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  2. The was the first and last time I was able to "shovel" 8 inches of snow with a broom, and I mean really effortlessly. The ratios were outrageous.
  3. it was 103 in 1895 in New Jersey. New Brunswick record for gthe day was a high of 103.
  4. I have been keeping up on the tropics somewhat, here and elsewhere, due to my affinity for those that track a couple hundred miles offshore New England, and produce some of our cleanest, nicest, juiciest waves. I go to Point Judith, or elsewhere (30 years, year round). Point being--there is a cane to track right now (the second one)!
  5. Just a little steamy out there this evening. The ol Florida Everglades have decided to pay us a visit apparently, quick downpours and manbuns included.
  6. I recall that event. There was sea smoke rising from the Long Island Sound even as the snow was falling. I doubled the size of an old photo from that storm and highlighted some of the sea smoke.
  7. A more recent event would be January 15th 2004 when it started to snow at 14 degrees in Central Park the evening before and finished up the following morning with about 6 to 9 inches of ultra fluff and a temp of 8 degrees. That day's high was 18 with a low of 2.
  8. I'd say 200-300 years. But who knows. Mother nature will probably throw a curve ball and we'll have ice age lol
  9. bncho

    Winter 2025-26

    you'll probably be dead by then
  10. To my nonexpert eye, two things: one is that the path of the low is tracking further NW; secondly, its trailing front looks like it will be more progressive so that any lingering moisture or waves will stay well east/south of DMV late week/weekend.
  11. I just took you off ignore like a month ago. Don’t blow it.
  12. I wonder what the conditions would have to be where one can reliability say that 2003/2010/2016 will never happen again even if you live in Boston and if you want that level of snow again you’ll have to move north AND up in elevation.
  13. For Central Park: February 13, 1899: 16.0" snow (High: 11°; Low: 6°) For Newark: December 26, 1872: 16.0" snow (High: 11°; Low: 5°) For Central Park, 18.0" fell on December 26, 1872 with a high of 12° and low of 6°. Data for Measurable Snowfall: Coldest High for Measurable Snowfall: New York City: 8°, February 8, 1895 and December 29, 1917 Newark: 4°, December 29, 1917 Coldest Low for Measurable Snowfall: New York city: -6°, December 29, 1917 Newark: -6°, February 11, 1899 and January 14, 1912
  14. I actually believe there are places in Lancaster county that have almost doubled my 26.84" of rain the past 12 months Sent from my SM-G970U1 using Tapatalk
  15. Yeah, maybe for some. Hopefully it delivers at least some poor drainage flooding rains, if not flash flooding. There's nothing really else to track besides foliage. No canes, no severe. Besides that triple-point idea which is probably a stretch
  16. That's a serious cutoff just to our south, looks like a snowmap
  17. You also don’t live in N CT. You live in the west Central Valley BDL to TOL had 7-8” in July alone
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