra and TI Richard Sanders - 1987) 1960 - A wind gust of 70 mph was measured at the Stapleton International Airport in Denver CO, their highest wind gust of record. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - A slow moving storm system produced heavy rain over North Carolina and the Middle Atlantic Coast States. More than six inches of rain drenched parts of Virginia, and flooding in Virginia claimed three lives. Floodwaters along the James River inundated parts of Richmond VA. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - A storm in the northeastern U.S. produced a foot of snow at Pittsburg VT. Severe thunderstorms produced baseball size hail and spawned five tornadoes in the Southern High Plains Region. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - A cold front, ushering sharply colder air into the north central U.S., brought snow to parts of Montana and North Dakota. At midday the temperature at Cutbank MT was just 22 degrees. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1990 - Thunderstorms developing along a stationary front produced large hail and damaging winds across Oklahoma, with 99 reports of large hail and damaging winds during the evening and early nighttime hours. Thunderstorms produced baseball size hail south of Carney, and wind gusts to 100 mph in the Oklahoma City area which swept away many Federal tax returns being transported from a mail cart to a waiting truck about the time of the midnight deadline. Will Rogers Airport in Oklahoma City reported a record wind gust of 92 mph. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) This was the start of the historic 2002 heatwave, one of my all time favorite April memories! 12 years after that, JFK's latest freezing temperature on record! Also, it's times like this that I wish for data going further back for NYC, I wonder if NYC got any snow in this 1849 snowstorm? Records: Highs: EWR: 92 (2002) NYC: 92 (2002) LGA: 89 (2002) JFK: 86 (2003) Lows: EWR: 26 (1943) NYC: 29 (1928) LGA: 31 (1943) JFK: 32 (2014) Historical: 1849: Charleston, South Carolina recorded their latest freeze ever with a temperature of 32 degrees while 6 inches of snow fell at Wilmington, North Carolina. Snow fell as far south as Milledgeville, Georgia. A damaging hard freeze occurred from Texas to Georgia devastating the cotton crop. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 02:07 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 02:07 PM 2 minutes ago, MANDA said: I boarded that train a month ago! At least the warm part of it. I'm not rooting for endless dryness. I like the idea of storms not outstaying their welcome. 6 days of sunshine every week with temps between 65-70 is fine with me and one day of rain every week with temps no lower than the 50s. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 02:10 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 02:10 PM 3 hours ago, bluewave said: Looks like the cutter next week won’t be as strong. So our next run on 80° this weekend won’t be followed by such strong winds. Then another chance of approaching 80° next week. So improving spring conditions going forward. wow it looks like down on the south shore we'll get close to 80 too, not as warm as March 30th, but this is pretty close and not followed by a super cold front dropping temps by 40 degrees later. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted Wednesday at 03:42 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 03:42 PM 1 hour ago, LibertyBell said: wow it looks like down on the south shore we'll get close to 80 too, not as warm as March 30th, but this is pretty close and not followed by a super cold front dropping temps by 40 degrees later. The Euro has a WSW flow on Saturday ahead of the cold front. So so Western LI north of the Southern State could approach 80°. JFK should be able to go 75°+ but not sure about 80° yet since there could be a short trajectory off the water. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uofmiami Posted Wednesday at 03:45 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 03:45 PM 1 minute ago, bluewave said: The Euro has a WSW flow on Saturday ahead of the cold front. So so Western LI north of the Southern State could approach 80°. JFK should be able to go 75°+ but not sure about 80° yet since there could be a short trajectory off the water. Wind direction is key for the Island, as you know, this time of year for any warmth. Keep the Westerly winds blowing & hold off the seabreeze as long as possible. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 03:46 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 03:46 PM 1 minute ago, uofmiami said: Wind direction is key for the Island, as you know, this time of year for any warmth. Keep the Westerly winds blowing & hold off the seabreeze as long as possible. in the summer too, thats how JFK gets to 100+ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 03:51 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 03:51 PM The winds over here are stronger now than they were yesterday. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted Wednesday at 03:56 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 03:56 PM 48 with gusty winds here 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted Wednesday at 03:58 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 03:58 PM 22 minutes ago, uofmiami said: Wind direction is key for the Island, as you know, this time of year for any warmth. Keep the Westerly winds blowing & hold off the seabreeze as long as possible. Most of the springs summers living back in Long Beach before I moved featured onshore flow. But occasionally we would get into W or WNW flow like 1993,1999, 2010, 2011, and 2012. Those were the occasions when we reached close to or made it to 100°. Even here along the CT Shoreline still get into an onshore flow much of the time as I only had 9 days reach 90° last summer vs 40 days in parts of NJ. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LongBeachSurfFreak Posted Wednesday at 04:07 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 04:07 PM 15 minutes ago, LibertyBell said: The winds over here are stronger now than they were yesterday. Just had a pretty strong gust that threw around some stuff in my backyard. I’d say close to what we had yesterday. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 04:13 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 04:13 PM 5 minutes ago, LongBeachSurfFreak said: Just had a pretty strong gust that threw around some stuff in my backyard. I’d say close to what we had yesterday. This one is more constant. Yesterday (after 4:30 pm) it was like, one gust and then 10 minutes later another gust, etc lol. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 04:14 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 04:14 PM 16 minutes ago, bluewave said: Most of the springs summers living back in Long Beach before I moved featured onshore flow. But occasionally we would get into W or WNW flow like 1993,1999, 2010, 2011, and 2012. Those were the occasions when we reached close to or made it to 100°. Even here along the CT Shoreline still get into an onshore flow much of the time as I only had 9 days reach 90° last summer vs 40 days in parts of NJ. I wonder if your new location hits 100 more often than your old location does, Chris? The years to look at would be the 5 years you mentioned (and also 2013). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted Wednesday at 04:22 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 04:22 PM 7 minutes ago, LibertyBell said: I wonder if your new location hits 100 more often than your old location does, Chris? The years to look at would be the 5 years you mentioned (and also 2013). New Haven hasn’t made it to 100° since 2011 due to all the onshore flow from the ridge extending east of New England. I am just to the east of the ASOS. So my temperatures are pretty similar. Time Series Summary for NEW HAVEN TWEED AP, CT - Jan through DecClick column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. 2024 95 1 2023 95 1 2022 95 0 2021 94 0 2020 94 2 2019 97 2 2018 93 3 2017 90 0 2016 94 0 2015 91 1 2014 89 0 2013 97 0 2012 95 3 2011 101 0 2010 100 0 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 04:42 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 04:42 PM 20 minutes ago, bluewave said: New Haven hasn’t made it to 100° since 2011 due to all the onshore flow from the ridge extending east of New England. I am just to the east of the ASOS. So my temperatures are pretty similar. Time Series Summary for NEW HAVEN TWEED AP, CT - Jan through DecClick column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. 2024 95 1 2023 95 1 2022 95 0 2021 94 0 2020 94 2 2019 97 2 2018 93 3 2017 90 0 2016 94 0 2015 91 1 2014 89 0 2013 97 0 2012 95 3 2011 101 0 2010 100 0 is that 101 their site record? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MJO812 Posted Wednesday at 05:08 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 05:08 PM This weather is beautiful 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted Wednesday at 06:25 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:25 PM 1 hour ago, LibertyBell said: is that 101 their site record? It’s possible but there was missing data from 1978 to 1999 with no records over those years. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 06:55 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:55 PM 29 minutes ago, bluewave said: It’s possible but there was missing data from 1978 to 1999 with no records over those years. too bad we don't have data from July 1977, that was our hottest day in my lifetime prior to July 2011 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted Wednesday at 07:00 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 07:00 PM 1 minute ago, LibertyBell said: too bad we don't have data from July 1977, that was our hottest day in my lifetime prior to July 2011 That was in the old days before they put the ASOS under the trees in Central Park. Monthly Data for July 1977 for Upton NY NWS CWAClick column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. NY NEW YORK LAUREL HILL COOP 104 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 104 NY DOBBS FERRY-ARDSLEY COOP 103 CT NORWALK GAS PLANT COOP 102 NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 102 NJ TETERBORO AIRPORT WBAN 102 NY WEST POINT COOP 101 NY VANDERBILT MUSEUM COOP 101 NJ ESSEX FELLS SERVICE BLDG COOP 101 NY MARYKNOLL COOP 100 CT STAMFORD 5 N COOP 100 NY SCARSDALE COOP 100 CT NEW HAVEN COOP 100 CT MIDDLETOWN 4 W COOP 100 NJ PLAINFIELD COOP 100 NJ CRANFORD COOP 100 NY NEW YORK AVE V BROOKLYN COOP 100 NY NY WESTERLEIGH STAT IS COOP 100 NJ LITTLE FALLS COOP 100 NJ WANAQUE RAYMOND DAM COOP 99 NY SUFFERN COOP 99 CT DANBURY COOP 99 NY WESTCHESTER CO AP WBAN 99 NY SETAUKET STRONG COOP 99 CT GROTON COOP 99 NJ CANOE BROOK COOP 99 NY LAGUARDIA AIRPORT WBAN 99 NY WALDEN 1 ESE COOP 98 NY CARMEL COOP 98 CT NORWICH PUBLIC UTILITY PLANT COOP 98 NY MIDDLETOWN 2 NW COOP 97 NY MINEOLA COOP 97 NY YORKTOWN HEIGHTS 1W COOP 97 CT NEW HAVEN TWEED AP WBAN 97 CT MOUNT CARMEL COOP 97 NY RIVERHEAD RESEARCH FARM COOP 97 NJ JERSEY CITY COOP 97 NY PATCHOGUE 2 N COOP 96 NY ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP WBAN 96 NJ CHARLOTTEBURG RESERVOIR COOP 95 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 95 NY PORT JERVIS COOP 95 CT PUTNAM LAKE COOP 94 NY GREENPORT POWER HOUSE COOP 94 CT IGOR I SIKORSKY MEMORIAL AIRPORT WBAN 93 CT WESTBROOK COOP 93 NY BRIDGEHAMPTON COOP 93 NY MONTAUK COOP 93 NY WANTAGH CEDAR CREEK COOP 91 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 07:05 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 07:05 PM 3 minutes ago, bluewave said: That was in the old days before they put the ASOS under the trees in Central Park. Monthly Data for July 1977 for Upton NY NWS CWAClick column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. NY NEW YORK LAUREL HILL COOP 104 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 104 NY DOBBS FERRY-ARDSLEY COOP 103 CT NORWALK GAS PLANT COOP 102 NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 102 NJ TETERBORO AIRPORT WBAN 102 NY WEST POINT COOP 101 NY VANDERBILT MUSEUM COOP 101 NJ ESSEX FELLS SERVICE BLDG COOP 101 NY MARYKNOLL COOP 100 CT STAMFORD 5 N COOP 100 NY SCARSDALE COOP 100 CT NEW HAVEN COOP 100 CT MIDDLETOWN 4 W COOP 100 NJ PLAINFIELD COOP 100 NJ CRANFORD COOP 100 NY NEW YORK AVE V BROOKLYN COOP 100 NY NY WESTERLEIGH STAT IS COOP 100 NJ LITTLE FALLS COOP 100 NJ WANAQUE RAYMOND DAM COOP 99 NY SUFFERN COOP 99 CT DANBURY COOP 99 NY WESTCHESTER CO AP WBAN 99 NY SETAUKET STRONG COOP 99 CT GROTON COOP 99 NJ CANOE BROOK COOP 99 NY LAGUARDIA AIRPORT WBAN 99 NY WALDEN 1 ESE COOP 98 NY CARMEL COOP 98 CT NORWICH PUBLIC UTILITY PLANT COOP 98 NY MIDDLETOWN 2 NW COOP 97 NY MINEOLA COOP 97 NY YORKTOWN HEIGHTS 1W COOP 97 CT NEW HAVEN TWEED AP WBAN 97 CT MOUNT CARMEL COOP 97 NY RIVERHEAD RESEARCH FARM COOP 97 NJ JERSEY CITY COOP 97 NY PATCHOGUE 2 N COOP 96 NY ISLIP-LI MACARTHUR AP WBAN 96 NJ CHARLOTTEBURG RESERVOIR COOP 95 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 95 NY PORT JERVIS COOP 95 CT PUTNAM LAKE COOP 94 NY GREENPORT POWER HOUSE COOP 94 CT IGOR I SIKORSKY MEMORIAL AIRPORT WBAN 93 CT WESTBROOK COOP 93 NY BRIDGEHAMPTON COOP 93 NY MONTAUK COOP 93 NY WANTAGH CEDAR CREEK COOP 91 JFK, only 95, how is that possible. In July 2011 when NYC hit 104, JFK was at 103. The reason for relocating the ASOS to under the trees was to keep people from stealing the weather equipment? It doesn't make any sense why they would put it there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted Wednesday at 07:20 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 07:20 PM 18 minutes ago, LibertyBell said: JFK, only 95, how is that possible. In July 2011 when NYC hit 104, JFK was at 103. The reason for relocating the ASOS to under the trees was to keep people from stealing the weather equipment? It doesn't make any sense why they would put it there. There was a sea breeze in July 1977 along the South Shore which kept JFK cooler. But the South Shore was warmer with the late August 1973 heatwave. Those were the two big 1970s heatwaves. Monthly Data for August 1973 for Upton NY NWS CWAClick column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. NY MINEOLA COOP 101 NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 100 NY NEW YORK LAUREL HILL COOP 100 NJ PATERSON COOP 100 NJ JERSEY CITY COOP 99 NY NEW YORK AVE V BROOKLYN COOP 99 NJ TETERBORO AIRPORT WBAN 99 NJ LITTLE FALLS COOP 99 NJ CRANFORD COOP 98 NY NY WESTERLEIGH STAT IS COOP 98 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 98 NY WEST POINT COOP 98 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 98 NJ PLAINFIELD COOP 97 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
psv88 Posted Wednesday at 08:15 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 08:15 PM 53 today Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 09:07 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 09:07 PM 1 hour ago, bluewave said: There was a sea breeze in July 1977 along the South Shore which kept JFK cooler. But the South Shore was warmer with the late August 1973 heatwave. Those were the two big 1970s heatwaves. Monthly Data for August 1973 for Upton NY NWS CWAClick column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. NY MINEOLA COOP 101 NJ NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 100 NY NEW YORK LAUREL HILL COOP 100 NJ PATERSON COOP 100 NJ JERSEY CITY COOP 99 NY NEW YORK AVE V BROOKLYN COOP 99 NJ TETERBORO AIRPORT WBAN 99 NJ LITTLE FALLS COOP 99 NJ CRANFORD COOP 98 NY NY WESTERLEIGH STAT IS COOP 98 NY NY CITY CENTRAL PARK WBAN 98 NY WEST POINT COOP 98 NY JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 98 NJ PLAINFIELD COOP 97 wow I'm really going to miss that Mineola COOP =\ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
donsutherland1 Posted Wednesday at 09:33 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 09:33 PM Tomorrow will be another cool day with highs in the upper 50s to near 60°. Afterward, it will turn warmer. Saturday could be unseasonably warm with readings soaring into the 70s in the New York City area. Some of the warmer spots in New Jersey could approach or reach 80°. The mild weather will continue into at least the start of next week. It will also remain mainly dry into at least early next week. The ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly was +1.2°C and the Region 3.4 anomaly was -0.1°C for the week centered around April 9. For the past six weeks, the ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly has averaged +1.25°C and the ENSO Region 3.4 anomaly has averaged +0.33°C. Neutral ENSO conditions will likely continue through at least late spring. Early indications are that summer 2025 will be warmer than normal in the New York City and Philadelphia areas. The potential exists for a much warmer than normal summer (more than 1° above normal). The SOI was -3.17 today. The preliminary Arctic Oscillation (AO) was -0.671 today. Based on sensitivity analysis applied to the latest guidance, there is an implied 57% probability that New York City will have a cooler than normal April (1991-2020 normal). April will likely finish with a mean temperature near 53.1° (0.6° below normal). 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MANDA Posted Wednesday at 11:09 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 11:09 PM 5 hours ago, MJO812 said: This weather is beautiful Have to disagree. It sucks. It was mostly cloudy, windy and temperatures in my part of NJ only got into the m/u 40's. This weather blows chunks for mid April. The constant wind is beyond tiresome. 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brian5671 Posted Wednesday at 11:41 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 11:41 PM 31 minutes ago, MANDA said: Have to disagree. It sucks. It was mostly cloudy, windy and temperatures in my part of NJ only got into the m/u 40's. This weather blows chunks for mid April. The constant wind is beyond tiresome. Today might be the coldest day for awhile 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MANDA Posted Thursday at 12:12 AM Share Posted Thursday at 12:12 AM 29 minutes ago, Brian5671 said: Today might be the coldest day for awhile Likely yes. Thankfully. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roger Smith Posted Thursday at 01:06 AM Share Posted Thursday at 01:06 AM 10 hours ago, LibertyBell said: Also, it's times like this that I wish for data going further back for NYC, I wonder if NYC got any snow in this 1849 snowstorm? Historical: 1849: Charleston, South Carolina recorded their latest freeze ever with a temperature of 32 degrees while 6 inches of snow fell at Wilmington, North Carolina. Snow fell as far south as Milledgeville, Georgia. A damaging hard freeze occurred from Texas to Georgia devastating the cotton crop. I found a wx map for Apr 16 1849, looks like NYC may have seen some snow or sleet showers in a very cool NW flow, but the s.e. coastal snow was associated with a low off the coast that did not move n.e., it weakened and the cold n.w. flow continued over NYC region for two days. Probably 4/16/1849 was close to 39/29 .05" prec 0.1" snow. NW 20-35. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Monty Posted Thursday at 01:31 AM Share Posted Thursday at 01:31 AM 24 minutes ago, Roger Smith said: I found a wx map for Apr 16 1849, looks like NYC may have seen some snow or sleet showers in a very cool NW flow, but the s.e. coastal snow was associated with a low off the coast that did not move n.e., it weakened and the cold n.w. flow continued over NYC region for two days. Probably 4/16/1849 was close to 39/29 .05" prec 0.1" snow. NW 20-35. Where do you find something like that? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
winterwarlock Posted Thursday at 03:34 AM Share Posted Thursday at 03:34 AM This has been a hellish spring. The cold wind and constantly dreary skies have been relentless. Every week people keeping saying this is the last cold day wash rinse repeat the following week. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
winterwarlock Posted Thursday at 03:34 AM Share Posted Thursday at 03:34 AM 3 hours ago, Brian5671 said: Today might be the coldest day for awhile This was said the last 4 weeks 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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