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9 minutes ago, IrishRob17 said:

A good amount of lightning and loud thunder with that storm which moved right between my office and my house.  A couple sprinkles in Goshen and nothing showing on the tipper at home.  

0.7 in the Davis. Light rain currently. Skies are getting brighter now. Activity just about done here. Agree with the good amount of lightning and thunder, not much rain.

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62/43 passing very light shower.  Should clear and also become smoky.  Upper 70s/ 80 in the warmer spots with enough sun and less msoke.   Trough still backed into the northeast through Sat (6/10) before lifting out.  Mainly dry and cooler, highs 70s Wed - Fri with next shot at showers Fri night into Sat.

Trough lifts out Sat (6/10) and more SW flow by Sun (6/11) and Mon (6/12) could allow for a two day warmup before next ULL cuts off under the building bridge and moves east by 6/14 - 6/15.   Next meaninful rain chances.  Once the next ULL clears out and it may be in and out quicker than the last 2 Memorial Day (carolinas) and this recent early June  (Northeast one), it will be much warmer by mid month.

Warmer as heights rise and much warmer and next shot at heat perhaps enhances by the dryness, pending on how much rain we can beenfit from early next week.   6/16 and beyond looks overall warmer than normal with some hot days.

 

GOES16-EUS-02-1000x1000.gif

 

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Records:

 

Highs:

 

EWR: 95 (2021)
NYC: 98 (1925)
LGA: 95 (2021)

Lows:

EWR: 49 (1945)
NYC: 47 (1945)
LGA: 49 (1945)

Historical:

1816 - The temperature reached 92 degrees at Salem MA during an early heat wave, but then plunged 49 degrees in 24 hours to commence the famous year without a summer . (David Ludlum)

1816: Snow fell near Quebec City, Quebec Canada from the 6th through the 10th and accumulated up to a foot with "drifts reaching the axle trees of carriages." 

1894 - One of the greatest floods in U.S. history occurred as the Williamette River overflowed to inundate half of the business district of Portland OR. (David Ludlum)

 

1894: One of the greatest floods in U.S. history occurred as the Willamette River overflowed to inundate half of the business district of Portland, Oregon. The river crested at 33.5 feet, the worst flood ever recorded in the city. 

1975 - A tornado, reportedly spinning backwards (spinning clockwise), was sighted near Alva, OK. (The Weather Channel)

1977 - Severe thunderstorms with large hail and winds to 100 mph caused one million dollars damage around Norfolk, VA. A forty-two foot fishing boat capsized near the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel drowning 13 of the 27 persons on board. (The Weather Channel)

1987 - Thunderstorms in southern California produced one inch hail at Mount Pinos, and marble size hail at Palmdale. Thunderstorms in southeastern Arizona produced heavy rain leaving some washes under four feet of water. Six cities in the north central U.S. reported record high temperatures for the date as readings soared into the upper 90s. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

1988 - Seventeen cities in the north central U.S. reported record high temperatures for the date, including Williston ND with a reading of 104 degrees. Thunderstorms in Florida produced wind gusts to 65 mph which damaged two mobile homes northwest of Melbourne injuring six people. (The National Weather Summary)

1989 - Thunderstorms developing during the late morning hours produced severe weather through the afternoon and night. Thunderstorms spawned 13 tornadoes, and there were 154 reports of large hail and damaging winds. A strong (F-3) tornado injured six persons at Lorenzo, TX, and thunderstorm winds gusting to 100 mph killed one person at Glasscock City, TX. Softball size hail was reported at Lipscomb and Glen Cove TX. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)

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4 minutes ago, Brian5671 said:

Wonder if this ends up being it for the day...models missed this action as well.

I think this is only the beginning of a busy day we'll see. Eyes to the radar not the models for these. With cold air aloft and energized jet these could pop at a moments notice as we get just a little daytime heating.

WX/PT

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22 minutes ago, Wxoutlooksblog said:

I think this is only the beginning of a busy day we'll see. Eyes to the radar not the models for these. With cold air aloft and energized jet these could pop at a moments notice as we get just a little daytime heating.

WX/PT

What are the chances that the smoke hinders the heating just enough to keep the storms down? 

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