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LibertyBell

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Everything posted by LibertyBell

  1. Lows: EWR: 16 (1940)NYC: 12 (1888)LGA: 17 (1940)JFK: 22 (2014) Wow 1888 was still so cold this late. I didn't realize 2014's record at JFK was so high. 1912 - Residents of Kansas City began to dig out from a storm produced 25 inches of snow in 24 hours. The snowfall total was nearly twice that of any other storm of modern record in Kansas City before or since that time. A record 40 inches of snow fell during the month of March that year, and the total for the winter season of 67 inches was also a record. By late February of that year Kansas City had received just six inches of snow. Olathe KS received 37 inches of snow in the snowstorm, establishing a single storm record for the state of Kansas. (23rd-24th) (The Kansas City Weather Almanac) (The Weather Channel) What kind of crazy pattern dumped 40 inches of snow in KC in that month? NYC has NEVER had 40 inches of snow in a month!! Olathe had 37 inches of snow in a single storm? OMG-- nothing like that has EVER happened here and they are in the middle of the country, not near any large body of water at all! HOW?!
  2. Yes I'm worried about it right now as we're getting more frequent rains. I had my entire roof and drainage system replaced a few years ago, but it's still happening.
  3. The generic crickets are very annoyingly noisy though it's been said you can gauge the temperature by timing the interval between their chirps.
  4. These are prehistoric creatures, one of the first to walk on land (after amphibians.) In ancient times these were even larger-- what a horror show. I think animals were much larger back then because the oxygen content of the air was higher. What do they eat?
  5. Yes strangely enough almost exactly on the same days as a nearly identical heatwave (with almost the same temperatures) happened in April 1976. However you can't use that kind of coincidence as an analog, as those two summers were radically different. 2002 had one of my all time favorite summers. And in a developing moderate el nino no less.
  6. We had this storm in February 2010 I think it was-- could have been January 2011 too, don't remember because both those winters were great. We had 5 inches of snow in Lynbrook and Valley Stream and JM in Long Beach was going back and forth with a mix. I remember us watching it on radar too and it clearly showed the mixing line on the barrier islands but it didn't make it up to us.
  7. Do you remember April 2010? The earliest ever 90 degree reading in the city and close to JFK and Long Beach was in the upper 60s lol. I think April 2002 was hot even down on the barrier islands though.
  8. These people are so funny. And Ant with his *it's still March* as if the weather in the last week of March is anything like the first week of March LOL
  9. I find that expanding drought feedback very intriguing, I think that will be a BIG factor this summer.
  10. Probably, but it could also be raining next weekend. I do think we'll get 70+ here by the first week of April.
  11. in no way shape or form is it winter LOL
  12. March is almost over, this isn't the first week of the month
  13. we're in a rainy pattern though (not surprising for early spring) looks like many more chances for rain and both days next weekend will be rainy.
  14. 2020's 3-1 is more what I would expect in a warmer March like this one has been. But 3-1 was actually our warmest day this month, we made it to 67 here.
  15. I bet that's why we get that howling southerly wind as soon as it warms up even a little. It actually felt warmer here because of the lack of wind and I was sitting outside in the full sun this afternoon. I think the wind is blocked here, aside from a few hours this morning, I haven't noticed the tree branches moving.
  16. Yes, you'd think that once it got that warm and stayed consistently warm, it wouldn't be able to get below freezing again. on News 12 they said it was the coldest morning in 3 weeks. Most unwelcome.
  17. Yes it was truly amazing. I don't think we'll see anything like that in our lifetimes again. One of the coldest Februarys ever and colder than most Januarys we have had. It was January 20 to March 20 cold I think without a break and a historic snowfall season to boot (even moreso for Boston and the Cape.)
  18. Yep, I have no objection to how it feels in the afternoon, nice and mild. It's the mornings that are cold (especially if there's wind to make it feel even worse.)
  19. Yes but that record is from almost a century ago lol. We can go by normal temperatures, plus how the month has been going plus it being so late in the season, after the spring equinox. It's interesting 2015 was still so cold, that feels like a different era, that entire winter was much colder than this one.
  20. Thanks for the map, Walt-- it looks like the 0.1 line is almost to Allentown! I hope you've had a wonderful weekend, Walt.
  21. wow I'm glad I haven't seen one of those!
  22. Globes are fun because you're looking at the actual shape of the Earth (more or less). On mine you could actually feel the mountain ranges and it also had the ocean currents listed as well as relief for both the mountains and ocean trenches (and measurements of the biggest ones.) I can't tell you how many dumb kids in my class thought Greenland was bigger than South America because of the ubiquitous Mercator Projection (I liked the Lambert Equal Area Projection myself). They also thought Maine was further north than Minnesota. With a globe it's easy to tell neither is true and are inaccuracies created by trying to show a round Earth on a flat surface.
  23. I did it the old fashioned way, my parents bought me a globe when I was 8 years old and it came with an atlas. I learned all sorts of things from that Rand McNally Atlas and the globe (which was topographically enhanced so you could feel the mountain ranges if you slid your fingertips across it.) Then when I was in 7th grade I got myself a star atlas and learned all the constellations. Those are infinitely more interesting than the countries on a planetary atlas. And this book which I found engrossing-- H. A. Rey's The Stars: A New Way To See Them.
  24. the funny and ironic thing is, when it comes to spring, we're in the northeast. when it's winter, we're in the midatlantic.
  25. Indeed-- I know this is obvious, but temperatures are measured in the shade. It's much warmer in the sun, which is where we should all be.
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