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powderfreak

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Everything posted by powderfreak

  1. Wind damage reports following the line.
  2. Damn! Thats awesome for an ASOS. High-end memorable at that level.
  3. Waiting for imminent strong storms to come is one of the better highs in watching weather.
  4. You love to read it… “transformers blown and fires everywhere.” lol
  5. That thing just seems to be getting healthier. It’s like a massive bow echo.
  6. I love seeing a line on radar with a whole bunch of thunderstorm wind damage reports in it’s wake.
  7. New Disco… Mesoscale Discussion 1439 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0753 PM CDT Wed Jun 26 2024 Areas affected...southeastern New York and southern New England Concerning...Severe Thunderstorm Watch 469... Valid 270053Z - 270230Z The severe weather threat for Severe Thunderstorm Watch 469 continues. SUMMARY...Risk for damaging winds continues -- particularly across northern parts of WW 469. At least some risk should eventually spread into Rhode Island parts of Massachusetts, possibly requiring new WW consideration in the next hour or so. DISCUSSION...Latest radar loop shows a band of strong to severe storms moving east-northeastward into/across southeastern New York including the New York City area at this time. Locally strong/damaging wind gusts remain the primary risk with these storms, which should continue over the next few hours -- moving across Connecticut and Long Island. With the instability axis extending eastward into Rhode Island and portions of Massachusetts near and south of the ongoing/persistent, west-to-east band of storms, at least some risk may extend east of the existing watch in the next couple of hours. This could warrant new WW consideration. ..Goss.. 06/27/2024 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...BOX...OKX...ALY...
  8. RT 20 in Worcester has vehicles stranded in floodwaters.
  9. This is going to be wild. That is torrential rain and not moving off those areas anytime soon.
  10. That axis looks like it’s slowed the northward movement. Another acute high rainfall event in progress.
  11. Does that line lift far enough north to be a problem for this game?
  12. Last of winter 2023-2024 right here…
  13. Raining again. A good deal of synoptic driven precip lately. Not going to amount to much but keeps the low levels moist.
  14. 82/55 and absolutely perfect. Felt warmer than 82F in the sun… I would’ve guessed mid-80s.
  15. Had a family of four come through last evening. Couldn't get them all in a shot at once.
  16. This last page of posts has been hilarious. 69 Shortjohnson Lane
  17. Days and days of precip is great in winter, but not in summer. Over 7” on the month here now.
  18. This is like backside deformation rains. Heavy sheet rains and low visibility. What a dumpster fire. METAR KMVL 241850Z AUTO 35006KT 1 1/4SM +RA BR
  19. Yeah, luckily this was a bit more localized in a west to east manner than widespread north-south along the Spine. Feel like most of the waterways in Stowe head towards the Winnoski instead of the Lamoille (from Moss Glens Falls and West Branches, Gold Brook, etc). I think both sides of the Worcester Range took the brunt of it to be honest.
  20. I haven’t. Not sure the northward extent of it. Seemed like an axis from Underhill to Stowe to Worecester/Elmore/Wolcott.
  21. Another rainy day. About to swallow an Uzi if I can't get outside again. We've had a month's worth of rain since Thursday.
  22. There’s just debris everywhere. This is along RT 100 in Stowe heading to Morrisville… I’m not even sure where the waterway is but there’s just trees littered throughout the fields. Still water and mud flowing out of the hillsides. That escalated so fast yesterday. Still crazy to me how sitting at the mountain it was fine, fine, fine, then every waterway exploded at once and it was very not fine. It felt like in 30 seconds every single creek went from routine to holy crap.
  23. It’s interesting that despite the high-end severe risk, with wind and TORs possible, the rainfall was by far the most impactful element. It rained hard. It was a “this is going to be a problem” type rainfall. I was in a vehicle at 1800ft at work during it… and after watching weather on this mountain for 15 years, this rainfall was a sign of problems in lower elevations if it was flashing like this up high. I alerted BTV to the situation at the mountain and they issued the first Flash Flood Warning immediately. WGUS51 KBTV 232044 FFWBTV VTC005-007-015-023-232345- /O.NEW.KBTV.FF.W.0001.240623T2044Z-240623T2345Z/ /00000.0.ER.000000T0000Z.000000T0000Z.000000T0000Z.OO/ BULLETIN - EAS ACTIVATION REQUESTED Flash Flood Warning National Weather Service Burlington VT 444 PM EDT Sun Jun 23 2024 The National Weather Service in Burlington has issued a * Flash Flood Warning for... Northern Washington County in central Vermont... Western Caledonia County in northeastern Vermont... East Central Chittenden County in northwestern Vermont... Southern Lamoille County in northwestern Vermont... * Until 745 PM EDT. * At 444 PM EDT, Thunderstorms producing heavy rain in steep terrain is driving flash flooding in the vicinity of Mount Mansfield. Between 1 and 2 inches of rain have fallen. The expected rainfall rate is 1 to 2 inches in 30 minutes. Flash flooding is already occurring. HAZARD...Flash flooding caused by thunderstorms. SOURCE...Public reported. IMPACT...Flash flooding of small creeks and streams, urban areas, highways, streets and underpasses as well as other poor drainage and low-lying areas. * Some locations that will experience flash flooding include... Morrisville, Worcester, Stowe, Middlesex, Morristown, Elmore, Morrisville Village, Waterbury, Waterbury Village, Calais, East Montpelier, Moretown, Hyde Park, Woodbury, Wolcott, Underhill State Park, Duxbury, Bolton, Cambridge and Underhill. This warning was soon updated with law enforcement reporting multiple washouts and roads out across the area. I give BTV credit for accepting my observations as fact in the moment (that the rainfall was going to be a problem) and they acted on it. Subsequent downstream flooding in Stowe and the Worcester Range was severe, but they were able to get the warnings out quick. I don’t think flash flooding was the primary concern but it’ll be the most costly part of these storms.
  24. It’s been a topic of conversation up here. The flash floods and larger river flooding has been a lot more frequent than anyone can remember. A couple widespread flooding events have set all-time river levels across a large chuck of real estate in recent years. On top of that there has been a propensity for locally high-end destructive flash flood events in many New England towns. The warm departures have consequences, if you could call it that. Naturally more heat and moisture (higher temps and dews) in the means will lead to more precipitation. And more acute, tropical style rainfall. We can’t keep pumping 70F sfc dews into the mountains, add synoptic lift with the low level orographics as the low level jet gets excited… and expect any different outcome than torrential rain somewhere in New England. The departures the past 10 years have been healthy. It has not been a gradual rise. It’s accelerated and has produced numerous acute rainfall events across New England.
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