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  2. Coaching this week is gonna suck. We have a B-meet Wednesday which may be rather miserable as well. I’ll push to cancel if excessive heat warnings are issued.
  3. LWX Discussion had some good Climate Summary data
  4. 88/79. Nasty. Would love to get the triple digits they're going to get back in my old stomping grounds later this week.
  5. 88 currently. Trying to move some flowers around today for my irrigation system since we are going away tomorrow and I'll have no one to water by hand.
  6. It isn't political if someone is commenting on (with actual caveats) the reason why a website went down. It isn't opinion based, or leaning to some kind of political affiliation. As someone who does not want politics in this forum either, this does not meet the criteria for that by a long shot, and you need to check yourself. Being hypersensitive does not serve our goals either.
  7. Here it was ... I guess it was mid month, altho I recall a wondering earlier because of the 'cadence' of hemispheric behavior. At the time, the modeling didn't go as far as July 1 but it's one of those extrapolation deals. Anyway, I recall now it was based purely at the time on the numerical teleconnector spreads from the various source, less so the spatial synoptic chart cinemas. In fact, I recall commenting on it since then how there was a discrepancy - it's interesting to me that the indices "won" this discovery at a very long lead. The operational runs were in fact fighting this as near as 7 days ago, however ... that's not really necessarily unreasonable given it was still 7-10 days away at that later time. But they were really just not interested. GFS was first to come around.
  8. Their argument was for a full scale turnaround to deep winter; arctic cold and snowstorms lasting for months after the rapid El Niño weakening began, not for the single anomalous blizzard and the single anomalous arctic cold snap, both in 2016. There was never a full scale turnaround in 1998 (JB) or in 2016 fDT, JB)
  9. 90 here right now, so the long heat wave starts.
  10. Record breaking summer heat in a super Nino... we're so cooked
  11. Radar looks clear. Seabreeze front very prominent on radar and is splitting Long Island almost exactly in half running east to west.
  12. Actually .. not disputing this at all but I did notice the EPS sending signals for back when it was over 300 hours. I post about it around June 11th or so... I'll try to find it
  13. There was a blizzard in Jan 2016..historic for many, so they were partly right
  14. Stop with the political stuff. Please and thank you.
  15. Pulled into work and winds are blowing. Kinda makes the heat slightly tolerable. But I am watching what looks like a storm try to build to my southeast, probably south of Brooklyn and moving west/southwestish. How are we supposed to attach/add pics if the allowable size of 10kb it's reached 30 years ago? Lol jc
  16. 90/75 My sweat glands have activated. Quite a bit more cloud cover than I expected today.
  17. 90/80 imby is tough, air is just so thick. station might be running a bit warm/moist, but another PWS a couple blocks away is showing 93/81.
  18. With a chance that some locations could see a 100-degree day later this week I went back and analyzed 30 temperature stations across the area to see just how rare such a day has become. A 100-degree day is a rare occurrence across most spots across the County. With the potential being even more rare across the relatively higher ridge stations above 595 ft. In fact the last time any ridge location station saw a 100-degree reading was 15 years ago back on July 22, 2011. Of the 18 current stations across the area that report temperatures 9 of these have never recorded such a day. Our lowest elevation stations at Phoenixville and nearby Spring City both recorded a 100+ day last June. To illustrate how different the temperature elevation impact can be on June 26, 2025 while Spring City (256 ft ASL) was hitting the century mark....not too far away at Glenmoore DEOS (620 FT ASL) but 400 feet higher the high was 10 degrees cooler at "only" 90.6
  19. Got an email from the guys doing the 250th parade Friday in Philly. They are cutting the route down to one mile rather than the 2.4 miles it was planned for. They are adding extra water stations and have SEPTA buses on standby for cooling areas.
  20. LOL, I was building a case! AI makes it easy in today's world. I should tell you sometime about all the acrobatics I went thru during the late 60's to construct a temperature measuring shelter to NWS standards!!
  21. Maybe. My older brother was in the Corps of Engineers and during the monsoon season of his Vietnam year (1967 into 68) there would be thunder and torrential rain 3-5 PM, so regular that one could almost set one's watch by the storm times.
  22. The new (12Z) UKMET has nothing from the lemon designated as a weak TD, unlike the prior 3 full runs. However, Pivotal’s UK maps still have just about the same as a weak TD (a closed weak sfc low) along a similar track. It approaches SC late on 7/2 and comes into SC with hardly any circ. but with strong and persistent convection for S SC on 7/3-4 with a max of a whopping 9” 35 miles W of CHS before the convection heads NE up the Carolinas’ coast 7/5-6. That very heavy precip though is a major outlier vs other models and thus is highly unlikely as of now.
  23. Also not sure if it was talked about but the GFS was all over this mid to late week heat wave while the EURO had no interest in it. Another impressive mid to long range win for the GFS.
  24. Today
  25. I more have a problem with this paragraph. “The US will endure one of its most expansive heatwaves in history this week. Then another long lasting record breaking heat dome will plague #Europe again, back to back on its worst #heatwave in its history!” Every anomalous outbreak doesn’t have to be dubbed “worst in history” . As you stated earlier there have been higher temperatures recorded much more humid air masses and more dangerous/long lasting heat waves. Let’s see where this one ranks when all is said and done. Now if we actually hit 100-104 over a large number of climo sites plus humidity that’s a different ball game. However it seems like we do 95-99 for a week stretch every year.
  26. Outside after a scattered t-storm is brutal. Sure the temperature is lower, but with all the evaporation from that storm and the lower temp, the air is much closer to saturation. It is the worst sticky soupy feeling. Much prefer the low RH with the triple digit heat that comes before.
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