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Post by Babu on Feb 26, 2019 15:40:19 GMT -5
the official values are in now. * denotes new record The manual stations weren't counted yet. 16.5'C is the national record!
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Post by boombo on Feb 26, 2019 16:02:41 GMT -5
Now I've seen a lot of record highs - ten months out of 12 have had their records broken since 2010, some of them more than once - but considering the time of year none of those warm spells has been in the same league as what we've seen here in the past few days. Four days out of the last five have not just beaten the old record but absolutely obliterated it.
5 warmest February days on record (since 1973)
1. 18.5C, 26 February 2019 2. 16.7C, 23 February 2019 3. 16.5C, 25 February 2019 4. 15.9C, 22 February 2019 5. 14.7C, 13 February 1998
It's the perfect counterpart to what Mother Nature treated us to just under a year ago:
5 coldest March days on record
(-3.9C, 28 February 2018) 1. -2.3C, 1 March 2018 2. -1.7C, 2 March 2018 3. -1.6C, 3 March 2018 4. -1.4C, 18 March 2018 5= -1.3C, 11 March 2013 5= -1.3C, 24 March 2013
Weird that over 46 years of records, the four warmest winter days and the four coldest spring days have all come within the past 12 months.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 27, 2019 7:48:57 GMT -5
Karlshamn apparently recorded 16.7c yesterday A new swedish all-time High for february.
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Post by Dean York (Old) on Feb 27, 2019 8:23:11 GMT -5
27.4C in Western France! The nearest city to the station is Bordeaux, and is a new February record for that area, and also looks like it will beat the March record too! Incredible!
Edit: Looks like they peaked at 27.9C in the Bordeaux area, which not only beats their February record, but also March! Not bad at all for winter, and is actually 0.8C warmer than the average high in their warmest month.
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Post by Babu on Feb 27, 2019 10:14:04 GMT -5
Karlshamn apparently recorded 16.7c yesterday A new swedish all-time High for february. That's definitelt not a station you'd expect to set any national records. No föhn winds except possibly from the north, and way too close to the sea.
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Post by Babu on Feb 27, 2019 15:05:33 GMT -5
Landvik of all places in Norway recorded 18.7'C yesterday. Normally, Tafjord and Sunndalsøra are the ones constantly winning the winter max league, and Sunndalsøra had the national record at 18.9. For Landvik of all places, with far cooler winters than on the western side of Norway and less pronounced föhn effects, to almost tangent the national record, is very impressive indeed.
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Post by boombo on Feb 27, 2019 15:13:02 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on Feb 28, 2019 2:30:17 GMT -5
That's definitelt not a station you'd expect to set any national records. No föhn winds except possibly from the north, and way too close to the sea. Only being slightly shielded can make a huge difference though. Karlshamn has one of the highest sun angles in Sweden of course and if the wind direction is perfect and it has enough shielding it can work. Also, being on the mainland in itself can be warm enough. I think the maritime Oxelösund station holds/held the Svealand January record at 12.1°C from 2007. It's got a free south-westerly path that only involves Bråviken and may completely circumnavigate any sort of open sea access. That also explains how Oxelösund in early August could record a 35°C day even at station with extremely warm heat wave nights, whereas Landsort only reached 29°C that very day.
Needless to say, Oxelösund has zero föhn influence whatsoever too, which makes those two consecutive 2007 January days at 12°C even more random and also a full two degrees warmer than Stockholm's all-time record for the month, just showing how important the sun angle difference is that time of the year. That being said, in spring Oxelösund's station is chillier than the interior because the average day sees a lot of maritime influence.
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Post by Nidaros on Feb 28, 2019 2:42:27 GMT -5
Landvik of all places in Norway recorded 18.7'C yesterday. Normally, Tafjord and Sunndalsøra are the ones constantly winning the winter max league, and Sunndalsøra had the national record at 18.9. For Landvik of all places, with far cooler winters than on the western side of Norway and less pronounced föhn effects, to almost tangent the national record, is very impressive indeed. It is a record place. Has Norway’s all-time high in March with 23.1C recorded March 27. 2012.
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Post by Babu on Feb 28, 2019 9:58:38 GMT -5
Landvik of all places in Norway recorded 18.7'C yesterday. Normally, Tafjord and Sunndalsøra are the ones constantly winning the winter max league, and Sunndalsøra had the national record at 18.9. For Landvik of all places, with far cooler winters than on the western side of Norway and less pronounced föhn effects, to almost tangent the national record, is very impressive indeed. It is a record place. Has Norway’s all-time high in March with 23.1C recorded March 27. 2012. Yeah, but March isn't winter anymore and sun strength starts to matter more than föhn
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Post by Babu on Mar 6, 2019 6:43:36 GMT -5
A complete list of all stations that broke their old february record this year.
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Post by Cadeau on Jun 28, 2019 8:19:23 GMT -5
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Post by Cadeau on Jun 28, 2019 8:22:49 GMT -5
Weather station in Villevieille reached 45.1°C in the recent hour, I don't know if the data is reliable enough to publish as official records.
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Post by Dean York (Old) on Jun 28, 2019 8:24:49 GMT -5
45.1°C in Villevielle(spelling)! Edit: you beat me to it! There are others close to 45C too. Amazing heat.
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Post by knot on Jun 28, 2019 8:29:30 GMT -5
When, precisely, did temperature records begin in this Villevielle?
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Post by Ariete on Jun 28, 2019 8:38:04 GMT -5
The village of Le Triadou: 45.2C!
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Post by Cadeau on Jun 28, 2019 11:35:49 GMT -5
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Post by urania93 on Jun 28, 2019 14:10:45 GMT -5
Apart from the crazy new absolute record high for the whole France, here there are some other records I heard of in the last few days. First of all, foehn wind effect broke quite a lot of records in my valley and in the rest of the Piedmont region, mostly in the mountain parts. The most extremes values I read of where measured in the Aosta valley, where temps up to 40°C were recorder up to 700-800 m of altitude (in particular, 40.6°C in Arvier and 40.5°C in Villeneuve-Saint Nicolas). Getting closer to my place, Bardonecchia (altitude 1350 m ca) hit 34.2°C, 3°C more than in August 2003. Foehn wind affected quite a lot also my home-place, but in that case it was mostly evident on the lows: Susa yesterday had a lovely low of 28.0°C, which up to my village would be considered as a pretty warm temp even as an high. My parents actually looked quite melted this evening when I heard them, and this is also the first time their home reaches the 30°C indoor. Yesterday high in Susa: 34.2°C Night low: 28.0°C Today's high: 35.0°C Passing to the Grenoble area, we are far from the absolute record, but the closest weather station to where I'm living surpassed its record high for June, with 38.2°C recorded yesterday. [1]
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Post by Lommaren on Jun 28, 2019 14:15:52 GMT -5
Is this the warmest ever overnight low recorded in Susa? It sounds quite extreme to get 28°C as a low in an Alpine valley, especially knowing the averages are just above the mid-teens in summer.
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Post by Lommaren on Jun 28, 2019 15:10:27 GMT -5
In addition to today's French records, Norrköping is on the verge of having its warmest June on record.
Last year was 23.7/11.4 while up until yesterday it was at 23.7/11.7 with temperatures like 29/15 and 32/18 being expected this weekend and today being 23/9 there. Last year fell short with 0.2°C from the 1953 record, so working out the math on that one, it definitely seems promising! Nyköping is a bit more narrower in diurnals as usual, but had we had a weather station here, I'd expect June to be the warmest ever too. The nights have been something else.
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