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February 2026 OBS & Discussion


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2 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

I agree with some of what you say, but you obviously never lived in Albany LOL. 

I did for many years. And late Feb was often the time where it began to feel Spring-like in many years. Its low elevation and tendency to downslope makes it a warm location relative to the surrounding hills.

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5 minutes ago, eduggs said:

I did for many years. And late Feb was often the time where it began to feel Spring-like in many years. Its low elevation and tendency to downslope makes it a warm location relative to the surrounding hills.

I don’t man; I was in Albany for 7 years in the early 2000s and while it wasn’t deep winter like the ADK or Greens, it was damn cold and lingered well into May. 

I remember the rugby pitch had some cold tourneys, Fountain Day had icebergs on 2 occasions and we had a snow shower on graduation day. 

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2 minutes ago, wishcast_hater said:

It seems every storm is thread the needle for NYC

We’re the most difficult metro area in the Megalopolis to forecast in the winter by far. Every storm type can nail us or totally shaft us. The storm types that frequently nail Boston and it’s clear 3-4 days out can slam us, scrape or screw us. Same for the big Miller As that hit DC/Baltimore. 

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6 minutes ago, ForestHillWx said:

I don’t man; I was in Albany for 7 years in the early 2000s and while it wasn’t deep winter like the ADK or Greens, it was damn cold and lingered well into May. 

I remember the rugby pitch had some cold tourneys, Fountain Day had icebergs on 2 occasions and we had a snow shower on graduation day. 

I'm not sure what you consider "damn cold." But average highs are in the 40s beginning around the first of March. Snow typically doesn't linger long, except during unseasonably cold periods. Maybe compared to NJ you remember it as having been cold, but climatologically/typically spring comes relatively quickly near sea level all the way up the Hudson Valley in March.

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1 minute ago, eduggs said:

I'm not sure what you consider "damn cold." But average highs are in the 40s beginning around the first of March. Snow typically doesn't linger long, except during unseasonably cold periods. Maybe compared to NJ you remember it as having been cold, but climatologically/typically spring comes relatively quickly near sea level all the way up the Hudson Valley in March.

Albany is colder, by several degrees, and snowier than Boston. I don't think most people around Boston, or Albany for that matter, would call March spring. I've lived in the HV for many years at elevation 600 feet, which is about mean elevation for most of the HV and I barely call April Spring.

Everyone sees things differently I guess.

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9 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

Albany is colder, by several degrees, and snowier than Boston. I don't think most people around Boston, or Albany for that matter, would call March spring. I've lived in the HV for many years at elevation 600 feet, which is about mean elevation for most of the HV and I barely call April Spring.

Everyone sees things differently I guess.

It's just a word. Everybody has their own definition. For me, the key distinction is whether snow/ice is increasing or decreasing on the whole (or if it could with precipitation). That takes into account all the factors that play into winter like diurnal temp ranges and sun angle. When net snow starts to decrease, I call that spring. For other people, maybe if it can snow and is occasionally below freezing, then it's still winter (e.g., Nov or April).

I've lived in both Boston and Albany. Boston Logan (where NWS measurements are taken) is warmer and less snowy than most people who don't live there think due to the marine influence. The airport is on a man-make island out in the harbor.  The NWS station doesn't get a ton of snow because of that, unlike places just to the north or west of Boston. But Boston does get the occasion big snowstorm. Albany, by comparison, gets fewer big events but more small events. Albany often avoids the chilly backdoor cold fronts that Boston experiences in April.

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35 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

Albany is colder, by several degrees, and snowier than Boston. I don't think most people around Boston, or Albany for that matter, would call March spring. I've lived in the HV for many years at elevation 600 feet, which is about mean elevation for most of the HV and I barely call April Spring.

Everyone sees things differently I guess.

The elevation of downtown Albany is between about 150ft and sea/river level.  The airport (NWS) is just below 300ft. The City is noticeably warmer than the towns on the escarpment to the west or the Taconics to the east.

Most of the true HV is actually below 500ft. You are in the Hudson Highlands. But of course most people refer to the entire region, hill country or valley, as the HV.

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Strange question, but this seems like the group to answer. 

I follow the hourly temps from NOAA for Central Park, and the other day, there were a few readings of major precipitation (about 1.12" total for the day . This data was clearly incorrect and fixed for the daily results. When this kind of thing happens, is there an explanation for what happened? Just curious because I saw it and I was confused where the data was originating. 

 

 

Feb 7, 12:51 pm 12 -9 37 -7 NW 22G39 10.00   FEW039 FEW055 OVC070 1006.50 29.57 29.74 0.60   1.12   20 11    
Feb 7, 11:51 am 12 -9 37 -3 WNW 13G33 10.00   OVC060 1006.40 29.57 29.74 0.52              
Feb 7, 10:51 am 12 -10 36       10.00   OVC060 1006.70 29.58 29.75                
Feb 7, 9:51 am 11 -8 41 -8 NW 21G38 10.00   OVC060 1006.20 29.56 29.73                
Feb 7, 8:51 am 14 -6 40 -5 WNW 23G40 10.00   OVC065 1005.20 29.54 29.71                
Feb 7, 7:51 am 17 -4 38 2 WNW 16G35 10.00   OVC065 1004.10 29.51 29.67                
Feb 7, 6:51 am 20 -1 39 6 WNW 15G33 10.00   OVC060 1003.00 29.48 29.64     0.48 0.64 27 20    
Feb 7, 5:51 am 25 8 48 14 WNW 12G31 10.00   OVC070 1001.10 29.43 29.59 0.04              
Feb 7, 4:51 am 27 20 74 18 WNW 9G21 3.00 Haze FEW023 FEW030 OVC055 999.90 29.39 29.55 0.06              
Feb 7, 3:51 am 26 21 81 18 WNW 8 4.00 Haze BKN055 OVC085 999.70 29.38 29.54 0.17 0.38            
Feb 7, 2:51 am 26 20 77 22   3 5.00 Haze OVC070 999.80 29.39 29.55 0.13              
Feb 7, 1:51 am 26 21 81 22   3 3.00 Haze FEW013 OVC040 1000.40 29.40 29.56 0.08              
Feb 7, 12:51 am 26 21 81 16 WSW 10G16 1.00 Lt snow BKN014 OVC027 1000.80 29.42 29.58 0.07   0.16   30 26    
Feb 6, 11:51 pm 27 21 78 22   5 4.00 Lt snow FEW014 BKN047 OVC100 1001.20 29.43 29.59 0.08           33 23
Feb 6, 10:51 pm 26 21 81 18 W 7 2.50 Lt snow SCT017 OVC037 1001.70 29.44 29.60 0.01              
Feb 6, 9:51 pm 27 21 78 18 W 9 1.50 Lt snow OVC029 1002.10 29.46 29.62 T T            
Feb 6, 8:51 pm 28 18 65 19 WSW 9 7.00   OVC047 1002.50 29.47 29.63                
Feb 6, 7:51 pm 30 16 55 24   6 10.00   SCT034 BKN055 OVC085 1002.60 29.47 29.63                

 

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59 minutes ago, ForestHillWx said:

I don’t man; I was in Albany for 7 years in the early 2000s and while it wasn’t deep winter like the ADK or Greens, it was damn cold and lingered well into May. 

I remember the rugby pitch had some cold tourneys, Fountain Day had icebergs on 2 occasions and we had a snow shower on graduation day. 

im from albs. i can attest that it will be a freezer throughout march. full seasonal depression energy until may

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30 minutes ago, eduggs said:

The elevation of downtown Albany is between about 150ft and sea/river level.  The airport (NWS) is just below 300ft. The City is noticeably warmer than the towns on the escarpment to the west or the Taconics to the east.

Most of the true HV is actually below 500ft. You are in the Hudson Highlands. But of course most people refer to the entire region, hill country or valley, as the HV.

I'm aware of all of that. I've lived in the region my entire life with the exception of the four years I spent at the university of Wisconsin.  
 

What I wasn't aware of is how mild and delightful you perceive March is in Albany. If that's how you see it, as blind as that is, that's all that matters. 

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1 hour ago, eduggs said:

March has a very different feel to the other months. Temperature-wise it's like late Nov into early December but with a much higher sun angle. So yes it can snow, but it almost always melts quickly. Elevation makes more difference in March too. Albany, NY tends to switch to Spring pretty quickly in March most years, while the high country of southern VT and the Catskills can still feel like deep winter. It's very location dependent but almost always categorized by freeze-thaw, mud, and residual salt grime.

I’m about 50 miles north of NYC, would take March 2017 or March 2018 over Feb 2006 or Jan 2016 any day.  Had way better snow retention than those two classics that started melting out almost before the snow ended.

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The low crossing the Great Lakes has pulled milder air in from the plains states and highs in w PA and even w NY have reached high 40s to near 50 F. This mild sector will rapidly collapse southeast tonight but especially for those south of Newark, don't be surprised if there's a brief spike in temperatures to around 40-43 F for a few hours around midnight. The milder air will not likely reach the surface for lower Hudson valley, parts of metro NYC and most of Long Island.

By morning a colder WNW flow will have arrived and any brief spell above 35 F will be replaced by that cooler air mass. This path for brief warming probably also defines the southern limit of where measurable snow could fall from the system, other than any briefly heavy snow showers in the WNW flow. 

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