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Weekend Drought Buster?


dailylurker
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9 minutes ago, Maestrobjwa said:

Is there a reason for that? I mean in general...even with small Hail, it seems to happen in the county more than the city.

I swear the bay pushes a mesoscale boundary just north of the city towards the top side of the Baltimore Beltway. I'm hoping that as we put more mesonet stations in, we can begin to better identify these small scale features that make severe weather forecasting so tricky.

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2 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

I swear the bay pushes a mesoscale boundary just north of the city towards the top side of the Baltimore Beltway. I'm hoping that as we put more mesonet stations in, we can begin to better identify these small scale features that make severe weather forecasting so tricky.

Come to think of it that area from Baltimore to Philadelphia always seems to be a hot bed for some of our more impressive severe storms so the bay boundary definitely makes a ton of sense.

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4 minutes ago, SnowenOutThere said:

Come to think of it that area from Baltimore to Philadelphia always seems to be a hot bed for some of our more impressive severe storms so the bay boundary definitely makes a ton of sense.

Yeah, thunderstorm lines seem to max out around here. Baltimore city gets some pretty good action too. 

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36 minutes ago, Maestrobjwa said:

Why doesn't large hail happen in the city much?

Large hail is a rare event in ANY given location. You're biased because it's your backyard. 

Think about why the SPC probabilities are "within 25 miles of a point" 

The probs are never "damaging wind at your exact location" 

Even factoring in the city boundaries, it is not a lot of geographical space. 

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Just now, Kmlwx said:

Large hail is a rare event in ANY given location. You're biased because it's your backyard. 

Think about why the SPC probabilities are "within 25 miles of a point" 

The probs are never "damaging wind at your exact location" 

Even factoring in the city boundaries, it is not a lot of geographical space. 

Adding...of course if you compare all areas vs your tiny area. You're going to get a sense that hail is "tons more common" but you need to compare your slice of land to a similar sized plot to get any accurate apples to apples comparison. 

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1 minute ago, Kmlwx said:

Large hail is a rare event in ANY given location. You're biased because it's your backyard. 

Think about why the SPC probabilities are "within 25 miles of a point" 

The probs are never "damaging wind at your exact location" 

Even factoring in the city boundaries, it is not a lot of geographical space. 

I'll little that down to just any hail. Seems to be hard to come by in the city. But others have said something about the bay.

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36 minutes ago, Maestrobjwa said:

I'll little that down to just any hail. Seems to be hard to come by in the city. But others have said something about the bay.

Could be a a bit of both. But in my 33 years of living in the area (stints in different spots but mostly the same spot near Colesville, MD) I have seen hail larger than pea size ZERO times....in 33 years. 

The largest hail I've ever seen at any location was maybe marble sized and it was not at my normal home location. 

So what's the explanation for Colesville, MD lacking hail?

Willing to run with the bay influence that Eskimo Joe mentioned...but I'd venture a guess that if you were to take a similar sized area as "Baltimore City" proper, you'd probably find pretty similar hail statistics in the general DC/Baltimore region. Of course, there will likely be anomalies here or there but on average I'd bet it's similar region wide. 

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The cell that originated in Montgomery County, ran up through the Baltimore metro producing gold ball sized hail, and then tried to spin a bit near Aberdeen, is throwing more hail out in the SW suburbs of Philadelphia. SPC mesoalanysis reveals there is a weak surface low nearby, so perhaps that's what is sustaining that cluster of storms?

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All that large hail talk trust me you do not want it!  It sounds like a hundred guys pounding on your roof with sledgehammers, combined with window after window shattering.  You go out after it's over in a daze looking at your dented car and broken windows everywhere.  Seen it twice and hopefully never again!

Got a third little shot of rain and greedily hoping for more later on

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8 minutes ago, BlizzardNole said:

All that large hail talk trust me you do not want it!  It sounds like a hundred guys pounding on your roof with sledgehammers, combined with window after window shattering.  You go out after it's over in a daze looking at your dented car and broken windows everywhere.  Seen it twice and hopefully never again!

Got a third little shot of rain and greedily hoping for more later on

I think that activity in Northern Virginia could scrape you.

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