Yardstickgozinya Posted 13 hours ago Share Posted 13 hours ago 1 hour ago, pawatch said: 32 degrees this morning. Yesterday was brutal…10 degrees below normal with 32 mph wind gust and the wind was 9mph. Normal temperature is supposed to be 45 degrees. The river is blowed out agin with high water. I did get out Friday, the water Temperature was 42 degrees. Caught 1 fish 16.5” smallmouth. This spring we’re getting a little bit of everything thrown at us. Smallie fishings has made such a great comeback around here. Last year was epic. My son has really started on a heater this year. I never specifically targeted them until last year , and that was only when my buddy came home from Maui . Even though I never specifically targeted them , I used to routinely catch them while bait fishing until around 2010ish then i rarely caught any until maybe about 4 or 5 years ago . By Last year I couldn't quit catching them while bait fishing. I caught and lost several absolute pigs last year, and over my life because I only use 3 pound test while bait fishing. I Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mahantango#1 Posted 12 hours ago Share Posted 12 hours ago 1 hour ago, Mount Joy Snowman said: 32 as I leave the house, may go lower. Happy Tuesday. 32 here. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChescoWx Posted 10 hours ago Share Posted 10 hours ago This morning was the 100th below freezing low of the season here in East Nantmeal. Here in EN we average 97 such days. This is the most below freezing days since 2018-19 when we had 104 days. With records here since 2004 the most were 120 days in 2013-14 and the least only 72 days in 2015-16. We will see below normal temperatures today before we moderate to near normal (low 50's) tomorrow. Thursday we should warm well into the 60's before rain arrives by Friday morning. Much colder this weekend with nighttime lows again below freezing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pawatch Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 4 hours ago, Yardstickgozinya said: Smallie fishings has made such a great comeback around here. Last year was epic. My son has really started on a heater this year. I never specifically targeted them until last year , and that was only when my buddy came home from Maui . Even though I never specifically targeted them , I used to routinely catch them while bait fishing until around 2010ish then i rarely caught any until maybe about 4 or 5 years ago . By Last year I couldn't quit catching them while bait fishing. I caught and lost several absolute pigs last year, and over my life because I only use 3 pound test while bait fishing. I Fishing for smallmouths for years on the river. Use 6lb and 12lb Fluorocarbon mostly . Currently 44 degrees. Looks like some more rain Friday. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Voyager Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago Today's mid 30's feels SO much better than yesterday's mid 30's. Sunshine changes everything. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mahantango#1 Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 22 minutes ago, Voyager said: Today's mid 30's feels SO much better than yesterday's mid 30's. Sunshine changes everything. Yes I'm out shoveling stone to put in my lane came in now for lunch and I see the temperature is only 39. I thought it was warmer then that. That March sun is doing wonders. Today despite the temperature and virtually no wind is turning into a beautiful day. To me yesterday sucked with that cold and wind. Better days with heat and humidity are coming...sometime. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jns2183 Posted 5 hours ago Share Posted 5 hours ago I’ve been looking back at the January 25, 2026 storm where MDT pulled in about 11" of snow. One of the most frustrating parts of that event was the "yo-yo" effect: we went from heavy snow to sleet, back to snow, and then back to sleet again.We often talk about Dynamic Cooling (where heavy precip "drags" cold air down or uses melting/evaporation to zero out a warm layer), but in this storm, it felt like the heavy rates were also doing the opposite.I’d love to get some thoughts on the Latent Heat Paradox from this event:The Cooling Phase: At what point does the "Melting Tax" (energy absorbed to turn snow to rain) lose the battle to the Latent Heat of Fusion (energy released when rain freezes into sleet pellets)? It felt like the very act of creating sleet was releasing enough heat to "insulate" the warm nose aloft.Altitude of Condensation: Did the transition back to snow mid-storm happen because the best lift/condensation shifted into the Dendritic Growth Zone (DGZ), or did we just finally "exhaust" the warm nose through pure melting cooling?The Disconnect: How do we reconcile the massive negative anomalies we saw on the 850mb maps with the persistent sleet pings we heard on the windows? Was this a case of the storm "cooking its own environment" through condensation warming at the mid-levels?Would love to see some sounding analysis or thoughts on which latent process were dominant at which times Sent from my SM-S731U using Tapatalk 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yardstickgozinya Posted 4 hours ago Share Posted 4 hours ago 4 hours ago, pawatch said: Fishing for smallmouths for years on the river. Use 6lb and 12lb Fluorocarbon mostly . Currently 44 degrees. Looks like some more rain Friday. I use 20lb braid, tied off to a 15lb Fluorocarbon leader when i'm targeting Smallies. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yardstickgozinya Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yardstickgozinya Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago 1 hour ago, Jns2183 said: I’ve been looking back at the January 25, 2026 storm where MDT pulled in about 11" of snow. One of the most frustrating parts of that event was the "yo-yo" effect: we went from heavy snow to sleet, back to snow, and then back to sleet again. We often talk about Dynamic Cooling (where heavy precip "drags" cold air down or uses melting/evaporation to zero out a warm layer), but in this storm, it felt like the heavy rates were also doing the opposite. I’d love to get some thoughts on the Latent Heat Paradox from this event: The Cooling Phase: At what point does the "Melting Tax" (energy absorbed to turn snow to rain) lose the battle to the Latent Heat of Fusion (energy released when rain freezes into sleet pellets)? It felt like the very act of creating sleet was releasing enough heat to "insulate" the warm nose aloft. Altitude of Condensation: Did the transition back to snow mid-storm happen because the best lift/condensation shifted into the Dendritic Growth Zone (DGZ), or did we just finally "exhaust" the warm nose through pure melting cooling? The Disconnect: How do we reconcile the massive negative anomalies we saw on the 850mb maps with the persistent sleet pings we heard on the windows? Was this a case of the storm "cooking its own environment" through condensation warming at the mid-levels? Would love to see some sounding analysis or thoughts on which latent process were dominant at which times Sent from my SM-S731U using Tapatalk I certainly can't answer any of your questions about the science. What I can tell you, is thst you're absolutely correct In you're observations. I actually brought this up in one of my posts during a storm this year.. I'm sure some people were quite confused by my statement, because of its goes against everything we've been taught and told. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mount Joy Snowman Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago 12 hours ago, Mount Joy Snowman said: 32 as I leave the house, may go lower. Happy Tuesday. My temp dropped an additional 3 degrees to 29 after I left the house this morning. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
canderson Posted 20 minutes ago Share Posted 20 minutes ago Got bit by a mosquito today. I already hate summer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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