I actually got enough rain this afternoon for it to register, .01! The ground under trees stayed dry and the rest was dry within 10 minutes of it ending. Nice rainbow on the back side which was nice.
That darker green blob over southeastern Putnam is my hill, I'm on the east side right on the county line. Just to give y'all some perspective of where I am The northern end of that blob is where Drvts is
My new used car doesn't have a dash thermo but I run a gauge that shows live values and at one point when the sun was out it hit 82° Intake Air Temp. I also got a few dozen raindrops so I could test the wipers
I added it up recently and it was under 1.5 and I think I figured pretty well over 10" down since 3/1. Were those showers that only went through on radar all there is for today?
Unbalanced trees are falling over all over the place up here. I haven't lost any yet but two are taking on a pretty good lean and will probably go over sometime soon.
Stuff is dying everywhere throughout the area. I went up to Cape Cod last weekend and it's parched all the way up. This weekend we'll be in N Conway so I'll see what's up in interior New England. My yard is mostly dead. It's
It was 50° up in the hills between Binghamton and Middletown a few hours ago. Mmm, felt good driving along with the windows open. So 30-40% chance of showers Monday and Tuesday huh? Yeah, whatever. Time to give up on the garden and stop abusing our well pump I'll keep the herbs and strawberries going because they're a few years old now but everything else is on its own now.
I don't keep records but my recollection is it started to dry out in mid October. I was well below through your average period and it just keeps drying out. Parched...
I spun the mower and weed whacker through the front yard after that last little bit of moistness just to clean it up.
I had a Great Mullein show up in the yard this year, I never watered or even touched it and it got 7 feet tall.
My garden is just about done. Tomatoes, melons, and squash are toast. What few tomatoes that are able to ripen taste like shit and the celery has wilted and stood back up so many times it's woody and tastes salty. The only bright spot so far is peppers and herbs. Even the strawberries in hanging baskets stopped producing and a 5 year old berry patch with blueberry, raspberry and blackberry bushes has all but died. My well water is too hard and I can't run it long enough to properly soak things anyway and I was out of town for 3 days and that was the final straw. All those hours spent on it...
Looks like the storm that came through last night was pretty significant, all the loose debris and stuff was washed into piles and plants that have never had that water weight on them fell over and broke. I was asleep so don't know how long it rained for but it's a fair bit of damage for just .32". Total for the day was .64.
The thing is this time it's dry a foot or more down. It's going to take a few wet weeks with a couple of multi-inch days mixed in to soak things down sufficiently. At this point I expect a terrible foliage season because the flora just can't produce the sugars needed for good color. My beans look like they're growing but they're half dessicated and tough skinned like leather.
We'll be out of town so it's do or die time, if it doesn't rain the entire garden will die. The peppers might make it but everything else is too water intensive, celery, squash, tomatoes, etc.
Out and about around town the car was hovering between 96 and 100 but I can't find anything (reliable) here in the hill above 97 and one that's pretty well sheltered didn't quite get to 90. There were dewpoints as high as 81 on 2 stations but there has been enough breeze that it's not totally unbearable in the shade. My 23 year old kid went for a run