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Posts posted by tamarack
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16 hours ago, WxWatcher007 said:
Let’s get two tropical systems to pour on us like 1954 so we can get moved from moderate drought to abnormally dry.
Carol and Edna each dumped a lot of rain, but they were about a month apart. The next year Connie/Diane combined for 12-22" in 8-9 days over much of SNE. Of course, the 1954 hurricanes had far more wind.
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Modest TS last evening (8:30-9) plus a shower about 6 AM totaled exactly 1/2". Looks to be all there we'll get before late next week.
So far this month's temp is running 2.2° warmer than our warmest July (2010) and the average continues to get warmer through late month, though only by 0.5°. Summer here has a 5-week plateau with average temp only varying by one degree. (The one-degree winter valley is less than 2 weeks.) -
"Never assume malice for what is easily explained as stupidity."
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That warning is in GYX' CWA. The heat criteria in Maine may be lower than for Massachusetts.

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10 hours ago, vortex95 said:
The record broken by the 1984 storm was April 7-8, 1982, the most glorious bust I've enjoyed. Late on April 6, CAR still thought OTS, forecasting 20s, windy, flurries. That blizzard left our black Chevette (a small car, but still . . .) with only a palm-size patch visible. My guesstimate in Fort Kent was 17", while the wind left the snow stake 2" lower than pre-storm, with mounds 5-6 feet tall within 20 feet on either side.
March 1984 is now 2nd, behind the 33.1" from an odd stationary storm Dec 25-27, 2005, the bright spot in a down winter. In mid-February a guy from Corpus Cristi, TX called the manager of Aroostook State Park (near PQI) about sledding. The response was that it was very poor, plus a recommendation to head north, to the St. John Valley and points west. -
1 hour ago, Great Snow 1717 said:
I refer to it as the softening of society..now days people have more issues handling weather because they are inside a lot more than back in the day..
Agree about the softening, also for folks playing the blame game if they are inconvenienced in any way. However, the bolded seems counterintuitive. at least from a practical standpoint. Those out in the wx would seem to be more affected than those sitting in their LRs poking their cellphones.
Wonder if we’ll all go 10 straight days with no rain ?
That arrives today; most recent precip was 0.16" on June 28. The temps running 5° AN during that period exacerbates the drying.
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11 hours ago, vortex95 said:
Nice li'l tight/coherent wrap up. Models showed this well. Don't always need a deep sfc coastal low for "fun 'n games!"
Biggest snowfall of my experience (26.5" on 3/14-15, 1984, CAR had 29.0") arrived at about 1030 mb and didn't quite get down to 1015 by storm's end.
Temp was +/- 10° for most of the event, with 15-25 mph SE breeze. 22" fell 6 AM-8 PM. The numbers:
13 10 -18 0 0 46"
14 12 2 2.08" 25.0" 65 " Deepest ever at my snow stake.
15 28 10 0.10" 1.5" 64" Snow ended before dawn, with some ZR.-
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51 minutes ago, powderfreak said:
Another sunny day and 81F.
Hasn’t rained in days. Feels like a different planet from SNE.
Mostly cloudy 70s here, not a drop since June 28. Water table is fine (5.53" in June) but the upper 6" is pretty dry.
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39 minutes ago, ineedsnow said:
last week I saw some guys roofing in the middle of the afternoon pretty sure it was the same day that guy was in your attic.. the hottest day of the few.. I couldn't believe it and was like no fooking way

Did that "attic-furnace" insulating in Fort Kent on the day (5/22/77) CAR hit 96, but I was young and foolish back then. I'm no longer young.
When I worked with carpenters in NNJ, 1967-73, we generally stayed off roofing if the temp was much over 80, especially in full sun, unless the roof pitch was low enough for us to work from above. Otherwise, we'd mess up the softened shingles already installed.
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3 minutes ago, CT Valley Snowman said:
Looks like about .45 so far at home. Nice day up in Maine.
Sun thru some very thin clouds, forecast says nada from the current system, maybe some TS late week. (Though that was the forecast for last Wed-Sat and nothing happened.) The Sandy River was above 75th percentile last Monday and probably will drop below 25% by Wednesday, as the trees are working and the temps have been very AN this month.
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3 hours ago, OceanStWx said:
Never say never, but I think this was good ol' fashioned straight line wind. That was a textbook bowing signature. You had a great signal for a rear inflow jet.
People are always surprised when they see real wind damage.
40 years ago in Northern Maine, straight line winds flattened about 600 acres, a swath 4 miles long running SW to NE. It started a bit north of (Aroostook) Eagle Lake and ended by blowing spruce trees into Square Lake. I've no idea whether the folks from CAR came out to look and report, but from what I heard and saw the wind probably reached 90-100 mph.
(That storm was late in season for that area - Sept 30. Ironically, 5 years later to the day they had 3-5" snow.)-
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1 hour ago, CT Valley Snowman said:
Nice 4th up here in Wilton,Maine. 85 and mostly sunny.
About the same 2 towns to the east, with a nice breeze. Low 60s dew still sticky but much more tolerable than Thursday's 70+.
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22 minutes ago, Ginx snewx said:
Every year. One NW wind day can unwell 7 to 10 degrees colder
Many years ago (1960?) I was with a group of kids on a trip to Sandy Hook, NJ. Expecting the mid-July ocean to be 70-72, we were a bit dismayed to find it at 57. Went swimming anyway but not for as long. Of course, some years earlier (1952) on our vacation at Spruce Head, part of Boothbay Harbor, I swam most every day in water that might've been even colder. Of course, 6-year-olds don't feel the cold water until mom or dad sees the blue lips and pulls us out.
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1 hour ago, dendrite said:
If that 87 is EWR it's their new record. 7/22/2011 was 108/86. (A Phoenix day, but with humidity.)
Storms slid to my south, 3-for-3 the past 3 nights. Didn't even see any "heat lightning" (a term I've used since the 1950s for flashes from too far away to be heard. Sorry, LR).
The SFD from GYX talked about storms/rain/troughs but their forecast for 04955 doesn't include a single drop thru next Thursday. -
11 hours ago, vortex95 said:
Saw this post today (screenshot attached). Posts like this allow us to call out nonsense or hype, or at least question content. This is a good thing b/c the amount of bad or misleading info out there is high.
So just take 133 heat index reading "as is" -- no critical thinking or independent thought?133 does not fit surrounding sites. We all too often assume what all wx sites report are correct. Untrue, and some networks are worse than others. You have so many out there, some just use personal wx stations (PWSs), and you know not all of them are sited or calibrated properly. This same problem exists for some official wx sites as well.
And where did this individual get the information for the record of heat index values in NJ? Is there even such a list officially?
Also, look carefully. No info on what this network this is, the name of the location, or what time it is at. It also does not give any information on where or when the previous heat index record occurred. This is often done to make it harder to check/validate claims.
In addition, it is mentions the highest actual temp recorded in NJ, yet talks about heat index. Inconsistent comparison and irrelevant in this case. And it claims that "much higher humidity" for the heatwave today (compared to the 1936 heat). Is that really true? Ppl just say things for a narrative or hype arbitrarily so much on posts like these w/ no hard evidence to support.
Be vague and generic, and hope ppl don't bother checking. Classic clickbait and hype tactic.
And when doing posts like this, I always take a screenshot and block out the poster's or site's name. Do not want to make it available for more clicks/likes. Which brings me to another point. Some post bad, incorrect, or exaggerated info on purpose b/c it will get more clicks/likes. It's all about content, facts and accuracy be damned.
Possibly a TD error - once dews get into mid-70s and above the HI goes nuts. Some years back I found a couple sites at Iranian oil-handling islands on the Persian Gulf that were reporting 98-100F with TD 88-90 and HI well into the 130s. Those readings were consistent over several days. Maybe each site had data issues, or maybe that's the dewpoint capitol of the world.
(Several times the reports included wind 25-30 mph with condition listed as "sand". I can't think of a worse wx experience, outside of strong tor/canes.)Follow-up to CAR minima: They were reporting 73 at midnight, warmer at 10 and 11 PM, down to 71 by 1 AM. Looks like their warmest minimum breaks the record, but by 2° rather than 3°.
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2 hours ago, dendrite said:
JFK and EWR 100
No surprise at EWR, while Central Park gets surrounded by ever taler trees. From 2000 on, NYC has reached 100 six times, the most recent in July of 2012. EWR has notched 40 triples during the same 26 years (don't have June numbers yet) and 17 of those have occurred in the 2020s.
KNYC 100°
And 15 minutes later my data becomes outdated.

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1 hour ago, Typhoon Tip said:
Those a bit more familiar with far NNE climo ... is 82 at 8:50 am impressive for CAR, ME. I'm assuming so.. but how much.
Impressive but probably short of all-time records. They've reached 96 on 4 occasions, May 1977 and June 1944, 2020, 2024. Those peaks came with lower dews than the current condition, and cooking water likely will modify the heat.
Their temp only rose 4° between 9 and 11, currently 86 with TD 71, so 90-02 looks better than 96 (unless mixing brings the dews to low 60s). However, if the morning low of 74 holds, that will be their record mild minimum, currently 71 reached a half dozen times. -
14 hours ago, VivaManchVegas said:
This is going to be unpopular, but cutting down trees to make room for solar panels should be outlawed. Unless they are impeding on your house and possible storm damage. I drive through Maine and see acres of clear cuts for panels. Its gross. On top of commercial buildings, land fills, desert or other wastelands, fine.
Edit.. I will add open hayfields to the ban.
Our home has trees 70-80 feet tall within 10 yards on 3 sides - 4th side same tree heights but 30 yards from the house. To make solar feasible we'd need to cut about a 3-year supply of firewood (5 cd/yr) and buy a new roof. No thanks.
2nd straight evening with all the action sliding to our south. Not even a flicker.
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13 minutes ago, powderfreak said:
Yeah I bet the neighborhood is bustling at -25F.
I love the cold and spend most time outside on the mountain in it, but it’s a fools errand to say more folks are outside in extreme cold than extreme heat.
Plenty of folks out up here.
Probably reached past -25 only once last (cold) winter - the frigid (2/-13) Sunday as the fluff bomb was approaching. Most recent -40 would be Feb 3-4, 2023. It's not an every-day phenomenon. (Unless you're on the Rockpile)
Mid 80s here with somewhat filtered sun and TD about 70 - summer. Forecast for tomorrow would predict a new hottest day here (currently 93) but our dense forest pumps cooling air into the atmosphere. The co-op 3 miles to my SE has a much better chance to be 95+.
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June 2026 numbers
Avg max: 72.8 +1.3 Warmest: 85, 12th
Avg min: 51.2 +1.6 Coolest: 35, 2nd
Mean: 62.0 +1.5
Precip: 5.51" +0.72" Wettest day: 1.27", 18th
This is the 2nd consecutive AN. Last time that happened was Dec 23-Jan 24.
We had 6 days with thunder, one more than we had all last year. June avg is 3.4.None of the TS were anywhere near severe, but they helped to bring AN total. YTD is still 2.86" BN but the gap has narrowed.
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2 hours ago, mreaves said:
We'll probably still get them - "Sunny and 88°, again"
Maybe. My older brother was in the Corps of Engineers and during the monsoon season of his Vietnam year (1967 into 68) there would be thunder and torrential rain 3-5 PM, so regular that one could almost set one's watch by the storm times.
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1 hour ago, OceanStWx said:
Maybe more impressive is that thing is just a ball of lightning. At its peak there were like 650-700 CGs in 5 minutes.
Around here 10 per minute is a lot. My only experience with anything close to the above came July 15 years ago at DEC. The storm was 6-8 miles to our south and the flashes were essentially uncountable - at least 100 per minute. Thanks to frequency and distance, the thunder was a constant drum roll.
Had a brief (10 minutes with most of the 0.16" in the first 2) but noisy TS arrive at 5 last afternoon. That makes 6 days with thunder this month, one more than all of last year. (Annual average is 15.)
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Time to get back to summer wx. Every day June 16-26 was BN, though modestly - the period was only 2.9° BN. The previous 7 days were 8.9° AN so the 18-day period was +1.7. Month's precip up to 5.35", first 5"+ since May of last year.


Ju-ply 2026 Obs and Disco - Kicking it off with heat, humidity, and ... severe?
in New England
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Memories of sweating while doing brush saw thinning north of Flagstaff Lake that summer. June had one hot spell, but the 6 weeks July 4 thru mid-August had some of the highest dews I've encountered in Maine. The 8/1-14 stretch of swamp-dews put mold all over things in our basement, only time I've seen that. IIRC, PWM had a 77° TD during that spell and a site in BGR (don't know where) reported 93° and 68% RH one afternoon, which would be a TD of about 81.