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Ju-ply 2026 Obs and Disco - Kicking it off with heat, humidity, and ... severe?


weatherwiz
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2 hours ago, Baroclinic Zone said:

 

2 hours ago, CoastalWx said:

OMG that is the most bullshit statement. JFC. It was the perfect rain.

 

2 hours ago, CT Rain said:

This drought stuff in out of control.

:lol:

The last time the city entered critical drought restrictions was in July 2024, when the Manchester Reservoir lost 7 feet of water over seven weeks amid drought conditions. Critical restrictions remained in effect for months afterward.

Initially, officials believed the drought caused the severe water loss. It was later determined the loss stemmed from a valve connecting Orr’s Pond and Manchester Reservoir — Attleboro’s two main drinking water sources — that had been left open longer and wider than it should have been. The valve was open for nearly two months.

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44 minutes ago, kdxken said:

Headed out to the Tetons for some hiking. I think I'm just going to sit my ass in the Snake River. Mother fuc...

 

 

Screenshot_20260710_195354_Weawow.jpg

 

16 minutes ago, powderfreak said:

Sounds like you need to go above 7,500ft…. Get as high as possible.

Looking at that heatwave I happened to look at the normals out there this time of year. Salt Lake City averages 93° and Denver 90° on July 10. That’s as warm as Miami (90°)!

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12 hours ago, Baroclinic Zone said:

Noticed last week around Narragansett RI they had water ban signs up all over town. They also had all the beach showers and water turned off. I think Narragansett uses groundwater wells and they are exceptionally low.

The Providence Journal just published an article yesterday but its paywalled. Here is the headline.

To understand why Gov. Dan McKee, in June, declared a drought watch for only the second time in Rhode Island in 24 years, you need only look at the precipitation numbers over the last 12 months.

In nearly every month since June 2025, the state has fallen short of the historical average, leading to a cumulative deficit of 13.4 inches for the year and a total that’s at only 80% of where it should be.

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June is a convenient cutoff considering May 2025 was 8.05”. But I get it, I want more rain too.

PVD Historical Averages and monthly totals


May 25 3.38” 8.05” +4.67”
Jun 25 3.25” 1.15” -2.10”
Jul 25 3.18” 5.08” +1.90”
Aug 25 3.64” 2.76” -0.88”
Sep 25 3.60” 6.24” +2.64”
Oct 25 3.47” 4.80” +1.33”
Nov 25 3.88” 2.56” -1.32”
Dec 25 4.09 2.37” -1.72”
Jan 26 3.82” 3.08” -0.74”
Feb 26 3.32” 2.84” -0.48”
Mar 26 4.16” 5.57” +1.41”
Apr 26 3.86” 1.89” -1.97”
May 26 3.38” 2.01” -1.37”
Jun 26 3.25” 2.38” -0.87”

Plus did they underreport liquid equiv in the big snowstorms this year? Spring has been dry, but where is the longterm 13” deficit?

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3 hours ago, BrianW said:

Noticed last week around Narragansett RI they had water ban signs up all over town. They also had all the beach showers and water turned off. I think Narragansett uses groundwater wells and they are exceptionally low.

The Providence Journal just published an article yesterday but its paywalled. Here is the headline.

To understand why Gov. Dan McKee, in June, declared a drought watch for only the second time in Rhode Island in 24 years, you need only look at the precipitation numbers over the last 12 months.

In nearly every month since June 2025, the state has fallen short of the historical average, leading to a cumulative deficit of 13.4 inches for the year and a total that’s at only 80% of where it should be.

That could tell us something about the reality of the urgency/risk to actual people.   

First, there's the "facade" of crisis, then ... we have to pay to find out how it will harm  us?  

Riiiight - 

What ...?  so let's venture a scenario.  Suppose the Canary Islands over there SSE of the Azores go on ahead a bifurcate in a geological event that sldes the western slope of the trillion trillion trillion ton volcanic shield's mass into the Atlantic depths ... sending enough wave energy to surge up a 1,000 foot high tsunamis into the eastern seaboard of America.  Media-sphere holds back, unless we spend 2.99 on a paywall site to find out what's going on.  Another 4 bucks for the premium service of finding out how one can save their ass or die.  That's right ... 4 bucks or you die! 

It's tacky at best.  I mean that's obviously a fictional/exaggerated depiction there but it takes elaboration of circumstance to brightly identify the point.  If it is really harmful, the ethical thing to do is tone down the rhetoric and up the expediency of useful/vital information -     

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11 hours ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

I mean, ball kind of don’t lie. Ponds and streams are easily the lowest I’ve seen them in my area in the 7 years I’ve been where I’m at.

The drought 3 years ago blows away anything I’ve seen. Ponds and what not look decent here. A little low but nothing atypical. 

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16 hours ago, WxWatcher007 said:

Let’s get two tropical systems to pour on us like 1954 so we can get moved from moderate drought to abnormally dry. 

Carol and Edna each dumped a lot of rain, but they were about a month apart.  The next year Connie/Diane combined for 12-22" in 8-9 days over much of SNE.  Of course, the 1954 hurricanes had far more wind.

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