Thanks. I dunno what I would have expected, but I note 47 at KLEB, 47 at KORE, 47 at KCEF, and then 52 at KBDL. CEF and BDL are 18 miles apart. Could be that random N @5kt wind I suppose. Or a sensor difference.
Are you aware of any known biases of ASOS temperature gauges relative to AWOS gauges in radiating conditions? It seems odd to me that BDL would be 5 degrees warmer than CEF when the temperatures were otherwise so uniform (based on the AWOS/PWS data) around interior New England, and BDL really should not be a UHI.
Run an extension cord and use a shop vac on the ground bees . Thump on the ground to get em to all come out. No need to pour a bunch of chemicals on the lawn.... oh wait
Friday and Saturday had great rideable surf at the cape with afternoon low tides. Low/mid 60s water temps. Both Coast Guard Beach and Marconi have sandbars well offshore. Have to swim across a 40-50 yard gut entirely over your head with waves reforming a bit to get out to it, but then knee deep and perfect once you get there. Tons of people including many small kids were game for it, but I was thinking it'd be interesting if there were a shark sighting.
Most of the National Seashore beaches had red flags up yesterday, with good sized but low period blown out storm surf on light easterly flow. Race point however was yellow flag and we were getting strong 5 footers breaking and washing up the beach nicely. Not true body surfing, but not a crashing beach break either. They were sending folks flying along the sand with a little exfoliation to boot. Anyway it was low 70s and clear, water mid to upper 60s that far north. Felt great.
Interesting that machine learning
convective probs are highest across the Mid Atlantic into NJ.
Thus lots of moving parts here yielding a below average
convective forecast
Anyone have a link for this model?
If you're coming from up north I'd tuck tail and go east of the Quabbin for an intercept later on. I'm thinking not much will come of this present stuff this far west.
a little cell popped between Amherst and Btown. Nothing to speak of just yet, but that's the type of thing that would need to be watched in about 15-20 mins, particularly if it becomes a right mover. Whether it's this particular cell or one like it.
You can kind of see evidence of 1-3 embedded supercell like structures out in the Berks back into the HV, but it'll probably transition to a truly linear system pretty soon. Mainly a wind threat, localized QLCS possibilities aside. We'll see if anything pops out ahead.
All these fake model soundings I'm looking at are a bit weak with the low level winds. But they do improve a bit as you head toward E CT/RI and adjacent MA. Thinking primarily a straight line threat out here... which'd be about the only notable winds we've had all season. But maybe a little more than that further SE.
Just noticed this thread... I'm in Kingston and woke up to WEA tornado warnings about 25 mins ago. Fully embedded couplet was easy to track over time. Missed me to the west a bit but it wouldn't surprise me if there were some light damage in town somewhere.