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How did you do in 1947-48, it was NYC's snowiest winter on record and had the longest duration snowcover until 1995-96 and 2010-11 came along.
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I mean I’m watching for flakes, ha. I’d take a couple degrees cooler through the column. The old Will adage that once below 45F, start rooting for 32F.
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Lows;EWR: 39 (2002)NYC: 38 (1976)LGA: 43 (1976)JFK: 42 (2002) Tony did you notice this too? It can't be a coincidence, obviously the same pattern repeated almost exactly in 1976 and 2002. Record heat on the same dates in April followed by record cold on the same date in May !! Obviously 2002 had a much hotter summer, but April and May were clones of each other in 1976 and 2002 !!
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Records:Highs:EWR: 98 (1962)NYC: 99 (1962)LGA: 96 (2017)JFK: 92 (2017)Lows;EWR: 39 (2002)NYC: 38 (1976)LGA: 43 (1976)JFK: 42 (2002) The extremes here are absolutely wild from nearly 100 to the 30s. What's ironic about 2002 is we had a historic heatwave (matching 1976) in April and then this historic cold and then a hot summer right after this. Looks like 1976 and 2002 were alike in the historic cold after historic heat but the summers were completely different!
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Loving the autumn-like weather this coming week!
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1962: A heat wave gripped the East Coast with high temperatures reaching 99° at New York City, 98° at Baltimore, MD and 96° at Philadelphia, PA (all either broke or tied records for the month of May.). Other daily records included: Greenville-Spartanburg, SC: 99°, Newark, NJ: 98°, Concord, NH: 97°, Allentown, PA: 97°, Richmond, VA: 97°, Athens, GA: 97°, Columbus, GA: 97°, Philadelphia, PA: 96°, Atlantic City, NJ: 96°, Roanoke, VA: 96°, LaGuardia, NY: 95°, Harrisburg, PA: 95°, Wilmington, DE: 95°, Charlotte, NC: 95°, Raleigh, NC: 95°, Nashville, TN: 95°, Hartford, CT: 94°, Lynchburg, VA: 93 °F. so close to getting our earliest 100 degree reading in May 1962!
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2025-2026 ENSO
michsnowfreak replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in Weather Forecasting and Discussion
I have looked into some of the eastern winters of the 1940s to compare to the meek ones we had here, and Id have to say its probably the most different of any decade. Those winters sucked here. But I think a lot of it was due to dry weather and bad luck. Though there were some mild winters in the 1940s, the decade was easily colder than either the 1930s or the 1950s. But it sucked for snow. It is by far Detroits least snowiest decade on record (avg 28.7"). We had 3 major ice storms but no memorable snowstorms. In terms of the WWII years, 1942-43 was the best winter of the decade. 1944-45 was cold and white but very dry. 1941-42 and 1943-44 were very bare winters overall. -
Unmitigated disaster that is
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50s with 40MPH winds. Yeah not bad out lol.
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Cold. 3,600ft... 31F 2,600ft... 35F 1,500ft... 39F
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I like the warmer Septembers and Octobers because I don't want to turn my heat on until November.
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1969-05-31 99 wild I didn't know JFK came so close to hitting 100 on the last day in May 1969, the 1960s were some period for extremes lol.
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but the wind has mainly been offshore this spring, no? why are the temps capped in the low 80s? Central Park hasn't hit 100 in a long time too-- I think the last time was 2013 or was it 2012?
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2025-2026 ENSO
michsnowfreak replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in Weather Forecasting and Discussion
The climate has never been "stable" here and many other places. Stable is a place like San Diego or Barrow. As a matter of fact, Ive yet to see a more erratic grouping of winters than we had from 1875-1882 (see bottom). Just because the globe is warmer than it was, the actual climate was anything but stable from 1880 to 1870 here. The year-to-year and decade-to-decade variability always has and always will exist. If there is to be any longterm significant change in snowfall in the Great Lakes region, we will need a lot more years of data to come. Winter avg temp at Detroit (current avg is 28.4F for reference): 1874-75: 19.1F 1875-76: 31.0F 1876-77: 23.5F 1877-78: 31.5F 1878-79: 21.8F 1879-80: 32.5F 1880-81: 21.8F 1881-82: 37.0F (warmest on record to this day) -
We are flipping over to snow flakes at 3,000ft on the snow cam. 39F in the base area with rain.
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September is basically an extension of summer now.
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and last night and today are extremely windy, something no one predicted!
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a lot of people go to the beach just to sit in the sand.
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Maybe the extremely cold and stormy 1993-94 winter was a holdover from Pinatubo?
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2025-2026 ENSO
40/70 Benchmark replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in Weather Forecasting and Discussion
There is a lot more variance in relation to the impact of volcanic eriptions that folks realize.....depends where they are and how strong. The very strong PV of the early 90s was likely a byproduct of Pinatubo. -
2025-2026 ENSO
40/70 Benchmark replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in Weather Forecasting and Discussion
I agree with this. -
2025-2026 ENSO
PhiEaglesfan712 replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in Weather Forecasting and Discussion
1976-77 was dry, but one that turned very warm during the spring. 1978-79 was a very wet winter, but that followed a very dry fall. 1979-80 and 1980-81 were very dry winters. 79-80, I think, is the least snowy winter in Boston. -
2025-2026 ENSO
40/70 Benchmark replied to 40/70 Benchmark's topic in Weather Forecasting and Discussion
Eh....from your area to NNE, yes....I hope to break even...def. bad for those south of me.