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@Blizzard of 93 - just 16 days from now we'll observe the longest day in terms of daylight...after that, the slow march towards winter commences!
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I’m dewing it well too. We evapotranspirate.
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83/70 here at 12:25pm.
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Weatherbell lol
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88/71 for today's Tamaqua nooners. Humid day today ahead of the rain.
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Kevs mulch pile dews are notorious
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I like trying to make connections and I can't help but feel that the warming of the West Pac and the West Atl is causing high pressures in the western basins to migrate further north causing a feedback mechanism that is resulting in these stuck patterns. I think this will only change when we see a massive melting of the ice caps and an influx of cooler water into these basins, which, ironically enough might reset everything to the old pattern (at a higher level.) Nature does self regulate through feedback mechanisms even though it might do it in a way we don't want it to.
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91/73. Yeah baby.
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Why not? It’s not far from Bristol.
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The exact reason that the warming is manifesting in these new stuck weather patterns that have become common in recent years may not be fully understood yet. But we can still use them as an aid to our long range winter and summer seasonal forecasts. Once a season begins and the same patterns emerge as recent years, then it helps gain confidence in the model forecasts going forward. So if the models show a big over the top warm up like today, then it’s a match for our new recent climo. This becomes useful in comparing it to what the longer range medium and and seasonals are showing.
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Unexpected .27 of rain this morning.
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Thanks Chris, is there a specific reason these over the top patterns are happening? Is it linked to what we are seeing with the western basins in the Oceans warming up more quickly too (it's happening both in the Western Pacific and the Western Atlantic.) I noticed that Western Europe has been getting a lot of extreme heat the last few years just like Western North America has been getting. London reached 104 F (40 C) for the first time in recorded history a few years ago.
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That's why I say to use the total historical data, not the previous 30 year average from 10 years ago?
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I agree! I temporarily lived closer to the coast late last summer and got to visit a lot. Would have chosen to permanently live there, but I wanted a little more snow so I ended up settling a little further north. Possibly no beach visits for me this summer. Sad.
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Chester County PA - Analytical Battle of Actual vs. Altered Climate Data
TimB replied to ChescoWx's topic in Climate Change
okie dokie -
88/72. gross
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NWS (National Weather Service) siting standards are intended to be consistent with the surrounding area, particularly when it comes to Cooperative Observer Program (Coop) stations. This means the site should be representative of the weather conditions experienced in that specific location. Siting guidelines aim to ensure accurate and representative weather data collection. Not that it matters as the data excludes my backyard for climate comparisons. But,, as you can tell with the satellite photo I am consistent with the surrounding terrain. Plenty of trees but not many houses.
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2025 Lawns & Gardens Thread. Making Lawns Great Again
tunafish replied to Damage In Tolland's topic in New England
What I assumed to have been brown rats that ate my carrot crop last Fall turns out to be Eastern Meadow Vole. I've got a lot of them. They carry ticks and will hurt the garden again if I don't deal with them. I'm not dropping rodenticide, and trapping proved ineffective last year. They have a 20-25 day gestation period and once you trap one in their run, they stop using that run. Other than predators (hawks, ermine, snakes), is there anything effective on these things? Anyone had experience with them? -
Central PA Summer 2025
TheClimateChanger replied to Voyager's topic in Upstate New York/Pennsylvania
Weeks 3-4 look good for heat too. They also use a less wishy-washy scheme without the near normal buffer zone, so it has a true 60-70 percent chance of above normal in the northern half of Pennsylvania and 55-60 percent in the south.