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Stormfly

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Posts posted by Stormfly

  1. 3 hours ago, psuhoffman said:

    What’s going to happen is late March the PV breaks down and blocking sets up but because it’s late March and the mid latitudes are torched by the antecedent pattern we will get a perfect track slow moving coastal 960 bomb that stalls just east of OC and dumps 3” of rain at 37 degrees and mixes with slush bombs at times just to tease us even more. 

    March 29, 1984.

     

    Of course the "snow mixed in with rain before ending" in the official forecast turned into 7" of the wettest snow I remember.  I broke two hickory handle shovels digging out the bottom of the lane where the plow pushed up a crazy wall of slush and snow.

  2. 1 hour ago, showmethesnow said:

    The best kind. Remember as a child down somewhere around Catonsville/Elliott City had a snow squall that has never been topped. Saw 5-6 inches in maybe 30-45 minutes. Didn't have thunder but we had snowflakes that were coming down almost the size of baseballs. Never seen the like since.

    Friday, January 25, 1985.

     

  3. 6 hours ago, Eskimo Joe said:
    Posting this here because some of the maps apply to this subforum

    I remember that well.  Was a busy day for me.  The snow accumulation was underwhelming but the roaring winds and subzero wind chills definitely were not!  Flizzard 2015! :D

  4. Saw a fly on one of the security cameras.
    The grass is getting green in spots.
    Spring onion bundles everywhere.

    Without any serious arctic freeze in sight, I can imagine how bad of a bug season this is going to be!
    Disgusting!

  5. 25 minutes ago, George BM said:

    Yeah. I'm not sure I completely trust myself to be "smart" if a tornado is bearing down on me. I'm guessing my "flight" would eventually overpower my "fight"... but probably not until 2x4s are raining down and shooting past me... that's if I'm still on the ground :lol:...

    ... Yeah I'm a psycho. 

    Lighting is my calling.  I've been zapped by side flashes from really close hits and still watch on the porch!  The most recent one was in 2017 (August 17) when a bolt hit a farm gate and followed the fence over to a light pole.  That pole was about 20' from where I was standing on our porch which is slate.  I was in stocking feet and felt a nice shock through both my feet that made my legs numb. 

    Wind is easier BUT it sucks you in (pun not really intended!) like watching a car wreck in slow motion.  By the time you see debris flying about (and that truly is your cue to haul ass!), it often is too late to seek shelter unless you're right next to the stairs.  I'm talking about a real game changer aka EF3+ making a bee line straight for you!

    Clarence Schulz comes to mind and anyone not familiar with the story can watch the video here.

     

    • Like 1
  6. 1 hour ago, George BM said:

    Lol. Zancildae, you KNOW that there is an ENH/MDT risk day in our future this year that will not be as exciting as this morning was for some ANYWHERE in the region. 

    Yes it happens all the time.  Of course summer severe events, even the so-called "widespread" ones, are quite hit or miss too.  But when you're right under one it can get quite nasty, even scary.  That is for those of us that do possess sanity. ;)

  7. Did not hear thunder but have a few confirmed strikes from detection network to our S and SW.  Nice heavy line moved through.  Overwhelmed the gutters big time!  Quite gusty too, sadly better than a lot of so called severe events we get in late spring. ;)

    Just noticed 973mb / 28.73" on the barometer!  That's really low here.  The record (for us) was 966mb / 28.53" set way back in 1993.  Yes that one!  Too bad this wasn't snow, I know 10 years ago we dug out from round one with round two coming.  Probably have to live 500 years to see another round like that.

  8. Southerly winds really picking up over the past hour.  Avg is 21, gusting to 34, peak 44.  Fog obliterated!

     

    EDIT:  Just had a peak of 49.4.  If it gets much stronger (out of the south), the weatherstripping under my front door will start "Kazoo-ing", a term my wife came up with.  We rarely have wind gusts over 55-60 mph out of the south.  Last time we heard it was in 2010 and before that Isabel!  I need to replace the door and maybe this time if it toots that may be my cue to do just that! :D

     

     

     

    Screen Shot 2020-02-07 at 7.38.02 AM.png

  9. Ad blocking on PC/Mac is easy...use the ublock origin extension in your browser.  It also prevents ads in youtube videos.

    On mobile devices, it's more complicated particularly to block ads system wide on both wifi and cell connections.  It's do-able though.

  10. 90s in March then! :P

    Anyone remember March 01, 1980?  Nice six inch snowstorm...


    Then exactly a week later we were in the upper 70s, only snow remaining was the usual (snow) mountains in the shopping center lots.  Some areas had severe, we got marble sized hail and a brief 50mph gust before it was all over.

  11. I just want to see legit thundersnow!  Only witnessed it once in my lifetime.  Sure there have been boomers, sky lighting up and rumbles while snowing.

    But when you experience true zero vis  from snow and lightning with near instantaneous thunder, it's quite the shocker.

    Only thing better would be a lightning wrapped snownado! :D

  12. 14 hours ago, George BM said:

    1779576998_June232020.thumb.png.7d81b2fa0205ffc4f8cfbcfdac8594f8.png

    The reality of the matter is, it will be triple digit heat at midnight and all that will just dissipate into a few gusty thundershowers by the time it reaches 95.

    2012 was a fluke for sure.

    If you really want to see BIG storms and not move, the best best is move the mountains.  :D

    Imagine if the Appalachians weren't there at all and it was flat from the coast all the way to the Rockies.  Now I think we'd see some weather, right?

    Thing is with severe, even with decent lines, it's never a perfect line where everyone gets nailed.  The 2012 Derecho was like that here.  Lots of lightning but the real activity was to our south.  And not far away either.

    Our best (lightning) seems from cells that just happen to score a hit right overhead.  Otherwise it seems to just fizzle out before reaching us.  Maybe it's that Columbia Gas pipeline! ;)

    • Like 1
  13. 8 hours ago, PhineasC said:

    Folks, time to admit that 2009-2016 was our "golden years" period like the 1960s and we are now into a decade of complete shit. A sustained -NAO in DJF may not happen until 2025 at the earliest. Blocking is only for spring and these days high pressures are complete chumps easily brushed aside by 1010 mb lows.

    Right and considering we're at solar minimum things aren't looking so good.

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