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  2. All sunshine all the time for the past week! Very few clouds. .08" total the first 12 days of Sept. is .05% of the normal of 1.68". 44.4 this morning.
  3. The EPS longer range was too cool for yesterday. It originally had mid 70s from its older forecasts. But the warm spots it to the low 80s yesterday. Data for September 11, 2025 through September 11, 2025 Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending. SOMERSET AIRPORT WBAN 83 NEWARK LIBERTY INTL AP WBAN 82 Newark Area ThreadEx 82 TRENTON-MERCER AIRPORT WBAN 81 Trenton Area ThreadEx 81 MILLVILLE MUNICIPAL AIRPORT WBAN 80 ATLANTIC CITY INTL AP WBAN 80 TETERBORO AIRPORT WBAN 80 CALDWELL ESSEX COUNTY AP WBAN 80 SOUTH JERSEY REGIONAL AIRPORT WBAN 80 Atlantic City Area ThreadEx 80 PENNSAUKEN 1N COOP 80
  4. Are the overall anomalies being affected by higher low temps? I don't see any temps higher than upper 70s on the EPS.
  5. Played Brunswick GC in Maine yesterday. One of the nicest munis in New England. Playing Belgrade Lakes today which is supposed to be top 3 in Maine.
  6. This ice plant has been growing like crazy out of tiny crack in my patio all summer. It gets roasted in the sun and was amazed it made it through all that summer heat and drought. I have a few others in some beds so it must have spread naturally. Did a little research and these are some hardy plants. I have had them bloom into November a few times here. There is no need to fuss with ice plants to achieve vibrant blooms. This powerful, low-growing perennial will thrive and spread in full sun, intense heat, periods of drought, and neglect! Not only do they produce colorful blooms through periods of intense high temperatures, but they also prefer it! This tough-as-nails succulent thrives in the heat, where many other flowers wilt and fade. Hailing from South Africa’s sunny shores, ice plants are adapted to high temperatures. The succulent foliage stores water, helping them easily weather dry spells putting on a dazzling display of blooms throughout the hottest months.
  7. More SE ridging this year-good as long as it doesn’t go wild and link up with the NAO block or otherwise send every storm to Buffalo. Here we need some ridging to make storms turn the corner, but as we all know Nina’s often promote the wild SE ridge. Of course any -PNA makes it worse.
  8. Just some food for thought over the long haul. We have been in an AMO Active period since 1995. When you look at the history of AMO Active and Inactive periods those are historically 25 to 30 years long. Historically we are due to return to a AMO Inactive period and perhaps this is a transition year back to an AMO Inactive period.
  9. Today
  10. Models bring back the mid to perhaps upper 80s again going forward for the usual warm spots. Much drier pattern returns as the recent rains were just a blip in the expanding drought pattern. The cool departures will begin shrinking. If we get a warmer Sep 21 to 30, then the month could finish with a + departure.
  11. Injuries and no energy. GB might be best team in NFC
  12. It didn’t work out this past winter and we saw one of the strongest +PNA patterns from December into January since 1948. But you are correct that prior to this winter it was a good indicator. Even though the CPC registered ad a +PNA in February, the 500mb PNA had a more negative look. In any event, the winter PNA has been trending more positive since 1948.
  13. This was mentioned extensively last fall….the research showing that +QBO/-ENSO causes a more poleward Aleutian High, while -QBO/-ENSO causes a more flattened, equatorial Aleutian Ridge. HM had a blog on this many years ago, which unfortunately I can’t find the link to anymore. IF this research is correct, then we will see it come “cold season” (Nov-Mar).
  14. should ramp up a bit through Oct. 1., though obv not going out on a limb saying that. Pretty dead overall
  15. Would be nice to get some rain, but what a stretch of pleasant weather since August began.
  16. Yeah not a great game for them.
  17. The North Pacific and Arctic are on fire. I find the giant area of 5C+ anomalies in the Kara Sea particularly unsettling. I’m not sure what marine ecosystems live up there, but I have a feeling that they’re probably in turmoil right now. The Sea of Japan is also scorching, which makes sense because Japan just had its warmest summer on record by a comfortable margin - 2.36C above average for the whole country above the 1990-2020 averages! That’s hard to fathom. https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/2025/9/1/japan-and-south-korea-record-hottest-summers-in-history
  18. For the first time, the UK has a TC (actually a TS) behind the current lemon in the far E MDR moving WNW: NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER 108 HOURS FORECAST POSITION AT T+108 : 11.9N 16.7W LEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WIND VERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS) -------------- ---- -------- ------------- ------------- 1200UTC 16.09.2025 108 11.9N 16.7W 1008 35 0000UTC 17.09.2025 120 13.3N 19.7W 1008 29 1200UTC 17.09.2025 132 14.7N 23.2W 1008 28 0000UTC 18.09.2025 144 15.8N 26.7W 1009 32 1200UTC 18.09.2025 156 16.6N 29.8W 1010 27 0000UTC 19.09.2025 168
  19. 0Z UKMET for E MDR lemon: again has a TS in the MDR moving mainly WNW though it turns W after 156:NEW TROPICAL CYCLONE FORECAST TO DEVELOP AFTER 90 HOURSFORECAST POSITION AT T+ 90 : 13.7N 36.1WLEAD CENTRAL MAXIMUM WINDVERIFYING TIME TIME POSITION PRESSURE (MB) SPEED (KNOTS)-------------- ---- -------- ------------- -------------0000UTC 16.09.2025 96 14.2N 37.0W 1008 291200UTC 16.09.2025 108 15.8N 38.9W 1006 370000UTC 17.09.2025 120 17.0N 41.9W 1006 381200UTC 17.09.2025 132 17.6N 43.1W 1006 410000UTC 18.09.2025 144 18.7N 44.9W 1006 431200UTC 18.09.2025 156 20.0N 46.7W 1006 430000UTC 19.09.2025 168 19.9N 48.8W 1007 39
  20. I thought it was too early when we discussed this a couple of weeks ago and it’s still obviously far from a done deal, but the chances of your bold prediction verifying are certainly increasing as the quiet continues. Like they’ve been showing almost every day for over a week and although they don’t get to above the active avg ACE like they showed 2 weeks ago, the Euro Weeklies still end the below avg ACE starting with the week that begins Sept 22nd. It rises to near the 20 year active avg then and that lasts for the 3 weeks going through Oct 12th. It still has the most active week of the next 4 to be 9/22-28 (with ~13.5 ACE) and the 2nd most active being 9/29-10/5. It’s projecting ~40 ACE 9/15-10/12. That would bring total ACE up to ~80. That would keep season to date ACE well below the active era’s avg of ~103 as of then.
  21. With the narrative the way it is, you'd never know there where plenty of hot summers in the past. It's shameful the way stuff gets portrayed sometimes, but an agenda will do that to people, instead of appreciating wx, and its cycles.
  22. Like they’ve been showing almost every day for over a week and although they don’t get to above the active avg ACE like they showed 2 weeks ago, the Euro Weeklies still end the below avg ACE starting with the week that begins Sept 22nd. It rises to near the 20 year active avg then and that lasts for the 3 weeks going through Oct 12th. It still has the most active week of the next 4 to be 9/22-28 (with ~13.5 ACE) and the 2nd most active being 9/29-10/5. It’s projecting ~40 ACE 9/15-10/12. That would bring total ACE up to ~80. That would keep season to date ACE well below the active era’s avg of ~103 as of then.
  23. not really summery with dew points in the mid 40's
  24. Thank, 87Storms! I remember those blizzards in Jan 1987! That's a story in itself! Why haven't they red-tagged YOU yet?!
  25. LOL I was thinking exactly the same thing this morning! Arguing about climate on a weather forum reminds me of a quote from Dr Strangelove. “Gentlemen, there will be no fighting in the war room!”
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