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tamarack

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Posts posted by tamarack

  1. 1 hour ago, The 4 Seasons said:

    11 and 19 years ago today is the V-Day Blizzards of 2007 and 2015. I just finished replotting and fixing up 2015, 2007 ill do later. Also another new L. Northeast map for 2015 w/ climate sites.

    This was quite a big bust here we were under blizzard warnings for 4-8", got a quick 2" on the front end WAA snows then nothing with barely any wind (at least when it was snowing). 2nd part clipped E CT and destroyed Middlesex down to Plymouth and Bristol counties. 2015 was another one of the storms where i look at the radar and its hard to believe a widespread 14-22" fell over E MA but those rates were pretty insane for the brief time it snowed during part 2. 

    https://www.jdjweatherconsulting.com/feb-14-15-2015

    2007 was essentially a sleet storm for most of CT especially south of 84. Most of those snow totals are pure sleet. Snow totals overall are not that impressive >12" until you get into the Berkshires and Catskills in Ulster Co. 

    https://www.jdjweatherconsulting.com/feb-13-14-2007

     

    02_14.15_jdj_v3_lower_northeast_hi_res_snowfall_totals.thumb.jpg.9ad33b4f69e200667e1c130be50f7e04.jpg

    VD07 was great here, 15.5" from 1.80" LE at temp near 10, especially appreciated as we'd gone nearly 2 years w/o a 6"+ snowfall.

    GYX has called VD15 their Valentine's Day Massacre.  The night before, the forecast was 18-24 plus a blizzard warning.  The day shift lowered snow to 12-18 and kept the blizz. 
    Verified at 1.5", the 4th and final snowstorm that winter to verify at 1/8 (or less) of the forecast's low end.  Meanwhile, SNE got buried and Machias, at 20' elev, measured 25".

    Looking forward to March 2001.  The early storm was fine, 9.5", but nothing special.  By month's end we'd had 55.5" with 48" pack on 3/31 as 35" came after the equinox.

  2. 1 hour ago, mreaves said:

    I guess I wasn’t paying close enough attention but I wasn’t really expecting light snow today. It’s nothing huge but always welcome. Well, at least until mid to late March when the golf jones starts kicking in. 

    Radar says it's snowing here, but the dry air is eating away, and no flakes have reached the ground yet.  Hit -3 earlier this morning.

  3. 14 minutes ago, tavwtby said:

    wasn't that cold spell that the "freezer bowl" was played in, in Cincinnati? I remember that winter being really cold, but don't remember a lot of snow until April vacation from school when we got a good 12-18"...

    Might've been 1985.  There was a giant Arctic high that encompassed nearly the whole country.  Fort Kent, where we lived then, was at the east edge of the high and avoided record cold but never warmed up - January never got above 22F, but the coldest was a modest -23.  Only the very AN Jan 1983 failed to get colder.  In the other 8 winters we lived there, January's bottoms ranged from -30 to -47.
    1981-82 had 185.8" total snowfall but had only 2 events with 12"+, 15.5" in Dec 19-20 and 17" in the April blizzard.  January's coldest that year was -34 on the 18th, which came with winds 25-35 (WCI -101 on the old chart, about -70 in the new) and visibility of 3 miles in very light snow.  Got all the way up to -14 that afternoon.  Northern Maine can't compete with northern MN, but Jan '82's temp was 9/-12, only Jan 1994 was colder.  (We'd moved to southern Maine in late 1985, and '94 there was quite cold, too.)

    • Like 1
  4. 2 hours ago, dendrite said:

    Ha yeah. It’s been all downhill from there. It’s going to take a lot to get back up to the 43” depth I had…there was a ton of water in that pack to support it. Around 20” right now and there’s still room to compact.

    We had 43" depth on Feb 29, 2008 with 10-14" forecast ("Manitoba Mauler") for March 1; I figured 50+ was in the bag.  Got only 6" which pushed the pack to 48", tops for that season, and there was still 35" on 3/31.  Somewhere (not in the spreadsheet) I have a core measurement from March 2008, probably 13-14" as we totaled 142.3" and most of the snow had meat.  DJFM precip totaled 22" and we had no extended thaws, just the one-day torch on Jan 8.

    Took a core earlier this afternoon, 20" pack held 3.86".  We probably had about 2" SWE in year end's 8" pack and we've had 2.59" since then (includes 0.54" from 2 modest Jan RA).   Factor in some sublimation and almost 4" seems appropriate.

  5. 1 hour ago, WxWatcher007 said:

    What's your coldest April low?

    Here's the coldest for each month, May 1998 on, contrasted with Fort Kent, Jan1, 1976 thru Oct 25, 1985.

    Month   New Sharon   Fort Kent   Month   New Sharon   Fort Kent
       JAN             -36          -47              JUL               37          32
       FEB              -29         -32              AUG              35          28
       MAR            -25          -32              SEP               23          20
       APR                5            -7               OCT               11            7
       MAY             21            20               NOV              -4         -12
       JUN             27            28               DEC             -31         -42

     

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  6. 3 hours ago, ORH_wxman said:

    People have to remember that 90% of the forum cares about snow. Nobody is going to get excited for a high of 24 and a low of 5F in late February if there’s no snow with it. 
     

    They’ll gladly take a high of 35-40F if it means a better shot at snow a few days later. 
     

    Nobody remembers March 2018 or March 2017 for “slowly melting”, they remember them for the huge snow events and deep pack that dominated those months. 

    March 2018 temps 1-15 were 5.1° AN and 36.4" snow fell.  Rest of the month was 4.0° BN (and 3° colder than 1-15) but had only 0.7" snow.

    1917-18 included NYC's coldest week.  Dec 29-Jan 4 temp avg was 9.3/-44 - that's 32.7 BN.  12/30 had 2/-13, 41 BN. 
    (Dec 1917 and Jan 1918 are NYC's coldest for each month since records began in 1869.)

  7. 52 minutes ago, dendrite said:

    I liked SLK’s -29 on St Patty’s in 2014. They did -25 a week later too.

    Not too many mornings below 0° in April during the ASOS era though.

    Our coldest March here.  We had -17 on 3/25/14, though the Month's coldest was -21 on the 6th.  Had 30.8" and the pack reached 43".


    Ah I see said the blind man

    The way I heard it:
    "I see, said the blind carpenter as he picked up his hammer and saw."

  8. High of 34 ended a 20-day run of maxima 32 or colder.  Longest run was Jan-Feb 2015 with 33.  Jan-Feb 2007 had 31 and only the 33 on Jan 24 broke a 42-day run. 
    (Dwarfed by Fort Kent, no surprise.  Dec 16, 1976 thru Feb 27, 1977 for 74 days, and only 5 of them had no flakes.  That period brought 117.2" snowfall.)

    • Like 3
  9. 12 hours ago, ORH_wxman said:

    Both 2003-2004 and 2002-2003 were about 0.4F behind at this point. Still quite cold but tied for 23rd while this year is tied for 17th

    Coldest DJM here, 1998-99 and forward, was 14-15 with 13.1°- no surprise.  Both 02-03 and 13-14 had 13.5°, 02-03 fractionally colder.  Adding March puts 13-14 in first place with 14.7° thanks to a very cold March.  14-15 is 2nd at 15.3°.
    In Gardiner, 85-86 thru 97-98, coldest for DJM and DJFM was 93-94, with 16.1° and 19.8°, respectively.  95-96 was BN but 92-93 was a bit colder.

    Day 18 of consecutive subzero minima, tying with Fort Kent in 1982, with -9.  No chance to extend the streak.

  10. 14 minutes ago, Roger Smith said:

    For NYC I think the -7 1934 entry is just the midnight low on the way down to the -15, as are some other NYC record lows. There are several -6 lows that would be next in the list of morning lows. 

    That is correct.  The other -7 came on Dec 31, 1917, the day after the -13 minimum.  My records show 6 days of -6 at NYC and one of them was 12/29/1917, likely an 11:59 reading. 
    Dec 29, 1917-Jan 4, 1918 stands alone as Central Park's coldest week.

    • yes 1
  11. 12 hours ago, powderfreak said:

    Back when BTV radiated... they used to put up some impressive lows.

    -18F at BOS is the most impressive though of those.

    I'd choose NYC.  Five coldest mornings:
         BOS            NYC
    -18   1934       -15   1934
    -17   1933       -13   1917
    -15   1933        -8   1943
    -14   1943        -7   1917
    -12   1957        -7    1934

    from HV:
    No crazy stretches of daytime low temperatures but I’ve had 17 mornings at or below zero now. Year of the radiators.

    Today makes 17 straight subzero mornings.  Forecast has #18 tomorrow, which would tie 1982 in Fort Kent for my longest anywhere.

  12. 1 hour ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

    Anecdotally, that kind of reminds of that Deathstar band at the end of 12-9-2005

    Or March 21, 1992.  Lived in Gardiner then and got a 2.4" overnight surprise.  11.4" at PWM and 2 feet at Goose Rocks Beach (Kennebunkport).  Several hours of 6"/hr for the 2-footer.  First time I saw the word "Norlun".

    Some eentsy snow grains sailing by.

    I wonder if that RI band will crush Cumberland.  :D

    • Like 1
  13. 1 hour ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

    Yea, it's going to be a late spring this year IMO....even by our standards.

    Hope it warms up in late May - last year the pollination window for our apples and quinces was 9 days of rainy 40s.  Fertilization was terrible.

    • Like 1
  14. 17 hours ago, ORH_wxman said:

    There’s no chance NYC goes below 0F. Unless there is just some sort of catastrophic model failure of 3-5C at 925mb. 

    Or a freaky event like Feb 8, 1963.  At 11 PM on 2/7 it was 30° and Tex Antoine forecast a low of 20.  When the temp dropped to 25 at midnight we wondered.  By 6 the next morning Central Park reported 5° and by 7 it had dropped to 2.  The low was -2 that morning with a stiff NW breeze, and some forecasters were talking 5-10 below zero for the next morning and were explaining the bust was due to a very cold blob somehow slipped from above to ground level.  (I understood none of that.)  The cold disappeared as fast as it arrived; after an afternoon high of 16 on 2/8 the temp only got down to 11 on 2/9 and by 2/10 the day's temp was 40/30, with 1.1" RA on 2/11-12.

    Got down to -2 during the overnight, the 15th straight day with subzero minima.  That tops the 14 days on Jan 15-28, 2003 for the longest run here.  Checked my Fort Kent  records, thinking that place would have much longer runs, but tops (and only one longer than 14 days) was 18 from Jan 16 thru Feb 2, 1982.

  15. 2 hours ago, ORH_wxman said:

    I think I’m all set with the pre-1940 winters…colder but drier. Unless it’s the 1930s….lot of huge torches mixed in that decade but it did have 1933-34.

    I’ll take the 1960s again though. :lol:

    Several years back I looked up states' records for 4 major parameters, hottest/coldest days and wettest/driest years.  My data is dated - most recent record was set in 2012.  That noted, my info has the 1930s holding 52 of the 200 total bests, 33 of the 100 temp extremes:  23 hottest, 10 coldest, 2 wettest (ID, WA) and 17 driest.  2nd most is the 1950s, with 5/2/10/9, respectively.

    Also noted was NNE holding 3 of the 5 hottest extremes in the 1910s.  (SC & CA the other 2.)  First 2 weeks of July 1911 were a north country furnace.

    • Like 1
  16. Solid winter so far, a solid B- which would be the best since 2018-19.  Sustained cold and pack plus the astronomical ratio that turned an 8-10" storm to nearly 20".  Snowfall YTD is 115% of average, but GYX's 7-day offers only a trace for Saturday and nothing beyond.  Maybe the mid-month mild-up can bring 'something' - haven't have a cutter since before Christmas.

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