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Everything posted by tamarack
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Looks like cloudy day #13 today, bringing us to within one of the 2009 record for cloudy days in July. I checked rainfall and 7/2009 had 3.89" thru the 21st while last night's 0.04" brings this July up to 3.85". Similar? Not quite. 7/09 finished with 7.29" and I don't see anywhere near 3.44" for the rest of this month. Also, June 2009 had 8.71" more rain than last month.
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We had a quick-hitting 0.04" no-thunder shower about 2 AM. Still no TS this month.
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Not long after moving to the small Ft. Kent house noted above, the old-fashioned piston pump became unreliable - had to go down to the cellar and give a shove to the flywheel to unstick it, repeatedly. Also, the water had a sulfur-y aroma. The only laundromat in town had just closed so every Saturday for about 4 months we'd pack the laundry down to CAR to use one there - became quite familiar with the little museum across the street, also picked up an old leaky parlor stove (as airtight as a lobster trap) to put in the cellar for when temps dropped under -20 and the small Jotul in the kitchen wouldn't furnish. Then we bought/installed a Sears "Captive-air" pump, and instead of a flush requiring one or more downstairs/restarts to fill the tank we could flush twice before the new one had to work. Sulfur smell was gone, too.
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My parents bought us an upright freezer - Kenmore IIRC - in 1974 when we lived in BGR and I was in UMaine forestry school. Our current home had no good place for it so we left it to the new owners of the Gardiner house in May 1998, still running like new despite our repeated attempts to kill it. They don't make them that way any more. Our first house in Ft. Kent was small - 18x20 with 2 stories - and it had an attached unheated wood shed. Over 4 winters we'd pull the plug in mid-Dec and plug it back in early in March, to save on the light bill. We later found that was an absolute non-no, keeping the freezer in unheated space. In Gardiner we hosted our church's food pantry in our basement "freezer room" for 6 years 1991-97, making weekly trips to Good Shepherd food bank in Auburn, serving 100+ clients and disbursing about 25,000 lb/yr. The freezer was filled with both pantry stuff and our own, kept carefully separated. My dad died in Dec 1993 leaving the NH house empty. We'd make overnight trips about once a month to prep the house for estate auction (contents only) and eventual sale. Another church member had a key in case there was a need while we were away. On one of those excursions in summer 1994 we got back about 11:45 PM on Saturday and went to bed. About 7 the next morning I looked in the pantry and saw a river of melted ice cream running across the floor. Evidently, a client had been taken to the pantry while we were away, and somehow the freezer door was left 2" ajar - for anywhere from 20 hours to twice that. Everything thawed, but the constantly running 20-year-old motor maintained refrigerator temps so little was spoiled beyond the IC. Why the machine didn't die then, we'll never know. Sadly, there was about 50 lb left of a very tasty deer I'd taken the previous Nov, and with a major heat wave, I chose to cook all of it outside on the grill the next day - wasn't quite as good as it had been when cooked up fresh.
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The NY/VT tiger was a tiny kitty when it reached here about 2 AM - 0.04".
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A bit later here. Using the raw 23-year data, Feb. 1 is closest at 50.1% of average, while doing the same 15-day smoothing I use for temps, Jan. 31 is 49.9% while Feb. 1 is 50.8%. For convenience, I've used the Jan-Feb bridge as the midpoint for snow. The midpoint for HDDs comes earlier; Jan. 21 is both the average and median date. It has ranged from Jan. 13 in the warm late winter/spring of 2010 to Jan. 28 when record mild Nov-Dec-early-Jan turned abruptly cold and snowy in mid-Jan.
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We were only in Iceland for 2 days on the way to Norway 4 years ago, and missed out on that delicacy. (Enjoyed lots of fish in both nations, though.)
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RA/dz most of the day, probably <0.05", just enough to keep things wet on the surface. July temps 1-18: 2.5° BN - maxima: -6.2°; minima: +1.2° 14 of 18 days have had BN maxima while 11 have had AN mimima. Current average diurnal range is 14.3° and today will shrink that a bit. July's smallest range so far is 16.8°, another 2009 score.
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Our grandkids in NJ have been home-schooled since the get go, though the oldest - 9th grade - took a science class in the nearby Christian school this past school year. Was a relief to them (and us) when the pandemic arrived.
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At 2 PM Aroostook was the warmest in New England, with FVE tops at 82 and the next mildest in NNE outside of The County is 75 at EEN. Warmest in SNE was 77, at BDL and ACK(?).
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Average annual TS is 15.1 , with 11.2 in met summer, 4.6 in July, max year with 23, lowest 8. As a wild guess, I'd estimate 60% are weak, 30% garden variety, 10% noteworthy. YTD is 3 weak, 1 G-V (mid-30s wind) and 1 noteworthy, though without the ultra-close strike it would've rated as weak. (And 0.3% possibly severe - 6/12/05 had 30 seconds of flying mist with leaves and branches, and toppled a half dozen tall aspens along our road, plus some other trees. I'd guess 50s to near/above 60 mph. Also dropped a handful of trees onto the road 1/2 mile to our west. As it arrived the SW view suddenly looked brighter as trees were bent downward by the gust.) --Fort Kent (1/1/76 thru 10/19/85) had fewer, unsurprisingly, with 12.1 annually, 8.7 in met summer, 3.8 for July and max/min 17/6. --At Gardiner (11/1/85 thru 5/14/98) the numbers are 13.1/yr, 8.75 in met summer with June tops at3.33 (July 2.83) and 22 in our 1st full year there - 1986 - and a low of 7 in 1992. July 1991 had none, the only July shutout since moving to Fort Kent.
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None this month at my place. Farthest into July I've gone w/o a TS here is 20 days. Apart from the tree-blaster 55 yards from the house on 3/26 and another hit within 1/2 mile a couple minutes later, we've not had a strike within 3 miles in almost a year.
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That's excellent, in many ways!
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Off topic note: Have not seen your name on AFDs for quite a while. Did you get promoted? (Or a nice long vacation?) Light RA the past hour, despite no echoes overhead. Yesterday's total was 0.60", toward the bottom of Maine precip on cocorahs. July is going to go down in the anals of all time SNE s*** shows. Artful misspelling there.
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That's truly horrible - not often when 1st-world nations have big casualties from a rain event (or a collapsing condo.) In contrast, the 2 worst floods in Maine since I've lived here, also the record flow for several main stem rivers, were 1987 on the Kennebec and Androscoggin and 2008 on the St. John. They caused many many millions in damages but afaik there were no fatalities from either.
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Month T 0.1+ OCT 1.6 0.6 NOV 7.1 3.4 DEC 14.1 9.0 JAN 15.0 9.7 FEB 13.1 9.7 MAR 11.4 7.1 APR 5.5 2.8 MAY 0.4 0.1 The "T" numbers are pretty close to 70% of yours throughout (except for May), while Feb is clearly tops here for 0.1"+. (For 1"+ Feb leads Jan 5.7 to 5.0, and for calendar days with 10"+ March is slightly above Feb.)
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I'll admit to being sad upon hearing that the unibody rust was basically unfixable and thus the car was dead, despite the engine running as good (or better) at 147k than when we'd driven off the Bean & Conquest lot in Bangor with 2 miles on the odometer.
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3 sunny, 4 partly cloudy, 11 cloudy here. 2009 was 2/15/14. Average is 5.2/19.4/6.4. July and August (5.9/19.5/5.6) are rich in PC.
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11th cloudy day this month, moving it to 2nd place for July. Still 3 fewer cloudy days than July 2009 and with about half the rain. 13+ hours of rain here, maybe 1/2" total and we're about done.
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DC isn't quite "next door" to NYC and while the shooting there was immediately outside the 3rd base exit ramp, "at another MLB game" suggests a incident in the stands. (Too close at any rate.)
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Thru yesterday I've had 5.99" since May 1, and 17.28" for the year. Another 0.23" as of 7 this morning.
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In the early decades of the 20th century there were numerous incidents of fans throwing things onto the field and/or at the players, though no shootings in the parking lot that I know of. One hopes we're not returning to that earlier period's fan behavior.
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Made me scratch my head, as 27-30 minima were anything but chilly. Then I checked the numbers and 23-25 had cool mornings, including 37° on the 24th, lowest for the month. Had 0.23" at 7 AM as rain began sometime after 2. Currently steady light rain, as the stratiform precip continues to dominate here this warm season.
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Started moving wood onto the porch after lunch and the sun almost burned thru the clouds for a few minutes. That plus dews made for some serious sweat. Radar says it's raining but nothing has made it to the ground yet. GFS doing its incredible shrinking qpf (TM) as the event get closer.
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Sounds decent. I've not fished Flying Pond in open water in years but I've pulled some big bass thru the ice. Had to put the biggest back due to the 1-fish-over-14" rule. It was a full inch longer than the 4.75 lb fish I'd put on the ice about 4 hours earlier and quite a bit fatter - no scale with me but I'd guess 5.5 lb at least, biggest bass I've ever caught. Hope you visited Mosher soon after Elsa. Prior to that event there probably wasn't more than a trickle dribbling over the rocks. How were the crowds at Tumbledown? Excluding ski areas, that peak might be summited more often than any other 3,000+ mountain in Maine. We (Parks and Lands) has decided to eliminate overnight camping at/near the top due to increasingly harmful impacts on the ecosystem, also on day hikers. We'll see how well folks conform to the change. Another cloudy but dry day here, so far.