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  2. Some Memorial Day weekends are hot, others are cold...
  3. Unfortunately I got screwed with that too. Only a trace in the rain gauge. Congrats to Martinsburg I think. Rain magnet needs some further calibration.
  4. Warmest NJ highs from this afternoon.
  5. Habanero is the worst. Heat with no flavor.
  6. Let’s go Sabres! Although whoever wins tonight, I’ll be rooting for against CAR.
  7. TBH, I think I would bet on this season being more impactful for the US than last season.
  8. That isn't what I said. However, I will discount a winter that is anything like 2009-2010 this coming season. Does that mean very little snowfall? No, not necessarily, but it will be warm.
  9. Looks like tonight will be night number 4 with storms dying out before reaching here. Hopefully meaningful rains return in June.
  10. I wouldn’t say that coming 1 degree short of the all-time record high for May is “normal”
  11. Yea, this one is developing as a “Costero”/coastal (east-based, EP) El Niño event. According to the South American Mets, we haven’t seen anything like this since 1997
  12. 10-11 was great. 96-97 naso much but had the April fools blizzard.
  13. How did those 2 following winters turn out? Lol
  14. Nice heavy downpour with some gusty wind. High was 93.
  15. Ai models keep weekend shunted south which makes sense with that strong HP to the north. Bet we’ll see ops follow suit this week
  16. My friend had a bottle of the Pepper X sauce. Surprisingly, not nearly as hot as I feared. I actually enjoyed it, in small amounts of course. It had a decent flavor to it too.
  17. ^You were right about it shifting east, like other Strong Nino's. I have seen cold pools get stuck in the middle-west for the last few years, and kind of thought this year could follow the same trend with Nino 4 getting warm so early.
  18. Nice windy rain cooling things down to 70 degrees .10 in the bucket
  19. From a South American Met: ^ Translation: “This is the magnitude of how deep—and therefore how long-lasting—the warming of the ocean floor near our coasts is. We're talking about 100 meters or more in its most significant part and nearly 500 in its verifiable depth. All that warm anomaly is advancing toward the South American coastal edge. There's little the APS can do, as noted (APS=South Pacific Anticyclone) We haven't seen anything like this since 1997. This is one of the reasons, perhaps the most relevant one, why there's so much information about a major #ElNiño event on the horizon.”
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