They are already saying she was overheating. It's fucking 75 and beautiful out.
EDIT: Turns out I was right the first time:
https://www.wunderground.com/q/zmw:10005.2.99999
8:25 am it was 75 degrees on Wall Street and there was a 4 MPH breeze from the west across the Hudson River.
Low humidity as well: 42%
It is actually considered worse to depart early in this industry.
Japanese rail company apologized for departing 20s early.
> Weather Underground
I fucking love that website. Great data, lots of choices, easy to understand, even gives doppler radar maps so you can eyeball when rain is going to start/stop at you. Haven't tried any mobile apps for them though.
The past two winters in california have been rough. Hot, dry, and enormous fires. Humidity is currently 4% where I am. That is not a typo. Winter is usually our wet season. Fire season used to be in Fall. Now it last through Dec.
California has suffered six of its top twenty most destructive fires on record over the past two years
99% of the cancelations and delays were localized around DFW (Source: https://citizenfreepress.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/American-Airlines.jpg)
There were severe thunderstorms in Dallas the evening of 10/13 (Source: https://www.wunderground.com/history/daily/KDFW/date/2021-10-13)
2018 Oct 1-10 were in the 80s
2017 stayed mid 70s-80s through the 14th
Going back to 2006, it didn't happen. Occasional 80s and one or two 90s, but not a long stretch like this.
It's the way things are now.
Only one of the two in the picture was killed, but a third guy out of frame was killed too, according to this.
Having grown up in Alaska, there is definitely a different in climate now than there was in the 80's.
Pretty interesting to look at the differences and extremes from here https://www.wunderground.com/history/monthly/us/ak/fairbanks/PAFA/date/2019-6?cm_ven=localwx_history comparing January temps in the 80's to what they are now. Make note of the more regular scale changes as you get into the 2010's.
The world just had its 16 month in a row of record breaking heat, and we're being force fed mud-slinging politics by our media.
We fiddle while Rome burns.
50.1°C in Pritchard, Kanada:
https://www.wunderground.com/dashboard/pws/ITHOMPSO13
51.1°C in Conell, Washington
https://www.wunderground.com/dashboard/pws/KWACONNE8
Der Wert für Kanada (falls er anerkannt wird) wäre damit ein neuer Rekord! Der alte Rekord hatte immerhin .... googelt 1 ganzen Tag Bestand!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_extreme_temperatures_in_Canada
Mt Baker and Mt Rainier in Washington have the highest (recorded) in North America, but there's likely places in Alaska that are more, but not measured.
99% of the cancelations and delays were localized around DFW (Source: https://citizenfreepress.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/American-Airlines.jpg)
There were severe thunderstorms in Dallas the evening of 10/13 (Source: https://www.wunderground.com/history/daily/KDFW/date/2021-10-13)
Saturday set a record for highest temp on record for that day in Boulder. https://www.wunderground.com/history/daily/KBDU/date/2018-9-15?req_city=Boulder&req_state=CO&req_statename=Colorado&reqdb.zip=80301&reqdb.magic=1&reqdb.wmo=99999
The 1913 record is widely disputed.
The 2nd highest was set in 1931 in Tunisia at 131 degrees. Death Valley could hit 132 by the end of the weekend, making it arguably the new highest.
https://www.wunderground.com/q/zmw:10005.2.99999
Wall Street. 75-79 Degrees when she collapsed.
Humidity is under 40%.
https://www.weather.gov/arx/heat_index
Temp 75 Degrees, Humidity 40%, feels like 74 Degrees.
Temp 80 Degrees, Humidity 40%, feels like 79 Degrees.
No excuses.
"Precipitation Whiplash" is in store for California. It's historically the West Coast's normal weather pattern. We're going back to that. We need to increase our water-holding capacity and the resilence of our existant water holding systems.
The past two winters in california have been rough. Hot, dry, high winds, and enormous fires. Humidity is currently 4% where I am. That is not a typo. Winter is usually our wet season. Fire season used to be in Fall. Now it last through Dec.
California has suffered six of its top twenty most destructive fires on record over the past two years. Edit this is now out of date. It is now 7 of the top 20 after this fire.
A lot of old records are like that. For example, until 2012 the official world record was thought to be 58˚C (136˚F) from a location in Libya in 1922, even though that figure did not make sense with respect to the data from surrounding areas and the thermometer was not sited properly.
My personal feeling is that a lot of these old records are invalid, but attempting to eliminate these old unreliable extremes would result in accusations of political motivations.
100% humidity is, at any temperature, the dew point where moisture from the air begins actively condensing into water. The highest recorded dew point in US history is 88 degrees (source: https://www.wunderground.com/blog/weatherhistorian/record-dew-point-temperatures.html ) so it seems unlikely that you've experienced a 95+ degree dew point in South Carolina.
Maybe you weren't quite at 100% relative humidity at 95+ degrees? There's an inverse relation between temperature and relative humidity, the higher the temperature the lower the relative humidity, so while it's possible to experience a 100% relative humidity day on cool, 40 degree, foggy day, it's almost impossible as temperatures go above 80 degrees.
24-hour Precipitation Records by country:
Alvin, TX, USA: 42 inches
Voorthuisen, Netherlands: 8.19 inches
https://www.wunderground.com/blog/weatherhistorian/national-24hour-precipitation-records.html
Anyone know what the weather was like at the time?
edit: I forgot we live in a world where you can just look this kind of thing up. There was a little over a mm apparently. Not exactly a storm, but enough to say it rained when he died.
If you go to wunderground for SF, you can look at average speeds for one year and compare to this year.
I just did for May, in 2020 the average max speed was about 22 mph, and in 2021 the average max speed for May is closer to 32 mph.
TrustArc verkauft solche Banner als Service an Betreiber.
Auf ihrer eigenen Website geht das übrigens innerhalb von Millisekunden direkt mit einem Knopf ... mmmmh
Für Neugierige: https://www.wunderground.com
https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/Which-Kills-More-People-Extreme-Heat-or-Extreme-Cold
Article buries the lead at the bottom, but expect 4300 extra deaths from heat a year (net of reduction in cold deaths) from 2050 to 2090 in the 49 cities that hold 33% of the US population. 4300 x 3 is 12,900 deaths a year (net) for the US as a whole unless there is a reason for cities to be different (which they may be, more asphalt absorbing heat but more AC and hospitals).
I got my first iPhone in 2009 and have been loyally buying a new one every 2 years since. I've always been very active in the jailbreaking/modding community, and one of the things that made me switch was how heavily apple is cracking down on jailbreaking recently. Long story short, I'm very very pleased with the fact that 90% of the things I had to jailbreak to do on my iPhone are available on stock android. Love it.
Made with:
On a OnePlus 3T if anyone cares.
Also here is a link to the .klwp file. Note that I'm using the WeatherUnderground API to pull weather data, not KLWP's default weather stuff, so you'll need a wunderground ANVIL API Key (they're free to get) for it to work. Once you have the key, just go to the global titled "wu" and put the key where it says "YOURAPIKEYHERE" and it should all work beautifully. PM me with and questions if that doesn't make sense.
The Weather Underground Wundermap ties together a bazillion of those home weather stations and puts it all on a map in real time. A lot of the weather stations have webcams, too.
Trump wears a wool sport coat in 90 degree / 90% humidity Louisiana while handing items from a truck - SUPER dying, I guess.
The American model actually needs some major investment to be updated.
Currently, the best model is the European one.
> ECMWF: The European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF) model is the premier global model in the world for medium range weather forecasting in the mid-latitudes. In 2006, the ECMWF made improvements that starting producing very accurate hurricanes forecasts.
You can read more about hurricane modeling and forecasts here: https://www.wunderground.com/hurricane/models.asp
It didn't happen. It was recorded in error.
Original Article reveals that it was a false report.
>Update: Paul Iniguez of the Phoenix National Weather Service office has done more detailed analysis on the July 24, 2018 rain event at Imperial, and has concluded: "Did quite a bit of analysis on this. Based on all the data (radar, satellite, soundings, area obs), this looks like an error with the present wx sensor. I really don't think this is a new record." The present weather sensor is what measures the presence of rain, when only a trace of rain is reported, and it is possible for this sensor to get fooled. In particular, there was not significant cloud cover apparent on satellite imagery during the first hour that rain was reported at Imperial, though clouds did move in after that. In light of Paul's analysis, we have to regard the world-record hottest rainfall event at Imperial, California as questionable.
>July 24, 2018 was one of the hottest days in California history, as a searing heat wave of rare intensity, even for the Desert Southwest, sent temperatures soaring to near-record levels. Death Valley hit 127°F, just 2° short of tying the all-time world record for hottest reliably recorded temperature; Palm Springs hit 122°F, just 1° short of tying its all-time record; and Imperial, California topped out at 121°F, their hottest day since 124°F was measured on July 28, 1995.
Better to compare to Siberia.
-43ºF right now: https://www.wunderground.com/weather/ru/amakinskiy/71.01999664,114.37999725
​
On this day last year, it was 77 degrees. Man, what a historical bummer this spring has been.
The past two winters in california have been rough. Hot, dry, high winds, and enormous fires. Humidity is currently 4% where I am. That is not a typo. Winter is usually our wet season. Fire season used to be in Fall. Now it last through Dec.
California has suffered six of its top twenty most destructive fires on record over the past two years. Edit this is now out of date. It is now 7 of the top 20 after this fire.
Year to date precipitation (2018) 49.22"
Normal precipitation (to date) 35.84"
Average per year (total) 41.45"
California has suffered six of its top twenty most destructive fires on record over the past two years
And this one may still get much worse
Even a magnitude 8 mega-colossal eruption (like the Yellowstone Caldera exploding) would not stop global warming:
To put up some numbers, The high was 83 and she fainted at 9:30am.
She's an old lady under a lot of stress so fucking whatever, man, but the depths of delusion and psychopathy of the hillary people were truly astounding.
As it turns out, the Mississippi is similarly inclined to change course, but the US Army Corps of Engineers built a structure to keep it from doing so. Weather Underground's Category 6 blog has a few articles on the structure, and they're fascinating reads:
America's Achilles' Heel: the Mississippi River's Old River Control Structure
Escalating Floods Putting Mississippi River’s Old River Control Structure at Risk
If the Old River Control Structure Fails: A Catastrophe With Global Impact
The urban heat island can be really strong in Gainesville, Florida. We get a lot of sunny winter days, so the temperature can change by over five degrees just going to a different block.
I found a really cool map on Weather Underground that allows you to see the urban heat islands for yourself. It displays data from personal weather stations, and the ones in cities are often much warmer than the ones in rural areas.
I believe he is guilty but one thing I want to point out is that according to weather history it was actually very warm on December 8 and about 55F in the middle of the night on the 9th. While that would be way to chilly for me to wear shorts outside, Michael did get that detail correct. And if it was 75F during the day, it makes sense if he says he was wearing shorts, he could have had them from earlier.
The high in Houston was 71. It was still in the 60s during the first half.
https://www.wunderground.com/forecast/us/tx/houston?cm_ven=localwx_10day
Now you have a player in an arctic jacket trying to patrol the sidelines while bench warmers are wearing short sleeves in the off chance they are needed for action. Even when temps drop well below freezing coaches tend to wear relatively normal clothing so that it looks like they are with the players. An injured player in a parka in 60 degree weather with a minor injury doesn't tell the team the right message.
> I'm not taking down my jurry rigged airconditioning set up until august is over.
Might want to hold out till mid-September especially if the smoke rolls in and you can't open up your windows.
https://www.wunderground.com/history/monthly/us/or/portland/KPDX/date/2020-9
It will decay from a hurricane to a post-tropical cyclone in the next 24 hours (as your NHC link specifically shows).
Ex-hurricanes that became strong post-tropical cyclones have hit the UK on multiple occasions (Bill, Alberto, Gordon and Helene is just the last 15 years). And regular old winter storms frequently bring hurricane-force winds to the UK.
If we're using an obscure definition for "our waters", the UK was hit by several major hurricanes this year - in British territories of the Carribbean.
Columbia had nothing to do with cold weather. Temperature in Titusville at the time of launch was over 60 degrees. Launch occurred on an average January day. The foam that impacted the orbiter (not ice) was likely liberated due to thermal cycles on the tank cracking the foam; this could have occurred in any weather.
https://www.wunderground.com/q/zmw:10005.2.99999
Wall Street. 75-79 Degrees when she collapsed.
Humidity is under 40%.
https://www.weather.gov/arx/heat_index
Temp 75 Degrees, Humidity 40%, feels like 74 Degrees.
Temp 80 Degrees, Humidity 40%, feels like 79 Degrees.
Beautiful day.
It depends (to an extent) on what part of the city you live in. Santa Monica is almost always cooler; downtown is punishingly hot in the summer.
Enter your zip code here. Then scroll down to see months at a glance and historical weather data.
Oh, and September is usually worse. It’s hot, it’s bone dry, and the Santa Ana winds kick in, which makes the dryness and heat even worse. (Santa Anas also push polluted air toward the coast, so be aware of that.)
The left-wing group The Weather Underground or the weather website The Weather Underground? Not trying to be snarky, honest question. And also, I have no idea why anyone would be painting either of those logos under bridges, sorry friend.
Dr Jeff Masters disagrees.
>Sea surface temperatures (SSTs) are near 29°C (84°F) across the eastern Gulf, which is 1 - 2°C (2 - 4°F) above average for this time of year. Even though it is early October, no cold fronts have yet chilled the waters near the central Gulf Coast, so very warm surface waters are in place to support Michael right up to landfall.
https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/Category-3-Michael-Intensifying-En-Route-Florida-Panhandle
<strong>WUNDERGROUND Personal Weather station KLAGOLDE1 at Port Fourchon.</strong>
Air pressure rises to 939 millibars.
Lowest at 27.65 mm/hG
Last time I update this station. The pressure will really only go uphill from here on out.
We've been breaking records consistently for the last couple years.
https://www.ktnv.com/news/historic-stretch-of-august-heat-expected-in-las-vegas-this-weekend
From last year, and there are some from every year for those previous to it.
Also, https://www.wunderground.com/history/monthly/us/nv/north-las-vegas/KVGT/date/2015-7
I just looked at the monthly data for the July and August months for the last 10 years, I don't have the time to crunch the actual numbers but just comparing the charts you can see we have been hitting higher temps more frequently as the years pass by.
>In a non-warming world the distribution of temperature records would be evenly spread over the last 150 year.
This is not true for a few reasons.
Temporal distributions of records can give us some information but they must be interpreted cautiously.
Go here:
https://www.wunderground.com/radar/radblast.asp?ID=wkr
In the drop down box, change it from "base reflectivity" (normal radar that sees rain) to "base velocity". If you know how to read it, it shows you wind speed, wind direction, and changes in wind direction (albeit at a massive scale because this is not a precision readout). Generally the wind is moving from the green area to the red area.
If it is Laramie, tell her it was - 40 degrees Fahrenheit there not very long ago, with no wind chill.
75F, feels like 78F, 52% humidity, overcast/cloudy. And that's right now, undoubtedly lower when this happened, which was 3? hours ago.
84 is the high, which is mid/late afternoon, this is morning.
>https://www.wunderground.com/history/daily/KJFK/date/2001-9-10
Yes, that is strange and definitely inaccurate. This weather .com article mentions the storms the night prior as well. I remember it as clear as day, there were so many planes stuck on the tarmac that night and were all in line to get out.
<strong>WUNDERGROUND Personal Weather station KLAGOLDE1 at Port Fourchon.</strong>
Air pressure drops to 949 millibars.
Holy crap, sub-950 is reached and the storm's barely made landfall.
My usual website is now saying 106. I've lived in a number of places where 100 degree summer days were normal, but that was one of the main reasons I didn't stay in any of them, preferring the cool and the clouds. Needless to say, I'm not liking this.
Anyone who has domestic animals that can't be brought into their house might want to think about what they'll need to avoid baking. Most can't sweat very effectively, if at all, and not all pens include shady areas.
In Miami here, actually southwest Miami in Kendall, here is my weather station if you guys want to check the rain and wind speeds. https://www.wunderground.com/personal-weather-station/dashboard?ID=KFLMIAMI322#history
So it's August 1st in Austin. He started shooting around noonish. The high for the day was 98°F(36.6°C). Who's lying on the ground faking it in 98° heat?
I checked out the weather, and currently it's 42 F in one place and -62 in another.
It looks just awful at-62 F
"Summit Camp, also Summit Station, is a year-round research station on the apex of the Greenland Ice Sheet. Its coordinates are variable, since the ice is moving. The coordinates provided here are as of July 2009."
Not sure why you're getting downvoted. Dr. Jeff Masters over on Weather Underground hasn't, given current models, ruled out a low-end Cat 4.
https://www.wunderground.com/history/airport/KVGT/2018/5/18/DailyHistory.html
Mean Temperature 77 °F
Max Temperature 88 °F
Min Temperature 65 °F
So... 88 deg at ~4pm (hottest time of the day) and decreasing slowly until sunset (~8pm)
then it will drop 2-3 degrees every hour to
65 deg at ~5:30am (when EDC ends and roughly around when the sun rises and temps start to climb again)
Wunderground predicting over 11 inches of rain through Tuesday.
EDIT: Updated forecast now only 8 inches.
Actually, it is about the same. Rainfall this month wasn't that much different from Dec 2014 or 2015, and most likely going to be lower than 2012 and 2013.
Rainfall was particularly heavy in the last couple of days, getting around 50mm in a span of 2 days, but there have been about 1-2 instances like this almost every year, the most recent was in February of this year..
To be frank both Anies and Sandi were dealing with trivial issues in the last month. This is typical elite Pribumi arrogance. IF you want get rid of flooding in Jakarta bulldoze 50% of the housing in Jakarta and put everyone in apartments, and make all the land that is free will be turned into green space.
In Indonesia, there is a lot of bad science and economics about apartment blocks. Generally, apartment blocks are more environmentally friendly than the suburban sprawl we have in Jakarta.
There is a strong prejudice against apartment in Indonesia in many segments of Indonesian society. Jakarta 3.5 times as densely populated as cities in China like Shanghai or Guangzhou. This prejudice was showly when the river bank slums were cleared, when people started blaming malls and apartment blocks for the flooding. First off malls make up a very small % of the total land area in Jakarta, and apartment allow more greenspace.
> it was below 70 at that time of the day
It was 78-82F at that time of the day, and 50-80% humidity. But same thing, right?
Tear gas canisters get very hot and can cause fires in some circumstances. That's why you see rioters and protesters use oven mits and tools like lacrosse sticks to throw them back at police. That's not what happened at Waco though.
That's not what the recordings say. Even if it was though, that wouldn't delete the rest of the evidence. Tear gas is not flammable, the fires started deep in the compound, survivor testimony says the cultists started the fires, and there was no sudden explosion as would be expected if flammable gas mixed with oxygen spread until it met an ignition source.
But the nail in the coffin that proves you're not just wrong but making things up wholesale is that day's weather. No one was heating fires on an 80 degree day in a compound with no chimneys.
California has suffered six of its top twenty most destructive fires on record over the past two years. Note this one week old article is now out of date. It is now 7 of the top 20 after this fire.
This year it only got to 72, and the highest it has ever gotten in Christmas in any year is 86.
Actually, the funny thing is it hasn’t gotten to 95 at all yet in 2018 in Orlando (you can toggle through previous months): https://www.wunderground.com/history/airport/KMCO/2018/6/21/MonthlyCalendar.html?req_city=Orlando%20International&req_state=FL&req_statename=&reqdb.zip=32827&reqdb.magic=6&reqdb.wmo=99999
These are MCO airport readings which are usually in line with the ghcnd data that is formally recorded.
I was skeptical but Weather Underground is predicting "Snow Showers" in the afternoon, too! Screen capture
It looks like some private weather stations that are listed on weather undergound have been able to stay functioning to at least some degree, and it's been interesting checking some of them out. This one from Bourg, LA, is really great. https://www.wunderground.com/dashboard/pws/KLABOURG19
I know PWS aren't the most accurate, but even still it's really interesting to see the immense pressure drop and the related precipitation and wind.
I found it pretty easy to read.
The interesting part to me is about how they predict what the highest wind speeds an area could be hit with over a 700 year period, for a 3 second gust. Obviously places like Miami and the southern tip, the Keys, and up to Tampa are rated for some very strong winds, along with the panhandle. Yet the armpit part of the state the crescent, their codes are barely rated good enough for a Cat 2.
There's more to it than just that, I actually haven't finished reading it lol but I wanted to jump in and link it. Either it's going to make people feel safer, or well not safe at all, depending on the location.
I'm over in the treasure coast area near Jupiter and PSL. But I haven't decided if I feel safer or not yet lol
This feels like a repeat of January 2019.
I bet we will get 6 -12 inches based on current forecasts. I’m inclined to believe that they are accurate since borderline rain/snow temperatures aren’t a major factor.
It's exactly that, a subtropical storm with hurricane-force winds. The terms tropical and subtropical when it comes to hurricanes doesn't signify if it's coming from the tropics or subtropics. They are classifications of types of storm organization (see here).
<strong>WUNDERGROUND Personal Weather station KLAGOLDE1 at Port Fourchon.</strong> While it doesn't give wind speeds, it is giving the air pressure level, which over there is currently at 976 millibars (at the edge of the eye).
It also updates very often, which is nice. It will be interesting to see how low air pressure goes here.
> While the storm poses no threat to land, it could become the 10th consecutive storm to grow to hurricane strength - a streak of intense systems that will tie a record last set in the late 1800s.
Thanks. I was wondering what record.
Because this is not the most tropical systems in a season. I remember the year they ran out of names in 2005 when there were 28 of them.
And it's not the latest tropical system as the 2005 season ended in January 2006.
Okay, so, if I did my math right (failure is always an option), the air pressure in Denver that day was 840.27 mb (sea level is 1013.25 mb). That would make the air density at a temperature of -14.4C (the average temperature of the day) 1.13 kg/m^(3).
At sea level pressure, air that is the same temperature will have a density of 1.36 kg/m^(3). At at a temperature of 20C (68F) and sea level pressure will have a density of 1.2 kg/m^(3). So, despite the cold air, it was still less dense then it would be on a room temperature day at sea level.
If you want to check my math (please do) you can get the weather conditions for Denver on December 8th, 2013 here. I wanted to use the average temperature of they day, because I don't know if this was a day game or a night game, but I also misread the average temperature of the day to be 6F rather than 8F as shown on that page, so I used 6F as the temperature (2 degrees Fahrenheit shouldn't make a huge difference).
The air pressure on that page is reduced to mean sea level. You can find a formula to convert it to the true air pressure here. Note that you can't use the calculator (it converts true pressure to sea level equivalent) you have to use the formula and do some algebra to convert from sea level to true air pressure (divide everything in the parenthesis over to the other side). Also, use Celsius for temperature, the conversion to Kelvin is built into that equation.
Finally, you can convert from pressure to density here.
... Why did I spend time doing this on a Friday night?
(posted this in a different thread)
he started at around 11am (10:49). this weather station is pretty close (and i think similar elevation) to where he was found: https://www.wunderground.com/dashboard/pws/KCAPLEAS218 . if you punch in july 10tht in the history menu, it shows temperatures around 87 at 10:50 rising to around 91-93 at 11:30, which is when he already was in trouble. then temperature stable for a while. not quite as hot yet, which makes it surprising he would deteriorate so quickly. would have to examine the terrain and his track more closely to guess how different the temperature there was relative to this station.
Bermuda Weather Services observations have been offline since approx 2AM. There is a personal weather station in Somerset (Western part of the island) still showing sustained over 90MPH and gusts over 100MPH. The storm must be ~50Miles north of us, but it's clearly strengthening as these are the strongest winds at our house since this thing started.
Here it says weather was around 0-1 celcius. Because shirts back then were more baggy, he probably threw on the training jersey as an under/warming shirt
>A portion of Florence’s remains could develop next week
>The remnants of Florence moved off the Northeast U.S. coast on Tuesday as an elongated zone of low pressure. As least two low pressure systems are expected to develop from Florence’s remnants, with one portion potentially transitioning to a tropical or subtropical storm by the middle of next week.
Dr. Jeff Masters updated his commentary at weatherunderground an hour ago. Here is the link https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/Cone-Florence-Takes-Aim-Southeast-US What is interesting is what he describes in the middle of the post (scroll down to the subhead Invest94L). He says he attended a presentation a few years ago where it was shown that a small area of low pressure was growing in front of Katrina, and that Katrina "ate" it and took in the energy and precipitation. The suggestion being, that this small, extra area of disturbed weather helped to ignite Katrina into the monster it became (in addition, of course to the warm Gulf water). There is now an area to the west of Florence which may do the same thing, unless the forecast tracks for both divurge. He says none of the models currently suggest that this will happen, but that it bears watching.
This will be the first September in 4 years that we have a day where the high doesnt hit 80 degrees.
Going back 10 years, we see a sub-80 high in 5 Septembers. We see multiple sub-80 highs in 2. And only in 2016 have we had consecutive days with sub-80 highs.
So this is relatively rare, and exciting. I hope its a sign of a colder fall/winter and not a random fluke like that one time in August where we randomly had a high in the 70s.
I really wonder how strong Haiyan really was. The satellite presentation was absolutely unbelievable. http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/131107_coms1_ir_haiyan_anim.gif Estimates put Haiyan at ~860mb pressure. https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/possible-new-world-record-lowest-barometric-pressure-860-mb
The first major rainband is hitting Apalachicola right now. Winds are gusting over 40 mph on the bridge to St. George Island. Storm surge is already ~2 feet above normal and rising. High tide is expected in 3 hours but the water will likely continue to rise through the day.
CYEG December 12 (-44°C) December 13 (-46°C)
I apologise for the "December 14, 2009". Looks like the temperature was actually recorded on the 13th.
Shows up here as well http://m.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=December+13+2009+Edmonton+temperature+ But had to expand stations as the airport is a fair distance away.
Of course you got down voted, but like you: I grew up in San Diego, albeit East County and had several no-school days due to the heat in the 80's.
If a school lacks Air Conditioning, they are required to shutdown due to public safety.
Further, this is our normal summertime and sorry, normal heat. Not new people; quit forgetting we have extremely hot summer days from August - November.
> We've already seen 11F high temperature this month; January 21, last Monday, was that cold. OSU did not close then.
OSU was closed on 1/21 for MLK day.
I'm a meteorologist, so naturally you piqued my interest and I had to check the weather on December 8/9 2001 (she was found dead very early on the 9th, correct?).
I agreed with your assessment that being out in shorts on a December evening in North Carolina seemed bizarre, but the evening of December 8th was, in fact, unusually warm with highs in the 70s, with many warm days preceding it.
I also checked on the hourly observations that day from the airport and saw that it remained in the 60s well into the evening. So it is not impossible to imagine someone being outside with shorts on that night.
>After a devastating 12-day rampage from the Caribbean to the U.S. Mid-Atlantic, Hurricane Matthew was reclassified as a post-tropical cyclone at 5 am EDT Sunday by the National Hurricane Center. Matthew wasn’t exactly slacking off--its top sustained winds remained 75 mph as of NHC’s 2 pm Sunday advisory--but it no longer had the warm core required for tropical-cyclone status. At 2 pm EDT, Matthew was located about 150 miles east of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, moving east at 15 mph. After days of computer models suggesting a potential loop back toward Florida, it now appears Matthew will continue eastward and gradually dissipate.
>It will be some time before we have a more complete sense of Matthew’s toll, but we already know that it is the deadliest hurricane in the Western Hemisphere since 2005. In Haiti, Matthew took at least 877 lives and and left entire towns across southern Haiti almost completely destroyed. A handful of deaths and significant damage were also reported in Cuba, Jamaica, The Bahamas, Colombia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and the Dominican Republic. After Haiti, it was the United States that took the worst of Matthew’s wrath. At least 16 U.S. deaths have been reported, and insured damage is expected to total at least $4 billion.
https://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=3474
Also, there is still significant flooding happening in the Carolinas, and people are still being rescued. Updated estimated amount of insured damages is over $6 billion.
It just lowered to category 3 for 8 AM Friday and now it's barely gonna be hitting Orlando if at all. A little disappointing tbh, but still great news nonetheless.
https://www.wunderground.com/hurricane/atlantic/2016/Hurricane-Matthew
Bad news for the Cape though:
FL Space Coast (including Melbourne and the Kennedy Space Center)
This is the most likely area to experience the highest winds from Matthew (see Figure 3 above) with Daytona Beach at high risk. The wind threat is especially serious at Cape Canaveral, which juts out into the Atlantic about 10-15 miles. If Matthew does make landfall along the Florida coast, this would be the most likely spot for it. Billions of dollars of facilities and equipment are at risk at Kennedy Space Center and nearby bases, which have never before experienced a major hurricane. Some of KSC’s older facilities were designed only to withstand Category 2 or 3 winds, while facilities built after Hurricane Andrew (1992) are designed to withstand Category 4 or 5 storms. Storm surge could reach 7 to 11 feet over the barrier islands of Volusia and Brevard counties. Matthew is likely to traverse the Space Coast during the overnight hours Thursday. (Ironically, the GOES-R satellite—originally scheduled to be airborne by now, where it would be gathering data on Matthew—is instead at the space center, awaiting its rescheduled launch in November.)
Edit: article published at 6:27 PM GMT on October 06, 2016
Edit2: formatting
<strong>WUNDERGROUND Personal Weather station KLAGOLDE1 at Port Fourchon.</strong>
Air pressure drops to 941 millibars.
How low can it go?
There were a few days in July that year in that area where the weather dipped into the low 50s or high 40s. Depending on the time of day, it's possible someone might need a coat.
The highest in California is actually 130°. The 134° is regarded as an error by meteorologists. Here's an interesting read on it.
> You are missing some good weather for it!!!
Tom Garabed is right. While the rest of the country is suffering from this sticky heat wave, Bonners Ferry is enjoying perfect building weather.
If they would just get to work, think what they could accomplish in that 10-day stretch.
The record for today was 72 (in 1985), and I think we are just going to tie it.
The record for 2/24 is 71 (in 1961) and it looks like we will smash that. Just 2 years ago it was -8 on 2/24.
I have found that weather underground (wunderground.com) has very accurate forecasting. They're saying mid-70's next week for Clairemont.
Your link says:
>The Week Ahead:
>Low pressure will weaken high pressure this weekend, pushing the high eastward as it weakens. This will enhance onshore wind flow in the region. This onshore flow will cool temperatures by several degrees in the inland communities this weekend. Marine layer will also strengthen this weekend, helping cool temperatures and increasing cloud persistence. Limited cloud clearing is expected in the afternoon for the inland areas. >Slight warming is expected for the earlier parts of the coming week as a weak high pressure passes through the region. Temperatures will
I think getting the weather report from tv is going away and to fight that trend the stations create more "click-baity" headlines to keep you interested.