Jump to content

Saguaro

Members
  • Posts

    140
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Saguaro

  1. Looks like most of Maine held off the gloom but it creeped into western ME towards late afternoon. There have been a copious amount of clouds here in AZ today as well, but still managed a high of 90. This is definitely the time of year when being in AZ vs the coastal plain of NNE pays handsomely.

     

     

    • Like 1
  2. It's been a long week and I just now have gotten the time to write up my experience Monday. I was deciding between Colebrook, northern VT, or Eustis area. In the end given the satellite cloud trend, and to maximize totality time, I went for Third Connecticut Lake on the Quebec border.

    There were no clouds to speak of, not even cirrus, so viewing was perfect. Conditions in the area were still pretty set in Winter, with the lake frozen over thick enough that most people were out on it in chairs and had tripods set up. The snowcover was at least a foot deep if not more.

    The eclipse itself was magnificent, and it looked better overall that the 2017 one I saw in Idaho which was marred by a thin haze of forest fire smoke. The corona looked a lot larger this go around, and the large flare at the bottom stood out. I regret forgetting to look for shadow banding in the minute before and after totality. I imagine on the expansive snowcover of the lake, it would be very easy to notice. I'm wondering if anyone got video of it in that area. I do not have any decent camera gear so I was only able to manage a phone picture pre-totality and short video during.

    The drive back took at least twice as long as normal, about 5 hours, thanks to closures of alternate routes to US 3, and an enormous backup in Errol that took over an hour to get through. It was still worth seeing and I'm glad I was able to experience it.

    It's amazing the weather cooperated so well with the timing. Right after I went back to Arizona, the usual spring time perpetual gloom, cold, and dampness settled in to plague Maine for what looks like a long stay.

     

    • Like 2
  3. 18 minutes ago, tamarack said:

    I may be looking there as well, but even though I'm familiar with the roads there, the paucity of off-road parking may be an issue.  Maybe Natanis Point Camps (north end of Natanis Pond) opened early, but if so, they're probably filled up.

    Yea I have hesitation about that area and there's only one major road there. I'm probably headed to Canaan/Colebrook/Pittsburg.

  4. Got into Portland from Phoenix late Saturday night. Original plans were for southern TX but I pulled the plug on those Thursday/Friday. The departing storm was still spitting out snow from around 7k feet all the way down to around 900ft in PWM area where it changed to rain showers the rest of the descent. A pretty big difference from the 70s and 80s we've been getting in AZ. The snowcover is melting rapidly, already down to patches, hard to believe 18" fell a few days ago.

    Starting from Harrison tomorrow morning and am thinking Norton, Canaan, Colebrook, Pittsburg or maybe Newport. Eustis to QC border area is a possibility too.

     

    • Confused 1
  5. I saw the 2017 one in Sawtooth National Forest in Idaho. It was spectacular with exception of being marred by forest fire haze. I'm planning on driving from Phoenix to southern Texas for this one, and getting an early start from San Angelo Monday morning. Hopefully the climatological sunshine % in that area comes to fruition.

    • Like 1
  6. 48 minutes ago, STILL N OF PIKE said:

    Bingo . New England severe is basically a joke compared to anything west or Sw of us and East of Rockies 

    The monsoon storms in AZ have been more impressive than anything I've seen here. Last July a complex ripped through from SE to NW with 80mph gusts, knocked the power out for 18 hours. Helps when it's over 100 degrees out ahead of the storm.

  7. 16 minutes ago, Lava Rock said:

    I can count on one hand how many severe storms we've had since moving into our house in 2013. I enjoy watching the naples causeway cam. Songo Queen just got back and it looks pretty cloudy there. Be interested to see what happens with the line coming.

    Yea it's been solid overcast draw the shades mood all day. The line arrived here about ten minutes ago and the only thing noteworthy is torrential rain. No thunder or wind or anything like what's happening in NH and SNE.

    The only excitement I've seen in Harrison is the mini tornado outbreak back in July 2018. Multiple hits in Bridgton and one lifted as it crossed long lake moving into Harrison.

    • Like 1
  8. Looks like that cell collapsed pretty fast. After it moved through we finally broke out into the sun after being plagued with high overcast most of the day.

     

    8 hours ago, Typhoon Tip said:

    Meanwhile, Italy .. with an average latitude of 41 N ( N of NYC ...), is expecting highs of 110 to 113 in a deadly heat wave.  After now 15 years of this shunting shit I begin to suspect that eastern N/A above ~ 40 N is too intrinsically protected by geologic circumstance.

    I was in Naples and Rome last month and I noticed the same thing with the latitude vs weather. It was remarkable how consistently they were able to both get into and hold onto a solid summer airmass and not have it constantly assaulted by backdoors, unrelenting buzzsaw troughs, heat ridges getting cut in half, marine layers, cloud debris, et al.

    • Like 1
  9. 4 minutes ago, DavisStraight said:

    Feels higher here than earlier in the day but I'm 60 miles from the shore.

    I think it's mostly a Maine thing. I can definitely feel a difference outside tonight versus the previous several evenings. IZG dp is 66, PWM 64, AUG 66. Getting a lot of marine intrusion, the whole of Androscoggin county was socked in with it all day under low overcast like a May gray or June gloom day in the LA basin. The high is far enough offshore that we're having to deal with these issues now. We probably won't clear out until Wednesday.

    • Like 1
  10. That marine puke never went away for inland areas east of here. It's now marching ominously back in like a wall of doom and it's looking like it never goes away at all tomorrow for places on the wrong side of the mountain divide well inland from here.

    Today has been much cooler than yesterday due to onshore flow I am guessing, since FIT was stuck with similar overcast conditions for the morning but still managed upper 80s. Upper 70s here, dewpoints still up there though. Going to guess our next chance at sun will be Wednesday, based on similar past events this sludge will be slow to budge.

     

    • Like 2
  11. 32 minutes ago, NW_of_GYX said:

    Humid but nice here with some sun. Finally gulf of Maine dong is over someone else’s head

    https://weather.cod.edu/satrad/?parms=subregional-New_England-02-48-1-100-1&checked=map&colorbar=undefined

    Yea we managed to luck out today somehow in the fishtail of cumberland county. Still lost a good 6 hours of insolation but we may be able to salvage the rest of the day if convection doesn't move in too soon. The rest of cumberland and points east look pretty porked the rest of the day, if anything the marine sludge is expanding inland even further.

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...