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Post by Babu on Jan 10, 2020 14:25:43 GMT -5
Turdku Artugaynen 2019:
November continued in December. Océanique !
Highest high: 7.9C (4th) Highest low: 4.7C (5th) Lowest high: -4.5C (28th) Lowest low: -7.5C (28th)
Deviations from 91-18:
High: +3.2C Mean: +3.3C Low: +3.3C Precipitation: 147%
Ice days: 1
Whole year monthly deviations:
Jan: -1.5C Feb: +4.1C Mar: +1.0C Apr: +3.3C May: 0.0C Jun: +2.7C Jul: -0.4C Aug: +0.4C Sep: -0.3C Oct: -0.5C Nov: +0.7C Dec: +3.3C
Artukainen station new records: new September record low, earliest freeze record, lowest October record high recorded.
Departures since Artukainen opened would be very relevant, since the old airport station was significantly colder in pretty much every month.
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Post by Ariete on Jan 10, 2020 15:12:20 GMT -5
Departures since Artukainen opened would be very relevant, since the old airport station was significantly colder in pretty much every month.
In the 91-18 normals the airport station is only for the years 1991-1999.
I have Kupittaa for 2000-2002 and Artukainen since 2003 in my "normals".
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Post by Nidaros on Jan 10, 2020 17:59:33 GMT -5
Stavanger 2019
Mild Feb, nice April, full gloom Dec. Cold May. Winter missing.
Sunshine data from Bergen Airport.
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Post by jgtheone on Jan 10, 2020 19:12:24 GMT -5
Yearly weatherboxes for my other stations that I keep track of. The stupid Hunters Hill station keeps screwing up around the end of the year so data is missing from November and December, as you'll be able to tell. All other weatherboxes are fine and complete.
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Post by Donar on Jan 13, 2020 12:15:48 GMT -5
2019 maps.
Precipitation:
Temperature:
Hot days (T_max > 30 °C):
Frost days (T_min < 0°C):
Ice days (T_max < 0°C):
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Post by Moron on Jan 13, 2020 14:23:38 GMT -5
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Jan 18, 2020 18:50:32 GMT -5
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Jan 18, 2020 20:03:12 GMT -5
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jan 20, 2020 11:44:11 GMT -5
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Post by Speagles84 on Jan 20, 2020 11:51:14 GMT -5
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Jan 20, 2020 13:59:45 GMT -5
YESSSS. I'm looking for jobs there again more actively. Even the rainiest month September didn't feel that bad to me and I was in the worst of it. A reasonable amount of rain days helps. I'm sick of the kind of rain Vancouver gets. PEI has a beautiful hemiboreal environment, tending closer to boreal than not. Felt almost as subarctic as Anchorage. Climate differences between the two clearly reflect that as well.
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Post by Speagles84 on Jan 20, 2020 14:53:22 GMT -5
YESSSS. I'm looking for jobs there again more actively. Even the rainiest month September didn't feel that bad to me and I was in the worst of it. A reasonable amount of rain days helps. I'm sick of the kind of rain Vancouver gets. PEI has a beautiful hemiboreal environment, tending closer to boreal than not. Felt almost as subarctic as Anchorage. Climate differences between the two clearly reflect that as well. That's awesome man, if you are done with Vancouver I'd go for it. I love Pittsburgh and Western PA in general, but if I had no family ties or marital family ties to PA, I'd seriously consider moving to Alaska or somewhere subarctic as well.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Jan 20, 2020 15:22:35 GMT -5
YESSSS. I'm looking for jobs there again more actively. Even the rainiest month September didn't feel that bad to me and I was in the worst of it. A reasonable amount of rain days helps. I'm sick of the kind of rain Vancouver gets. PEI has a beautiful hemiboreal environment, tending closer to boreal than not. Felt almost as subarctic as Anchorage. Climate differences between the two clearly reflect that as well. That's awesome man, if you are done with Vancouver I'd go for it. I love Pittsburgh and Western PA in general, but if I had no family ties or marital family ties to PA, I'd seriously consider moving to Alaska or somewhere subarctic as well. Yeah AK would be good for you as a civil engineer. If I were to live there again, it'd be Fairbanks area probably. Not a fan of Anchorage and surrounding area even though the climate and scenery are awesome. The interior is awesome in late winter though. Dry powdery snow that doesn't melt and ample sunshine. And it's not that cold.
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Post by Speagles84 on Jan 20, 2020 15:25:13 GMT -5
That's awesome man, if you are done with Vancouver I'd go for it. I love Pittsburgh and Western PA in general, but if I had no family ties or marital family ties to PA, I'd seriously consider moving to Alaska or somewhere subarctic as well. Yeah AK would be good for you as a civil engineer. If I were to live there again, it'd be Fairbanks area probably. Not a fan of Anchorage and surrounding area even though the climate and scenery are awesome. The interior is awesome in late winter though. Dry powdery snow that doesn't melt and ample sunshine. And it's not that cold. Scenery wise, Anchorage is fantastic. But climate wise... I'd probably pick somewhere a bit further inland like Talkeetna. Fairbanks might be too cold for even me in the dead of winter lol
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Post by Nidaros on Jan 21, 2020 15:12:23 GMT -5
One place representing SE Norway 2019.
Hokksund is just 17 km up the valley from Drammen, and 50 km W of Oslo.
One of the places with warmest summer highs in Scandinavia, also can have warm highs in late winter/spring. Sizeable diurnal range in spring.
Mean monthly snowpack (snow depth, data from Drammen) in 2019:
Jan: 18 cm Feb: 36 cm Mar: 20 cm Apr: 0 cm
----- Nov: 1 cm Dec: 1 cm
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Post by Crunch41 on Jan 24, 2020 0:19:25 GMT -5
One place representing SE Norway 2019.
Hokksund is just 17 km up the valley from Drammen, and 50 km W of Oslo.
One of the places with warmest summer highs in Scandinavia, also can have warm highs in late winter/spring. Sizeable diurnal range in spring.
Mean monthly snowpack (snow depth, data from Drammen) in 2019:
Jan: 18 cm Feb: 36 cm Mar: 20 cm Apr: 0 cm
----- Nov: 1 cm Dec: 1 cm
If December was colder and snowier, that would be pretty good. May is cool as well, but it's in Norway, after all. Good summer temperatures.
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Post by Crunch41 on Jan 24, 2020 0:48:31 GMT -5
December was 7F above average in Milwaukee, extremely mild. The second half had several days in the 50s and broke a few daily records. It was very dry except for the last few days. Through the 27th, total precipitation was 0.24" (6mm) and snowfall 0.5" (1.2cm). Then on the 28th, some unseasonably heavy rain came through, followed by some snow at the end. The 31st recorded a snow depth of 2", the first snow depth since mid-November, and just enough to avoid a month with zero snow cover. The mild weather in the second half was interesting, but I'm glad there is some snow now (late January) instead of continued fall weather.
December had higher max temperatures than November which is rare but has happened before (4 times in 150 years)
For the year, compared to 1981-2010 Max temperature -0.1 F
Mean temperature +0.0 F
Min temperature +0.2 F
Precipitation +11.28" (+32%), third wettest year on record (1850-2019), just ahead of 2018.
Snowfall +16.8" (+36%) Overall - too wet, too much lag. B, a bit worse than an average year. The best parts were the cold snap in January, the winter weather in late October and early November, and the many thunderstorms in spring and summer.
The most abnormal month was December (+7.0F), followed by September (+4.9) and November (-4.8). February, September, and October were about twice as wet as average.
The year started cold, with 5 of the first 6 months colder than normal. Winter was very mild until mid-January, when it came on strong with lots of snow and record cold. The 30th had a HIGH of -10F/-23C, and it was windy. The wind chill reached -47F/-44C that day. Many cold records were broken, including an all-time cold record for Rockford, IL (-31F/-35C) which is about an hour south of Madison. February was snowy, but also rainy, and had thaws in between the snow. In places to the northwest that didn't have a thaw, it broke some snowfall records.
March started off very cold, then was generally dry and felt very sunny. April was near average but got a few good snowfalls. May was cool and wet. June was again cool and wet with some chilly days (57F/14C high on the 16th). In July, the cool weather broke, and it was above average. The dew point reached 78F/26C on the 19th, leading to a 107F/42C heat index that day (93/77). August was an average month.
September was warm and wet, basically an extended August. The lowest in September was 52F/11C, a new record for mildness. October started warm, then ended with some very early snow storms. November started out cold, with winter weather, then ended mild. December was mild and dry. The last 6 weeks of the year were boring in-between weather.
Madison, for comparison. You can see a smaller lag in spring and fall compared to Milwaukee. Winter is a bit colder. Nights are cooler all year, as the Madison airport station has less UHI than the Milwaukee airport.
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Post by Cadeau on Jan 28, 2020 10:33:21 GMT -5
Reykjavík, Iceland December 2019 - Copenhagen, Denmark December 2019 - Honolulu, HI, United States December 2019 *Official data of 22 September doesn't look right, modified.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Feb 1, 2020 23:09:09 GMT -5
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Post by Ariete on Feb 2, 2020 13:03:33 GMT -5
Interesting that such a cold climate managed to be over half the year above freezing.
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