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Post by Steelernation on Apr 19, 2020 12:46:02 GMT -5
When warmth appears in the forecast 9-10 days out and then stays there forever and never happens or gets removed all together.
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Post by DoΓ±a Jimena on Apr 19, 2020 15:32:07 GMT -5
High-pressure systems over Scandinavia. As always in the Northern hemisphere, it brings north winds if you are to the East from the high's center. Weather forecast for tomorrow:
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Post by aabc123 on Apr 19, 2020 16:55:45 GMT -5
This here. Throughout the winter, temperatures in this area were above average and in March as well. But now this is the situation.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2020 10:16:28 GMT -5
Autistgust sunshine hours. The average is 205 hours. Triggered. 2008 and 2010 are not typos.
2006: 140.2 hours 2007: 192.6 hours 2008: 104.3 hours 2009: 167.9 hours 2010: 110.9 hours 2011: 144.1 hours 2012: 182.6 hours 2013: 198.7 hours 2014: 183.6 hours 2015: 134.1 hours 2016: 201.4 hours 2017: 174.9 hours 2018: 182.1 hours 2019: 201.2 hours
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Post by bizzy on Apr 20, 2020 18:57:43 GMT -5
1. Backdoor cold fronts; nothing worse than seeing Philly in the 80βs while NYC is in the 50βs/60βs and overcast. New England gets it much worse than we do though.
2. Seasonal lag during February-April; it takes so long to warm up in the spring here, itβs agonizing. DC, being inland and slightly further south, trounces NYC in terms of spring warmth, itβs painful to witness.
3. Thunderstorms that die out upon reaching Long Island, happens like 75% of the time, NYC/NJ/CT get blitzed and then the storms fall apart; and what makes it worse is that Long Island is usually more humid/steamy than inland areas in the summer, youβd think this would throw some fuel on the fire but the stable Atlantic air just kills everything.
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Post by omegaraptor on Apr 23, 2020 15:11:46 GMT -5
Abnormally warm December and January, bonus points if followed by a cold March
Atmospheric rivers, windstorms, and snow derping north into Washington, missing Oregon entirely
Atmospheric rivers derping south into California
The fact that California gets much heavier rain than us whenever the jet is pointed into them, for zero penis mcghee reason at all
Storms missing me by 5 miles
Storms dying before they get here
Drizzle. Any time of the year but especially between April and October. Rain properly or get off the pot.
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Post by deneb78 on Apr 24, 2020 13:22:52 GMT -5
Anytime it snows in winter in Vancouver massively triggers me. I get very depressed and moody.
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Post by knot on Jun 21, 2020 5:16:42 GMT -5
This fuckan gay shit (yep, just happened today) Westerly cold front + moisture swings north too early (starting at Albury), missing my region entirely (the blue dot circled with red), and goes straight up to the Central Tablelands (Orange)β¦delivering snowfalls up north, but very little to no snow down south. This should be fucking illegal.
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Post by ral31 on Jun 21, 2020 8:02:19 GMT -5
Thunderstorms dying as they approach, then new ones developing elsewhere and moving away.
Extended dry periods during the summer.
Stubborn warmth during the winter.
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Post by Speagles84 on Jun 23, 2020 9:38:08 GMT -5
Lows above 60F, when you walk outside into gross humidity.
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Post by Wildcat on Jun 26, 2020 13:00:55 GMT -5
Thunderstorms dying when they approach Lexington and then restrengthening on the other side
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Post by segfault1361 on Jun 28, 2020 21:43:38 GMT -5
1) "Cooler by the lake weather" in April and May under a SE breeze over Lake Ontario when it can be 4-6C cooler in Toronto than 100km north. Ottawa from 400km to the northeast usually beats out Toronto in average temperature these two months because of the prevalence of easterly winds in the spring.
2) When we skip spring and fall completely. Looking at 2018 in particular. 2016 and 2020 also both skipped spring.
3) Many years we get plenty of snow in early or mid December, but a warming trend which seems to happen every year late December steals away a White Christmas in many years and cuts it close in others.
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Post by Steelernation on Jul 6, 2020 16:19:02 GMT -5
Fantastical heat forecasts in summer. No Iβm not talking about far out models, Iβm talking about the fucking NWS.
They forecast high 90s like 5 days out then downgrade the forecast to something reasonable as it gets closer. Why the fuck would you forecast impossible temps...if you know itβs not gonna happen donβt fucking forecast it. Turns what would be good heatwaves into disappointing forecast busts because of the extreme temps that had been in the forecast.
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Post by tij on Jul 6, 2020 16:50:49 GMT -5
Things that trigger me about Mpls weather:
-Extended periods in winter without precip, while areas to the south and east get rain/snow: -ridging in summer, prone to oppressive heat and humidity at times while, given the poleward latitude, we "should" have nicer summer weather than say, kansas/nebraska, and say, Ohio/PA/Mass "should" be more oppressive than here but aren't -skipping transitional weather, jumping straight from winter to summer
Very little actually "triggers" me in Prov since it has rather nice weather overall. Maybe a bit cool spring, or missing out on a nor'easter?
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Post by snj90 on Dec 5, 2020 14:38:18 GMT -5
- When a snowstorm narrowly misses us to the north and west, and we get rain.
- Unseasonably warm weather in the spring, winter, or fall
- Warm nighttime lows in the spring, fall, and winter
- Thunderstorms in general
- Excessive wind
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Post by MET on Dec 5, 2020 14:43:32 GMT -5
No.1, WIND.
Followed closely behind by hours of frontal rain.
Overcast/misty days in summer when the forecast said it would be warm, such as unforecast north sea low cloud coming in and keeping it cold all day.
A sheet of ice on the pavements, making it take twice as long to walk anywhere.
I used to get bent out of shape by missing thunderstorms, but seeing as Sheffield averages only about 1 storm a year anyway, I've lost interest in storms now.
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Post by Donar on Dec 5, 2020 18:17:55 GMT -5
When they get snow at home while I get only cold rain, like it happened last week.
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Post by rpvan on Apr 9, 2021 20:43:31 GMT -5
1. When snowstorms miss us to the south, hitting Seattle or Portland (while its cloudy here with strong NE outflow winds and blowing dust) 2. When snowstorms miss us to the north, hitting north/central Vancouver Island or the central BC coast (while we get mild temps, heavy rain and strong SW winds) 3. Warm nighttime lows when it's clear
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Post by Benfxmth on Apr 9, 2021 20:48:48 GMT -5
When warmth appears in the forecast 9-10 days out and then stays there forever and never happens or gets removed all together. This. I fucking hate teases like these, especially when they're only to be replaced by cold weather 3-4 days after the supposed warmth appears in the forecast.
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Post by tommyFL on Apr 9, 2021 21:16:23 GMT -5
Cloudy/windy periods with low diurnal ranges. I would easily sacrifice some daytime coolness with a higher max temp if it meant it was sunny and calm and was cooler at night.
Extended periods with no rainfall, especially if it coincides with above average temperatures and high dew points.
Any time there's a strong NE wind and Okeechobee is 10 F to 15 F cooler than me at night
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