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LibertyBell

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Everything posted by LibertyBell

  1. thank goodness we got rid of that yucky sea breeze that raises the humidity
  2. Technically fall only starts on the equinox. The first three weeks of September are definitely part of summer. Never understood lazy mets who try to redefine seasons by when a month ends rather than actual astronomical events which is how seasons should always be defined.
  3. Yeah I remember it was in the 20s for lows early in November and then we had the 80 degree high on November 15th a day after the NYC Marathon (a real Indian summer) and then it was all cold after that, basically a storm every 3 or 4 days and almost wall to wall cold right to the end of March. First wintry storm was a snowstorm between Christmas and New Years.
  4. I call foul on the JFK high. It was actually hotter on the south shore today than yesterday by 1 degree. How could JFK have possibly been stuck at 89 on a westerly wind? I hit 91 between 3 and 4 PM while it hit 90 here yesterday at 5 PM. JFK had a high of 92 yesterday no way no how they were 3 degrees lower today.
  5. That's awesome, what's a tourney without a few upsets lol.
  6. I remember we had back to back days in the 90s as late as mid September as Cat 3 Hurricane Emily grazed Cape Hatteras and missed us wide right.
  7. If that was year round that would mean we could still get a big winter (like they had in 1965-66 and 2009-10) but it would probably be a once in 30 year occurrence. Many more 90 degree days and perhaps a 100 degree high every year on average. Also scary to think about getting a TC hit up here likely every other year.
  8. Walt I see our major media outlets predicting exactly that, a stalled front over our region and a developing low delivering flooding rains across NJ and NY on Saturday.
  9. Weird, would you say our climate is evolving to more of a coastal Virginia kind of climate? I remember this brought up during the 2015-16 winter when JFK tied Norfolk as the only two locations that have had a 40 degree average winter temperature and 40 inches of snow.
  10. wow 1993 was still setting records even this late in the summer
  11. I cant wait until we get back to those extremely hot Sonoran Heat Pump summers! Aren't those our hottest summers for the entire area though? I saw that EWR has their hottest summers in that kind of situation too (1993, 2010). Get that 120 degree air to come all the way east, slightly modified of course.
  12. That was one of my favorite fall days because it was a nice dry heat. It can get to 90 like that on a one and done day after Labor Day weekend, but to see three straight days of that is pretty rare. After the first week of September anyway.
  13. This is likely our last heatwave of the year. It'll probably hit 90 at some point in the first half of September but this week probably has the last period of extended 90+ heat for the season.
  14. Yeah I mean some of these people who are saying No must be thinking that August ends tomorrow lol. SEVEN DAYS LEFT IN THE MONTH FOLKS! It's almost impossible for it NOT to happen in our new climate.
  15. WAR isn't really a heat pump, it's more of a humidity pump. Our truly hot summers come with a downsloping flow from the west which brings in true unadulterated pure heat. Haven't had that in almost a decade.
  16. It already hit 90 here at noon and is approaching 91 here now. But Thursday and Friday wont be as hot as these two days because the wind will come off the waters. This is very likely the last heatwave of the year (September starts next Wednesday), although we'll very likely get at least 1 90 degree high in September, even out here, and an outside shot at 2, but a heatwave in September is extremely unlikely here.
  17. Our recycling methods aren't exactly where they should be either.
  18. what about this? https://scied.ucar.edu/learning-zone/sun-space-weather/sunspot-cycle 11-year Cycle - Usually! The duration of the sunspot cycle is, on average, around eleven years. However, the length of the cycle does vary. Between 1700 and the present, the sunspot cycle (from one solar min to the next solar min) has varied in length from as short as nine years to as long as fourteen years. Note, however, that of the 26 solar cycles during that three-century span, 21 had a length between ten and twelve years. Arriving at a precise count of sunspots is not as straightforward as it might appear. Some spots are much larger than others, some sunspots partially merge together at their edges, and many spots appear in groups. In 1848 a Swiss astronomer named Rudolf Wolf devised an algorithm for making consistent counts of sunspots that allows comparisons between data from different observers across the centuries. The sunspot count derived using Wolf's formula, now known as the Wolf sunspot number, is still in use today. Wolf used data from earlier astronomers to reconstruct sunspot counts as far back as the 1755-1766 cycle, which he dubbed "cycle 1". Since then, subsequent cycles have been numbered consecutively, so the cycle that began with the 2008 solar minimum is cycle 24.
  19. well it also happens in the winter on cold nights lol
  20. Walt analog 1944 for heat and September east coast TC Secondary analog 1999
  21. Looks like no sea breeze again today so JFK and I should both hit 90 at least!
  22. I love the EWR list because I find their top list is closer to what our climate really is than LGA which is much more polluted by high min from UHI. EWR list definitely matches how I experience heat, which is that my two hottest summers were 2010 and 1993. Does JFK's top list also match EWR's? (I would add 1983 and 2002 to the list too.)
  23. all hail 1983 it's #1 on so many lists lol
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