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March Madness


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6 hours ago, CoastalWx said:

2023 ruined a lot of apple crops here with a horrible May freeze. However, not sure if the issue was early season blooming vs a really anomalous cold snap. Maybe a little of both.

We were in PA for a family reunion when the mid-20s morning hit on May 18, 2023, but somehow we avoided serious damage. 

Our quinces and apples generally have peak blossoms in the May 15-25 period and last year they were right on time.  Unfortunately, the weather wasn't - 19-25 had potentially over 100 hours of sunlight but that week had less than 30 minutes in total, and the average maxima was 50.6, which was 16° BN with nearly 3" of cold RA.  The poor pollinators were absent for the most part until long after blossom peak, so fruit set was awful for the quinces and 2 of the 3 apples, barely reaching mediocre for the 3rd.  Those few fruits had all the nutrients, however, for some of the biggest and nicest we've grown (though few and far between).

2010 was a different disaster, with Feb/Mar/April way AN (all 3 our mildest here) and blossoms were peaking by May 8-10.  Then 11-13 had minima 23 to 26 and killed essentially every blossom, also torched the new growth on ash, maple, even some oak.  The trees set new buds and shoots but used a lot more energy than in a normal growing season.

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2 hours ago, NW_of_GYX said:

I’m at 62.5”. Difference is the December norlun and a couple other events where you outperformed. Wonder when the last time klew was ahead of the southern foothills/interior Cumberland county.

Jeff's first 18" event was 9.5" more than here and he's 4.2" ahead since Jan 31.  Other than that, we're running about at climo, with the foothills about 15% higher than LEW.

As for summer, we had some hot days, including only our 2nd official heat wave on August 11-13, but as climate is warming our convective SVR seems waning.  Last year we had but 5 days with thunder, 3 fewer than any other year and 1/3 of average.  Also haven't had significant effects from a TC since Floyd in 1999 or a real rain and blow since Bob.

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7 minutes ago, tamarack said:

Jeff's first 18" event was 9.5" more than here and he's 4.2" ahead since Jan 31.  Other than that, we're running about at climo, with the foothills about 15% higher than LEW.

 

I’m about 22” from my average at this spot since 2013. Certainly feasible but not guaranteed. If it happens, long duration cold plus best lake ice season since 2019 this winter could salvage a B-, otherwise it’s solidly in C category for this part of NNE 

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