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Post by ilmc90 on Oct 27, 2020 20:16:16 GMT -5
Sun came out for a little while today but it was generally cloudy. Reached a high of 57 F/14 C.
NWS issued a Hazardous Weather Outlook for the possibility of heavy rain and flash flooding Thursday and Friday. First flakes of the season may fly Friday as well.
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Post by ilmc90 on Oct 27, 2020 20:53:12 GMT -5
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Post by edmountain on Oct 27, 2020 21:05:05 GMT -5
Bozeman broke their previous record by 31°F/17°C??? That in itself must be some kind of record.
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Post by AJ1013 on Oct 27, 2020 21:08:24 GMT -5
Tucson broke both it’s record low and record low max today
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Post by Steelernation on Oct 27, 2020 21:25:22 GMT -5
It dipped to -1.5 (-18.6 c) this morning, which smashed the daily record by 14 f.
This was 6 f colder than any October temp since 1917 and the 3rd coldest October temp ever.
The sun came out though and it warmed up to 44 (7 c) for a huge diurnal range.
Today was also the first blue dome day I can remember since moving here, there’s always been haze or scattered clouds. There’s still a good 6-8” of snow on the ground although the sun has melted a decent amount.
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Post by edmountain on Oct 27, 2020 22:36:41 GMT -5
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Post by Beercules on Oct 27, 2020 22:40:56 GMT -5
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Post by shalop on Oct 27, 2020 23:22:27 GMT -5
Laramie's -26F not only broke the record low for October, it also tied the record low for November.
I have to wonder how cold it got in Peter Sinks UT. It's one of the coldest spots in the country with a record low of -57C. The cold was centered not far from there.
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Post by Morningrise on Oct 27, 2020 23:51:49 GMT -5
We have a forecast low of 0C tonight, super warm for late October. If it happens this will be our warmest low since October 11th.
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Post by Benfxmth on Oct 28, 2020 2:00:02 GMT -5
ECMWF is forecasting some warmth for much of western Europe this weekend, before a cold front pushes through NW Europe early next week. Highs of up to the mid-high 70's F in parts of southern France (it'll likely reach 70°F here with those 850 hPa temperatures)?
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Post by Moron on Oct 28, 2020 5:16:54 GMT -5
Oh yeah Edmountain relating to your post. Brisbane has had 157.2mm of rain in the past 5 days (including today), which is 202% of their average October rainfall of 77.8mm. Pretty anomalous rain. Even compared to November which is a wetter month, it's still 171% more than that November average rainfall. Most of this rain is from a series of heavy rain events and storms that hit the city from the W/NW.
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Post by edmountain on Oct 28, 2020 9:47:26 GMT -5
We have a forecast low of 0C tonight, super warm for late October. If it happens this will be our warmest low since October 11th. Looks like Saskatoon ended up dropping below freezing last night but there's a good chance of above-freezing lows in the first couple of days of November as an upper-level high amplifies and drives the jet stream far north of the arctic circle. Both GFS and Euro are in good agreement. Source: www.tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/models/Here are the current forecast highs from EC on November 2 for some select cities in Alberta and Saskatchewan: Prince Alberta 15 °C Saskatoon 18 °C Regina 20 °C Fort McMurray 11 °C Edmonton 19 °C Calgary 24 °C Lethbridge 24 °C Take these with a grain of salt--EC has a habit of dropping model-generated numbers into their forecasts without any human oversight but there's certainly a strong probability of very warm temperatures regardless.
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Post by shalop on Oct 28, 2020 13:46:30 GMT -5
Amarillo had a thunderstorm when the ground temperature was -8C.
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Post by Speagles84 on Oct 28, 2020 13:50:09 GMT -5
Warm last week, chilliest stretch of highs yet this week
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Post by Steelernation on Oct 28, 2020 21:38:42 GMT -5
Well the cold snaps over and the sandles are back out. Today warmed up to 55 (13 c) with sunny skies after a cold 19 f (-7 c) low.
Next week looks beautiful with highs in the 50s and 60s and sunny.
There’s still a snowpack but it’s down to a few inches now and there’s green spots poking through. I bet we’ll be pretty much snow free by the weekend.
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Post by Benfxmth on Oct 29, 2020 2:55:07 GMT -5
Severe thunderstorms with 6-8+"-diameter hail in Tripoli:
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Post by Ariete on Oct 29, 2020 4:23:34 GMT -5
Another dull mild day in store for us. Around 10C day and night, cloudy and some rain. Now only partly cloudy!
Extremes for the last 3 days have been 8.8C and 12.5C. The cold is near, though. Down to -10C last night in Northern Lapland.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Oct 29, 2020 7:36:32 GMT -5
Another wet day today, October 2020 will be among the wettest months on record at Heathrow.
174.8mm (Oct 1987) 162.4mm (Jan 2014) 155.5mm (Oct 1960) 155.4mm (Oct 2000) 151.2mm (Nov 1970) 151.0mm (Nov 2002) 150.3mm (Aug 1977) 148.0mm (Nov 2009) 142.8mm (Nov 1974) 140.0mm (Sep 1974) 139.6mm (Oct 1949) 132.6mm (Nov 1951) 131.4mm (Oct 2020)**
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Post by edmountain on Oct 29, 2020 9:31:21 GMT -5
Another wet day today, October 2020 will be among the wettest months on record at Heathrow. 174.8mm (Oct 1987) 162.4mm (Jan 2014) 155.5mm (Oct 1960) 155.4mm (Oct 2000) 151.2mm (Nov 1970) 151.0mm (Nov 2002) 150.3mm (Aug 1977) 148.0mm (Nov 2009) 142.8mm (Nov 1974) 140.0mm (Sep 1974) 139.6mm (Oct 1949) 132.6mm (Nov 1951) 131.4mm (Oct 2020)** While the remnants of Hurricane Epsilon strike Iceland, there's an attendant surface low that has formed northwest of Ireland bringing gales and rain to Ireland and mostly rain without gales to the UK. The Met Office has gone and issued a " yellow alert" for much of the west coast of the UK from about Wales to southern Scotland. Massive waves off the coast of Ireland thanks to this setup.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Oct 29, 2020 9:47:58 GMT -5
Another wet day today, October 2020 will be among the wettest months on record at Heathrow. 174.8mm (Oct 1987) 162.4mm (Jan 2014) 155.5mm (Oct 1960) 155.4mm (Oct 2000) 151.2mm (Nov 1970) 151.0mm (Nov 2002) 150.3mm (Aug 1977) 148.0mm (Nov 2009) 142.8mm (Nov 1974) 140.0mm (Sep 1974) 139.6mm (Oct 1949) 132.6mm (Nov 1951) 131.4mm (Oct 2020)** While the remnants of Hurricane Epsilon strike Iceland, there's an attendant surface low that has formed northwest of Ireland bringing gales and rain to Ireland and mostly rain without gales to the UK. The Met Office has gone and issued a " yellow alert" for much of the west coast of the UK from about Wales to southern Scotland. Massive waves off the coast of Ireland thanks to this setup. 29 metres is monstruous for a wave! 6-10m is usually considered a sizeable wave in the North Sea, and it's rare to get much above 3-4m in the English Channel.
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