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July Discobs 2026


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4 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

Drop that shortwave from Hudson Bay due south into Tennessee, and that'll end the drought real quick. 

That would be cool. Still looks active starting Saturday and continuing a while afterwards.  We cool off and then maybe another heatwave early August looking at model clusters. 

Meanwhile,  I believe I bserve smoke overhead. Skies are milky white. 

Currently here 

 

Current conditions at

Wilmington Airport (KILG)

Lat: 39.67°NLon: 75.61°WElev: 72ft.
sct.png

Fair

88°F

31°C

Humidity 55%
Wind Speed W 10 G 17 mph
Barometer 30.12 in (1019.9 mb)
Dewpoint 70°F (21°C)
Visibility 10.00 mi
Heat Index 93°F (34°C)
Last update 14 Jul 12:51 pm EDT
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24 minutes ago, MN Transplant said:

Probably not too much of a leap to think that the smoke might be holding temps back a bit.

I can certainly see that too.  Maybe a couple of degrees cooler would be possible.  Never hit the forecasted high here today.  Tomorrow's HRR smoke forecast is even worse, but I have not looked at the latest update. 

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30 minutes ago, MN Transplant said:

Probably not too much of a leap to think that the smoke might be holding temps back a bit.

Looks like our area is worse tomorrow as well. 

Dense smoke plume arrives tomorrow.  

 

https://x.com/weather_buffalo/status/2077091092860694878

The latest HRRR shows some absolutely insane smoke on Thursday across WNY. If it comes to fruition it would be much worse than what we experienced a few years ago in 2023.

 

 

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22 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

Wonder if we undercut our high temperatures with this smoke? Looks like some the the solar radiation readings in NE MD are dropping a tad due to the smoke/haze.

You can clearly see the epicenter of the wild fires in this animation if you look in the NW part of the video

 

https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES/sector_band.php?sat=G19&sector=cgl&band=GEOCOLOR&length=24

 

or the still frame 

 

 

GeoColor - True Color daytime, multispectral IR at night - 14 Jul 2026 - 2051 UTC

 

 

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11 minutes ago, WxUSAF said:

If the smoke gets as thick as it looks it may (rivaling 2023), that’ll definitely knock a few/several degrees off the temps. New England highs today were mostly under the forecast.

Looks like Thursday morning will be rough according to the HRRR. Interestingly it keeps west of the blue ridge/shenandoah shielded from the near surface smoke. 

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Mount Holly AFD snippet-

While some areas will likely reach the
century mark again, it will not be quite to the magnitude that
we experienced to start July. Humidity will be a little less as
well, and the hottest conditions will only last for one day.
However, heat index values are still forecast to range from
100-109 degrees for most of the area, again hottest from along
and southeast of I-95. A modest westerly, offshore wind near
10-15 mph should help keep the sea breeze from making much
inland progress during the afternoon hours. Thus, we expect high
temperatures in the mid to upper 90s and heat indices near
100-105 degrees even for the New Jersey Shore and Delaware
Beaches. The limiting factor in how much we heat will be smoke
from Canadian wildfires. We are already seeing the first plume
of wildfire smoke dropping south into the the Mid-Atlantic this
afternoon and that will insulate the region from the highest
heat. The smoke should again help mitigate how much heating we
receive tomorrow so while temps are going to be hot and there
are no changes to any heat headlines, we are not fully
maximizing the potential heat that the thermal profile suggests
we could warm to.
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24 minutes ago, 87storms said:

This wildfire smoke thing was not a thing like this in the 80s and 90s, that I recall. In other news, the humidity right now is quite impressive.

i was about to say - folks who grew up here, do any of you remember this from the 80s/90s?  I certainly do not EVER remember dealing with wildfire smoke.

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56 minutes ago, pazzo83 said:

i was about to say - folks who grew up here, do any of you remember this from the 80s/90s?  I certainly do not EVER remember dealing with wildfire smoke.

No

The sky was muddier at times in 70’s but that was pollution 

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