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SACRUS

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  1. JFK July, 1993 Day High (°F) Low (°F) Precip. (inches) Snow (inches) July 1 83 66 0.00 0.0 July 2 71 64 0.85 0.0 July 3 85 65 0.61 0.0 July 4 96 71 0.00 0.0 July 5 89 71 0.00 0.0 July 6 81 71 0.00 0.0 July 7 88 73 0.00 0.0 July 8 94 77 0.00 0.0 July 9 101 77 0.00 0.0 July 10 100 80 0.00 0.0 July 11 91 76 0.00 0.0 July 12 94 77 0.00 0.0 July 13 89 75 0.00 0.0 July 14 85 71 0.05 0.0 July 15 90 74 0.00 0.0 July 16 88 68 0.00 0.0 July 17 87 67 0.00 0.0 July 18 82 68 0.00 0.0 July 19 75 65 0.33 0.0 July 20 91 66 0.00 0.0 July 21 87 72 0.00 0.0 July 22 85 69 0.00 0.0 July 23 87 70 0.00 0.0 July 24 81 66 0.00 0.0 July 25 86 68 0.00 0.0 July 26 76 65 0.00 0.0 July 27 81 68 0.33 0.0 July 28 89 73 0.00 0.0 July 29 88 72 0.22 0.0 July 30 86 73 0.00 0.0 July 31 84 70 0.00 0.0
  2. 1991 not as hot in JFK JFK, July, 1991 July 1 79 62 0.00 0.0 July 2 80 67 0.28 0.0 July 3 77 66 0.00 0.0 July 4 77 63 0.00 0.0 July 5 71 66 0.35 0.0 July 6 77 67 0.00 0.0 July 7 84 71 0.07 0.0 July 8 89 71 0.00 0.0 July 9 88 73 0.00 0.0 July 10 80 62 0.00 0.0 July 11 90 68 0.00 0.0 July 12 82 63 0.00 0.0 July 13 77 66 0.68 0.0 July 14 82 69 0.00 0.0 July 15 87 67 0.00 0.0 July 16 86 67 0.00 0.0 July 17 91 71 0.00 0.0 July 18 92 76 0.00 0.0 July 19 88 76 0.00 0.0 July 20 96 76 0.00 0.0 July 21 99 77 0.05 0.0 July 22 89 74 0.08 0.0 July 23 97 74 0.39 0.0 July 24 89 74 0.00 0.0 July 25 80 70 0.26 0.0 July 26 84 71 0.20 0.0 July 27 79 69 0.00 0.0 July 28 86 67 0.00 0.0 July 29 74 67 0.12 0.0 July 30 78 68 0.00 0.0 July 31 80 69 0.00 0.0
  3. Haze moving out and some clouds forming - A beautiful 81 / 54 here https://cdn.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES19/ABI/SECTOR/NE/GEOCOLOR/GOES19-NE-GEOCOLOR-600x600.gif
  4. JFK July, 2010 July 1 81 64 0.00 0.0 July 2 83 62 0.00 0.0 July 3 87 66 0.00 0.0 July 4 101 69 0.00 0.0 July 5 97 71 0.00 0.0 July 6 101 75 0.00 0.0 July 7 100 77 0.00 0.0 July 8 87 76 0.00 0.0 July 9 87 74 0.00 0.0 July 10 83 74 0.00 0.0 July 11 90 73 0.00 0.0 July 12 90 71 0.00 0.0 July 13 83 74 0.85 0.0 July 14 82 74 0.29 0.0 July 15 86 73 0.00 0.0 July 16 87 74 0.00 0.0 July 17 93 79 0.00 0.0 July 18 95 77 0.00 0.0 July 19 88 74 0.58 0.0 July 20 89 75 0.00 0.0 July 21 90 76 0.00 0.0 July 22 91 75 0.00 0.0 July 23 84 74 0.61 0.0 July 24 97 80 0.00 0.0 July 25 93 74 0.08 0.0 July 26 89 68 0.00 0.0 July 27 90 71 0.00 0.0 July 28 86 71 0.00 0.0 July 29 87 74 0.03 0.0 July 30 80 68 0.00 0.0 July 31 81 64 0.00 0.0
  5. JFK July, 2011 July 1 85 63 0.00 0.0 July 2 86 67 0.00 0.0 July 3 78 70 0.23 0.0 July 4 86 69 0.00 0.0 July 5 91 70 0.00 0.0 July 6 86 71 0.00 0.0 July 7 92 73 0.09 0.0 July 8 82 70 0.58 0.0 July 9 91 70 0.00 0.0 July 10 82 68 0.00 0.0 July 11 88 72 0.00 0.0 July 12 98 77 0.00 0.0 July 13 89 70 0.06 0.0 July 14 85 66 0.00 0.0 July 15 86 68 0.00 0.0 July 16 89 69 0.00 0.0 July 17 87 70 0.00 0.0 July 18 94 72 0.00 0.0 July 19 93 75 0.00 0.0 July 20 85 73 0.00 0.0 July 21 88 73 0.00 0.0 July 22 103 76 0.00 0.0 July 23 102 79 0.00 0.0 July 24 93 76 0.21 0.0 July 25 81 70 0.09 0.0 July 26 88 70 0.17 0.0 July 27 87 69 0.00 0.0 July 28 86 69 0.00 0.0 July 29 83 71 1.28 0.0 July 30 93 75 0.00 0.0 July 31 89 71 0.00 0.0
  6. JFK July, 1966 July 1 85 67 0.00 0.0 July 2 101 69 0.00 0.0 July 3 104 77 0.00 0.0 July 4 101 74 0.00 0.0 July 5 86 69 0.00 0.0 July 6 82 70 0.00 0.0 July 7 91 73 0.00 0.0 July 8 87 69 0.00 0.0 July 9 85 62 0.00 0.0 July 10 87 70 0.00 0.0 July 11 98 73 0.00 0.0 July 12 93 72 0.00 0.0 July 13 92 73 0.00 0.0 July 14 89 73 0.00 0.0 July 15 83 66 0.00 0.0 July 16 82 60 0.00 0.0 July 17 83 63 0.00 0.0 July 18 87 63 0.00 0.0 July 19 81 67 0.34 0.0 July 20 82 61 0.00 0.0 July 21 79 59 0.00 0.0 July 22 81 59 0.00 0.0 July 23 81 64 0.00 0.0 July 24 80 64 0.00 0.0 July 25 82 66 0.00 0.0 July 26 89 68 0.01 0.0 July 27 82 69 0.08 0.0 July 28 80 70 0.03 0.0 July 29 91 70 0.23 0.0 July 30 78 63 0.00 0.0 July 31 85 62 0.00 0.0
  7. July 1966 hottest of the summer JFK 7/2/1966: 101 / 69 7/3/1966: 104 / 77 7/4/1966: 101 / 74
  8. Records: Highs: EWR: 96 (2000) NYC: 95 (1973) LGA: 96 (1984) JFK: 93 (1984) Lows: EWR: 46 (1980) NYC: 46 (1972) LGA: 46 (1972) JFK: 48 (1980) Historical: 1842 - A late season snowstorm struck New England. Snow fell during the morning and early afternoon, accumulating to a depth of ten to twelve inches at Irasburg VT. Berlin NH was blanketed with eleven inches of snow during the day. Snow whitened the higher peaks of the Appalachians as far south as Maryland. (David Ludlum) 1842: A late-season snowstorm struck New England. Snow fell during the morning and early afternoon, accumulating to a depth of ten to twelve inches at Irasburg, Vermont. Berlin, New Hampshire was blanketed with eleven inches of snow during the day. Snow whitened the higher peaks of the Appalachians as far south as Maryland. The latest date for the occurrence of a general snowstorm in our period over northern New England and northern New York came in 1842 on the morning of 11 June. Zadock Thompson, a professor of natural history and the Queen City's longtime weatherman, commented: "Snow during the forenoon's boards whitened and the mountains as white as in winter." 1877 - The temperature at Los Angeles, CA, reached 112 degrees during a heatwave. It would have been the all-time record for Los Angeles but official records did not begin until twenty days later. (The Weather Channel) 1915: A tornado moved slowly northeast from southwest of Mullinville, KS, allowing people to reach shelter from this extremely large tornado. One entire farm was completely swept away on the edge of Mullinville, and many more homes were destroyed. As it moved northeast, eight separate funnels were noted at one time under the huge rotating cloud. Damage totaled $75,000 dollars. It was reported that three mules were carried two miles. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1947: An unusually cold late season storm system brought significant snow to Cheyenne, WY. By the end of the day, 4.4 inches of snow had fallen, and the snow continued into the 12th. A trace of snow fell at Denver, CO. They also set a daily record low of 34°. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1954: A strong heat wave hit much of the Midwest. Chicago, IL set a record high of 97°. This began an 11-day run with high temperatures of 90° or higher. Two high temperature records were set during that period. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1972: FROST at Big Meadows, VA 31°, Blacksburg, VA 30°, Dulles, VA 40°, KDCA 47°, Naked creek, Virginia 32° . Dozens of locations in the Mid-Atlantic and southern New England reported record chill thanks to Canadian high pressure. Muskegon, MI set a June record low of 31°. Locations that reported daily record lows included: Elkins, WV: 29°, Beckley, WV: 32°, Charleston, WV: 33°, Baltimore, MD: 40°, Dulles Airport, VA: 40°, Lynchburg, VA: 41°, Richmond, VA: 48° and Norfolk, VA: 53°. 1972 - Heavy showers brought 1.64 inches of rain to Phoenix AZ, a record for the month of June. (The Weather Channel) 1987 - South Texas endured another day of torrential rains. Up to twelve inches of rain drenched Harris County, and nearly ten inches soaked Luce Bayou, mainly during the afternoon hours. Thunderstorm rains left seven feet of water over Highway 189 in northern Val Verde County. Flooding caused nine million dollars damage in Real County. A thunderstorm at Perryton, TX, produced golf ball size hail and 70 mph winds, and spawned a tornado which struck a mobile killing one person and injuring the other four occupants. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Thirty cities in the central and eastern U.S. reported record low temperatures for the date, including El Dorado, AR, with a reading of 48 degrees. Canaan Valley WV and Thomas WV dipped to 30 degrees. Flagstaff AZ was the cold spot in the nation with a low of 30 degrees. Coolidge, just 180 miles away, was the hot spot in the nation with an afternoon high of 105 degrees. (The National Weather Summary) 1989 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather in the south central and southeastern U.S. during the day and night. Thunderstorms spawned eleven tornadoes, including one which tore the roof off a restaurant at Bee Branch, AR, injuring six persons. The tornado tossed one car into the restaurant, and another car over it. Temperatures soared into the 90s across much of Florida. Lakeland reported a record high of 99 degrees for the second day in a row. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1990: One of the most expensive hailstorms in U.S. history occurred as $625 million of damage was caused along the Colorado Front Range from Colorado Springs to Estes Park. Golf to baseball sized hail fell along with heavy rain. 60 people were injured in the storm. 1993: The first federal Disaster Declaration was issued for parts of Minnesota hard hit by the beginning stages of the Great Midwest Flood of 1993. By August, parts of nine states were declared disaster areas. The entire state of Iowa was declared a disaster area. The flood was the worst this century in the U.S. Damage totaled almost $20 billion dollars. More than 50,000 homes were damaged or destroyed. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1995: Lightning struck a metal garage door in Franklintown, PA. A man leaning against the door was partially paralyzed for nearly a day. It was the 2nd time in the last 10 years the 30-yr-old man had been hit by lightning. (Ref. Weather Guide Calendar with Phenomenal Weather Events 2011 Accord Pub. 2010, USA) 1996: Hail five inches in diameter fell 13 miles southeast of Mullinville, KS. There was a report of 10 head of cattle killed. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1999: On this date through the 14th, several hailstorms occurred across Eastern Colorado. Hail accumulated to a depth of 12 inches near Colorado Springs, CO. The roof on a business gave way under the weight of the hail. Damage in the Denver area totaled $35 million dollars ($17.5 million dollars from auto claims and $17.5 million from homeowner claims). Areas hardest hit included: Castle Rock, Commerce City, Evergreen and Golden. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History)
  9. 73 / 56 hazy (smoke) otherwise partly sunny- sunny. Back to the 80s today - warmer tomorrow with the next or first 90 for the hotter spots in C/N -NJ perhaps even east. A bit cooler Friday but still sunny/ dry. Next stretch of 96 hours of clouds and front over or near by bring 1 - 1.5 inches of rain between overnight Friday into next Tuesday. Beyond there overall warm / wet with heat from the west building north and east by the 20th as it turns hotter but looks to remain with rain/storms chances keeping it overall wet. 6/11 - 6/13 : Warm up , dry 6/14 - 6/17 : Front - clouds, rain 1-2 inches 6/18 - 6/19 : warmer 6/20 - beyond : warm-hot / wet overall western heat building north=east
  10. Today's (6/10) Highs PHL: 84 ACY: 82 TTN: 80 New Brnswck: 79 TEB: 79 EWR: 79 BLM: 78 LGA: 76 JFK: 75 ISP: 75 NYC: 73
  11. https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/goes//wfo.php?wfo=phi https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/goes//wfo.php?wfo=phi
  12. Yesterday's departures 6/9 LGA: 64 / 61 (-8) NYC: 64 / 62 (-7) EWR: 67 / 62 (-6) JFK: 66 / 62 (-4)
  13. Just hard to clear out with an onshore wind component E/ENE still. Like silly puddy
  14. Yes I was pointing out there wasn't high concentration in other period like this period.
  15. Looks like rain is possible Sun/Monday as well.
  16. 15 of JFK's July record highs occurred from 2000 - 2024 including 2 back to back 99 degree readings in 2019.
  17. 3 day reprieve with maybe some 90 degree readings in NJ (Thursday) then a 4 days / 96 hours of mainly cloudy conditions stretch again Sat - Tue. When was the last good ol fashioned zonal flow - I remember those TWC forecast maps
  18. Records: Highs: EWR: 99 (2008) NYC: 96 (2008) LGA: 100 (2008) JFK: 94 (1959) Lows: EWR: 49 (1972) NYC: 49 (1972) LGA: 48 (1972) JFK: 51 (1998) Historical: 1752 - It is believed that this was the day Benjamin Franklin narrowly missed electrocution while flying a kite during a thunderstorm to determine if lightning is related to electricity. (David Ludlum) 1816: A severe frost blackened fields of beans and cucumbers from VA to New England. In some areas of the NE, trees remained leafless well into June due to the long and cold spring. (p.33 Washington Weather Book 2002 by Ambrose, Henry, Weiss) Chauncey Jerome's wife who lived in Plymouth, Conn. brought in some clothes that had been spread on the ground the night before, which were frozen stiff as in winter. (Scientific American, "The Year without a Summer" pp. 45 - 48) 1902: A tornado touched down a few miles east of Canton and moved through Kingston Mines, IL. Two people were killed near Canton, but much of the damage occurred in the Kingston Mines area, where 16 homes were destroyed. 20 men and 18 engines were buried in the roundhouse there. Eight people were killed further east, when buildings were destroyed by strong winds. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1929: The first radiosonde was sent up by French Meteorologists.(Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1957 - A dust devil at North Yarmouth, ME, lifted a 600 to 1000 pound chicken shelter into the air and carried it 25 feet. It landed upright with only slight damage. It is unknown whether any eggs were scrambled. (The Weather Channel) 1958 - A woman was sucked through the window of her home in El Dorado, KS, by a powerful tornado, and was carried sixty feet away. Beside her was found a broken phonograph record entitled Stormy Weather . (The Weather Channel) 1972: Record chill invaded parts of the upper Midwest. Locations that reported record low June temperatures for the date included: Jump River, WI: 23°, Blair, WI: 28°, Owen, WI: 28°, Alma, WI: 38°, Genoa, WI: 38°, Trempealeau, WI: 38° and Lynxville, WI: 40°. (Ref. Wilson Wx. History) 1987 - Thunderstorms produced 2 to 4 inch rains in southern Texas. Two and a half inches of rain at Juno TX caused flooding and closed a nearby highway. Flooding on the northwest side of San Antonio claimed one life as a boy was swept into a culvert. Thunderstorms in the north central U.S. produced an inch and a half of small hail at Monida Pass MT. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data) 1988 - Three dozen cities, mostly in the eastern U.S., reported record low temperatures for the date, including Elkins, WV, with a reading of 33 degrees. Unseasonably hot weather continued in the Northern High Plains Region. The record high of 105 degeees at Williston, ND, was their seventh in eight days. (The National Weather Summary) 1989 - Thunderstorms produced severe weather through the day and night across much of the southern half of the Great Plains Region. Thunderstorms spawned 14 tornadoes, and there were 142 reports of large hail and damaging winds. Hail three inches in diameter caused three millions dollars damage at Carlsbad, NM. Hail four inches in diameter was reported at Estelline TX and Stinnett, TX. Thunderstorm winds gusted to 80 mph at Odessa TX. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary) 1997: Flash Flooding occurred in many locations in Mississippi. Highway 80 and many other streets were flooded in and around Vicksburg. Water engulfed one person's car, but the person was rescued. This event caused $300,000 in property damages. Over 6 inches of rain fell in Lexington in a little over 3 hours. The torrential rains caused Bear Creek to overflow and flood much of the town of Lexington. 45 businesses were affected by the flooding and 30 of these suffered major losses. As many as 300 homes had water damage. This event caused 10 million dollars in property damages. Portions of Jones County experienced flash flooding as 3 inches of rain fell in just 1.5 hours over saturated ground. 2008: June 7 - 9 , New York, New York: New York City set record high temperatures for three days running: 96 °F, 96 °F, and 99 °F.
  19. 64 / 63 cloudy , foggy and moderate rain. Looks to stay mainly cloudy day 4, with some potential clearing moving through CPA now coming eat later this afternoon. Clear our and warm up Wed - Fri, with Thu next or first 90+ in the hotter spots. Next front boundary and 4 days of clouds Sat - Tue next week before clearing out and warming by mid week / 6/18. Heat building from the SW on north nd east and could see brief stronger hear 6/20 with overall warm /wet last 10 days that with the potential that it could turn hotter with the expended heat source into the east. https://cdn.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES19/ABI/SECTOR/eus/02/GOES19-EUS-02-1000x1000.gif
  20. Agreed and feel this summer the peak of the heat (above normal) is late July - August and spots east will stay near or mid 20s and C-N NJ 30+ days in the 90s. In 2022 EWR had 4 90 degree days to this point and wound up with 49 90 + days and before then 2016 had 3 90 degree days to this point and wound up with 40. Thursday EWR gets to 2 then will have to wait to the Jun 20 - 30 period to see where June winds up this year.
  21. 40s/50s had more record lows as well check the daily records posted. 2010 - 2019 #90 days vs 40-40 , 50 -59 i think still trended higher recently (maybe outside the park) . I am trying to find previous posts with the data or online. (We) the part of the area east of the Hudson and Staten Island has been influenced by persistent onshore limiting heat west of there while those in EPA- NJ had many above normal 90 degree days in the past 5 years outside 2023 which was jsut shy of normal amount of 90 degree days.
  22. Another inch over (Tue) / Sat - Sun.
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