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nzucker

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Posts posted by nzucker

  1. Both White Plains (HPN) and the Dobbs Ferry Wunderground station had a high of exactly 90F yesterday. That makes five 90-degree days here in Southern Westchester. We may get one today, despite last night's rain, and tomorrow should definitely be at least 90F.

    August is quickly making up ground for the cool start in June (my high on 6/1 was 58F and my high on 6/2 was 54F). Been a very warm stretch since early July, though lacking the extreme heat we saw in 2010 and 2011.

  2. Looks as if melt is below average to start August, and should remain that way with cold air pooling over Greenland. Might get a brief spike from WAA as the low from the Beaufort approaches, but then a strong high pressure with -10C 850s settles over the ice sheet, keeping it cold...GFS shows 2m temps of -20C in the higher elevations atop Greenland. 

  3. Unless it's completely cloudy or wet, hitting 90 is pretty much a given. We also average 12-13 days a year above 100, and the ground has dried out, so we should start that up soon.

    What are temperatures like in January and February?
  4. So far about 45 90F and over days in Austin. On average there's about 110 per year. Still hasn't hit 100-today might be the day, currently 99 and we've had some late highs recently.

    You guys got a late start on 90s with the wet May and early June pattern. I imagine it's pretty much a given that every day in July and August hits 90F.
  5. Zucker, time for an update. 

    LOL, thanks for calling me out...Got some new stuff coming along in the garden.

     

    post-475-0-97809200-1436672007_thumb.jpg

    This was one of the smaller red cabbages I harvested...

     

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    Inside of a large red cabbage freshly picked.

     

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    Eggplant now has a fruit, was just developing in this photo.

     

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    My first zucchini, although powdery mildew and cool weather has slowed plant down.

     

    It hasn't been that hot here this year, although the last few days in the mid 80s has pushed the garden along. I should be harvesting cherry tomatoes within a week or so, regular sized tomatoes in 2 weeks, along with eggplant and zucchini. I am still harvesting cabbage, and a big green one is almost ready to be picked. Cabbage has been one of my highlights this year, excellent crop with delicious flavor. I also made a bunch of pesto with all my basil, as I have at least 20 plants.

     

    Will update this thread more as the garden warrants...

  6. Here are some pics from this year..

     

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    Usually grow Apollo Arugula but this variety with serrated leaves is good too, looks a bit like frisee.

     

    post-475-0-52403500-1434814118_thumb.jpg

    Red cabbage planted in early April, almost ready...also have the green variety. These guys get huge.

     

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    Growing slowly with the cool weather. Love fresh eggplant though, makes pasta delicious.

     

    post-475-0-94557900-1434814183_thumb.jpg

    Tomato plants have a few flowers but also suffering from lack of heat.

     

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    Lettuce has gone nuts this year, bought this early April and has yielded for almost 2 months.

     

    post-475-0-26642900-1434814236_thumb.jpg

    Can't wait to harvest my first zucchini. Has some powdery mildew though...

     

    post-475-0-90176700-1434814266_thumb.jpg

    Love making salads with fresh greens from the garden. 

  7. Great thread, always follow it closely. I live north of NYC on a small suburban property so have a cooler climate and less space, but I manage a garden. Here is what I have:

    8 lettuce plants, mostly oakleaf

    8 cabbage, some red, some green
    2 varieties arugula, mostly Apollo
    1 kale
    20 basil/purple basil
    4 tomatoes, cherry, beefsteak, Lemon Boy and Brandywine
    4 peppers, sweet and hot
    2 zucchini
    2 eggplant, Black Beauty and Japanese
    1 winter squash, Guatemalan blue
    oregano
    dill
    wild mint
    thyme
    sage

    tarragon

    I have harvested a lot of greens and herbs, especially arugula and oakleaf lettuce which went nuts. Basil has gotten huge. Zucchini has several fruits but not big enough to harvest.Tomatoes are flowering and so are eggplants but no fruits yet. I have a second round of arugula getting ready.

    We don't have nearly the heat...most days this June have been in the 70s, a few in the 60s, and the first two days of June had highs of 58F and 54F. So it's a little different up here...I have been gardening since 2008 and learned a lot. Just started composting again, and can't wait for this year's harvest.

  8. Greenland is so far behind on melt this year that we will never catch up to 2012 or probably even last year. There is only like 7 weeks left of major melting with max insolation as we wasted most of June with the cold pattern after no preconditioning in May.

  9. Amazing we had the winter we did with a strong +NAO.

     

    In any case, models show Greenland finally warming up as a ridge builds into the area. This is after a few more days of cold conditions with -10C 850s atop the ice sheet..A lot of cold continues to get dumped into the United Kingdom and Northern Europe where 850s are below 0C in many areas even in the middle of June, and this should accelerate with a significant trough moving into Spain/France as the NAO declines in the coming week.

  10. 0z NAEFS Temp Probabilities keeping most of Greenland still in the greater chances of below normal anomalies June 21-28

     

    2015061300_054@007_E1_global_I_NAEFS@TEM

    All of the Arctic looks to be cold in the long range as the fractured PV returns to the Central Arctic Basin and pushes all the warm air away.

  11. From the anomalies posted, the Euro shows the ridge setting up west of Greenland, which would keep northerly winds over Greenland itself thus cooler temperatures. The stronger warmth from that map would be Baffin Island, the CAA, etc...NAEFS keep Greenland chilly well into the latter part of June, anyway.

  12. It's been on there for some time now, the setup begins pre-truncation with enhanced blocking over Eastern Siberia.

    Probably a decent chance of some form of this scenario happening. Could go either way, colder or warmer...even tho the latter would be insane and emotionally disagreeable.

    The GFS is not known to have a warm bias, and looking back +240 has been running colder than verified over the conus.

    Good pattern for lowering global temperatures.
  13. Tomorrow morning has a chance to snap the 70 degree stretch.

    Euro continues to have early morning convection and rain.

    We won't make the 2010 record with the trough moving in by later in the week, even if we don't snap the streak tomorrow morning.

  14. I've got a feeling (that tonight's going to be a good night) Central Park will be pulling some 89F highs in the next several days given the enormous amount of rain lately. We may see a few days where EWR tops out at 92-93F and NYC is 89F. Going to be close.

    You mean a good good night?

    NYC has been sitting just short of 90F today...85F there right now as clouds are preventing forecast highs from being realized.

  15. Looking forward through the next couple weeks, I honestly don't know when the next 90F day will be. Looks troughy with near normal temps for the most part in the NE CONUS. Plenty of convective activity w/ a southerly flow. We may make it to the middle of August with only a couple 90F days. Of course, by the end of the month it becomes more difficult to attain 90.

    My numbers from May will probably be a bit too low, Tony's probably look better (30/20), but we'll see, August looks like a high min/normal daytime temps type of month.

    August will probably be the coolest month of the summer with what models are showing and the developing Nino. It wouldn't surprise me to see a taste of fall early.

  16. LOL, that's ok, I still like snow even if it doesn't disturb school. I remember '08. It snowed all day Saturday in between the two systems...just never stopped snowing. I wasn't on this forum but that was one of the first storms I was on accuweather for lol....I discovered this forum spring of '09 (eastern) and started posting at the end of that year. I can't believe its been 2+ years on eastern/american already...time flies.

    I started posting in Summer 2008, so I was on for the 08-09 winter...I was home from Middlebury in Westchester for the Dec 19-21 storm...had about 8" or so from the 12/19 event, then 3" plus icing from the second wave although it turned to rain in NYC proper. It was a huge double-barreled event in Vermont with about 10" from each storm. The New Year's mega torch ruined most of the snowpack but January 2009 was just epic in Vermont, had the fluff clipper early in the month and then the monster SW flow event on 1/28 that dropped over a foot. I left to study in Chile a few weeks later but what a great front-loaded winter that was.

    Your posts have been great man...you are a wonderful contributor to the forum.

  17. ?????????????

    Look what Rindge got in Feb 2001 noreaster

    That was probably very solid here, just managed like 8" in Dobbs Ferry. I know lots of CT/MA had 15-20" with Feb 01 though. Birch Hill Dam, MA located quite near here had 24" in that storm, and received 31.5" that month. I guess it's partially a false impression that the interior can't get big Nor'easters because of the sharp cut-offs with the last few years such as 12/26/2010 and 2/10/2010 when the coastal areas got far more than expected from climatology. I'm sure it will shift back to the interior areas and we'll see some stretched like Jan 2002 or March 1958 where the Poconos/Catskills/NY capital district/interior NNE cash in.

  18. 2/25/10 could have been epic if it hadn't flipped over

    Still psyched over 2/27/10

    2/25 was not an elevation event in Central VT....Middlebury got 20" at the bottom of the Champlain Valley. We had a nice slug of moisture moving due north with that coastal low forming, classic signal for the CPV to get blasted. We barely stayed all snow though.

    WA WA was like donner/ tahoe for a storm 42 inches EPIC.....

    who will get smoked this year........will someone see a 20 incher....a thirty incher......more.......all possible in just about any area in SNE....which IMO is one thing that makes this area special

    I think interior NNE is favored with the -QBO/Nina. I'm really liking where I'm sitting though Rindge probably isn't the best place for 20"+ events since it's fairly far from the coast.

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