
SACRUS
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About SACRUS

- Birthday 08/08/1951
Profile Information
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Four Letter Airport Code For Weather Obs (Such as KDCA)
KEWR
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Gender
Male
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Location:
NYC-NJ
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Interests
Baseball, cigars, travel. Oh yeah tracking all weather especially snow and heatwaves, hurricanes. Historical weather
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46 / 28 and clear. Sunniest day in a while and highs into the low 60s. Warmer Friday +10 to the low 70s and add more Saturday to low 80s in the warmer spots but clouds may spoil the afternoon. Dry Easter and cooler to the 60s. Overall warmer than normal and drier pattern to close the month with around 0.25 in the forecast between 4/17 and 4/24.
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Records: Highs: EWR: 92 (2002) NYC: 92 (2002) LGA: 89 (2002) JFK: 86 (2003) Lows: EWR: 26 (1943) NYC: 29 (1928) LGA: 31 (1943) JFK: 32 (2014) Historical: 1849: Charleston, South Carolina recorded their latest freeze ever with a temperature of 32 degrees while 6 inches of snow fell at Wilmington, North Carolina. Snow fell as far south as Milledgeville, Georgia. A damaging hard freeze occurred from Texas to Georgia devastating the cotton crop. 1851: "The Lighthouse Storm" of 1851 struck New England on this date. Heavy gales and high seas pounded the coasts of New Hampshire and eastern Massachusetts. The storm arrived at the time of a full moon, and high tide was producing unusually high storm tides. The storm was so named because it destroyed the lighthouse at Cohasset, Massachusetts. Two assistant lighthouse keepers were killed there when the structure was swept away by the storm tide. 1851 - The famous "Lighthouse Storm" raged near Boston Harbor. Whole gales and gigantic waves destroyed Minot Light with its two keepers still inside. The storm resulted in great shipping losses and coastal erosion. (David Ludlum) 1880 - A tornado near Marshall, MO, carried the heavy timbers of an entire home a distance of twelve miles. (The Weather Channel) 1933 - Franklin Lake, NH, was buried under 35 inches of snow. (Sandra and TI Richard Sanders - 1987) 1960 - A wind gust of 70 mph was measured at the Stapleton International Airport in Denver CO, their highest wind gust of record. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - A slow moving storm system produced heavy rain over North Carolina and the Middle Atlantic Coast States. More than six inches of rain drenched parts of Virginia, and flooding in Virginia claimed three lives. Floodwaters along the James River inundated parts of Richmond VA. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - A storm in the northeastern U.S. produced a foot of snow at Pittsburg VT. Severe thunderstorms produced baseball size hail and spawned five tornadoes in the Southern High Plains Region. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - A cold front, ushering sharply colder air into the north central U.S., brought snow to parts of Montana and North Dakota. At midday the temperature at Cutbank MT was just 22 degrees. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1990 - Thunderstorms developing along a stationary front produced large hail and damaging winds across Oklahoma, with 99 reports of large hail and damaging winds during the evening and early nighttime hours. Thunderstorms produced baseball size hail south of Carney, and wind gusts to 100 mph in the Oklahoma City area which swept away many Federal tax returns being transported from a mail cart to a waiting truck about the time of the midnight deadline. Will Rogers Airport in Oklahoma City reported a record wind gust of 92 mph. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
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47 / 27 cloudy and breezy. Coolest of the next 7 days. Should get more clearing into the afternoon but another cloudy morning. Overall warmer Thu and very warm Fri/Sat and enough sun gets the warmest spot to mid 80s on Saturday. Dry and pleasant but a touch cooler Easter Sunday and into the Monday. Overall riding into the east to close the month warmer than normal. Drier week ahead with only up to or less than 0.25 forecast between 4/16 and 4/23.
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Made it to 71 now dropping down to 65 with winds gusting SSW
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As it looks now Easter Sunday looks nice, partly cloudy.
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Records: Highs: EWR: 88 (1960) NYC: 87 (1941) LGA: 86 (1941) JFK: 80 (2006) Lows: EWR: 25 (1943) NYC: 27 (1943) LGA: 28 (1943) JFK: 33 (1962) Historical: 1921 - Two mile high Silver Lake, CO, received 76 inches of snow in 24 hours, the heaviest 24 hour total of record for North America. The storm left a total of 87 inches in twenty-seven and a half hours. (David Ludlum) 1927 - New Orleans LA was drenched with 14.01 inches of rain, which established a 24 hour rainfall record for the state. (The Weather Channel) 1949 - A hailstone five inches by five and a half inches in size, and weighing four pounds, was measured at Troy NY. (The Weather Channel) 1958 - A tornado 300 yards in width skipped along a five mile path near Frostproof FL. A 2500 gallon water tank was found one mile from its original position (it is not known how much water was in the tank at the time). (The Weather Channel) 1987 - Thunderstorms developing along a cold front produced severe weather in the Southern Atlantic Coast Region. A tornado killed one person and injured seven others near Mount Dora FL. Drifts of hail up to two feet deep were reported in Davidson and Rowan counties in North Carolina. Myrtle Beach SC was deluged with seven inches of rain in three hours. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Death Valley, CA, was soaked with 1.53 inches of rain in 24 hours. Snow fell in the mountains of southern California. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Showers and thunderstorms soaked the eastern U.S. with heavy rain, pushing the rainfall total for the month at Cape Hatteras NC past their previous April record of 7.10 inches. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 1990 - Thunderstorms developing along a stationary front produced severe weather from west central Texas to west central Arkansas during the late afternoon and evening. Thunderstorms spawned a tornado which caused more than half a million dollars damage at Fort Stockton TX, produced wind gusts to 65 mph at Dennison TX, produced baseball size hail at Silo OK and near Capps Corner TX, and drenched southeastern Oklahoma with up to 4 inches of rain in two hours. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1998: An F3 tornado hits downtown Nashville causing extensive damage but no loss of life. An additional 62 tornadoes touched down in Arkansas, Kentucky, and Tennessee. These tornadoes caused 12 fatalities and approximately 120 injuries. Click HERE for more information from the NWS Office in Nashville.
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58 / 53 light drizzle earlier and what is the 6th straight day of mostly cloudy conditions rolls on. Did make it to 70 yesterday with some breaks in the clouds but was mostly cloudy a majority of the day. More clouds and windy later tonight and tomorrow and cooler back to the 50s. Thursday looks the sunniest day of what should wind up being 11 days (April 10 - 20). Much warmer Fri / Sat but still plenty of clouds and isolated showers, larger breaks on Saturday will get places back above 80. Easter looks dry and near normal. The period 21 - 30 looks overall warmer than normal but not as warm as had previously been forecast.
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just a little sun will do the trick.
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Some breaks into S NJ with sun. If we cant get more prooucned clearing upper 60s and 70 will be hard to achieve.
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Showers approaching
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Records: Highs: EWR: 93 (2023) NYC: 91 (2023) LGA: 89 (2023) JFK: 82 (2023) Lows: EWR: 26 (1950) NYC: 26 (1950) LGA: 27 (1950) JFK: 27 (1950) Historical: 1873 - A famous Easter blizzard raged across Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota. Gale force winds blew the wet snow into massive drifts, however there were few deaths due to the sparse population and due to the gradual increase of the storm. (David Ludlum) 1886 - A devastating tornado, 800 yards in width at times, cut a twenty mile path through Saint Cloud MN killing 74 persons. The bottom of the Mississippi River was said to have been seen during the tornado's crossing. Eleven persons were killed at a wedding party near the town of Rice. (David Ludlum) (The Weather Channel) 1912: On her maiden voyage, the RMS Titanic rammed into an iceberg just before midnight. The "unsinkable ship" sank two hours and forty minutes later into the icy water of the Atlantic Ocean near Newfoundland, Canada. Tragically, 1,517 passengers including the crew were lost. A nearby ship, the Carpathia, rushed to the Titanic and was able to save 706 people. 1922: The Mississippi River reached a record height of 21.3 feet at New Orleans, Louisiana, and the river was still rising, with the crest still a week away. Understandably, the City of New Orleans was nervous as reports of levees failing upriver reached the city. A crevasse below New Orleans would relieve the pressure on the town's strained levees on the 27th, spared the city from disaster. 1935: Black Sunday refers to a particularly severe dust storm that occurred on April 14, 1935, as part of the Dust Bowl. During the afternoon, the residents of the Plains States were forced to take cover as a dust storm, or "black blizzard," blew through the region. The storm hit the Oklahoma Panhandle and Northwestern Oklahoma first and moved south for the remainder of the day. It hit Beaver around 4:00 p.m., Boise City around 5:15 p.m., and Amarillo, Texas, at 7:20 p.m. The conditions were the most severe in the Oklahoma and Texas panhandles, but the storm's effects were felt in other surrounding areas. 1987 - A storm system moving slowly northeastward across the Middle Mississippi Valley produced severe thunderstorms which spawned three tornadoes around Ottumwa IA, and produced up to four inches of rain in southeastern Nebraska, flooding rivers and streams. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - A weather disturbance off the southern coast of California brought parts of southern California their first rain in six weeks. Rain-slickened roads resulted in numerous accidents in southern California, including a ten car pile-up at Riverside. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1989 - Late afternoon thunderstorms in northern Florida soaked the town of Golden Gate with 4.37 inches of rain in about two hours, resulting in local flooding. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1990 - Thunderstorms developing along a cold front produced severe weather in southeastern Texas during the mid morning hours. Thunderstorms produced dime size hail at Galveston, and wind gusts to 59 mph at Port Arthur. Afternoon thunderstorms over southeast Louisiana spawned tornadoes south of Bogalusa and at Rio. (Storm Data)
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51 / 33 clouds coming back. Break the below normal streak and much warmer the next 36 hours. Mid / upper 60s and with enough sun in spots near or to 70. Some showers overnight. Cooler Tue PM / Wed. Back to normal or above by Thu and it looks to stay overall warm to very warm beyond there. Drier week with the exception of some rain light and showers Tue AM and Fri PM into Saturday near 0.25 for the week. Saturday could be very warm pending on clouds. Easter looks dry and pleasant. Ridge into the east and a very warm close to the month should balance off the current negative departures and push some places above.
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A week (7 days) of below average should end tomorrow. EWR: 4/7: 51 / 41 (-4) 4/8: 49 / 35 (-9) 4/9: 50 / 32 (-10) 4/10: 51 / 40 (-5) 4/11: 48 / 43 (-6) 4/12: 43 / 36 (-12) 4/13: 60 / 40 (-3)
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JFK: Latest April 16, 2014 : 32 degrees / Earliest October 19, 1976 : 31 dgrees
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Rain totals from Fri/Sat LGA: 0.97 EWR: 1.02 JFK: 1.02 NYC: 1.05 TTN: 1.38