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Pattern July '22

A tad warm today! Can't wait for cooler temps in fall. :confused:

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Warm evening, still 91°F as of 7 PM, as the sea breeze has been pinned closer to the coast most of the day (although is near me now). All convection has remained north of me today thus far.
 
Warm evening, still 91°F as of 7 PM, as the sea breeze has been pinned closer to the coast most of the day (although is near me now). All convection has remained north of me today thus far.
You turn your ac on at all ? What’s your current house temp/ dew point combo ?
 
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You turn your ac on at all ? What’s your current house temp/ dew point combo ?
When I wrote my previous post, about an hour ago, virtually the same as outdoors (91/77°F), the highest temp I've had thus far this summer. It's all about what you're used to...didn't feel that bad with a ceiling fan on medium tbh.

At the end of the day, A/C is a rather new invention
 
Line moves steadily south for hundreds of miles and dies right before getting to Southern Wake Co. Astonishing.

My favorite part is all the new development between Smithfield and Greenville and nothing here along the ofb. I'm starting to think there's something legitimately broken here that makes it not rain
 
My favorite part is all the new development between Smithfield and Greenville and nothing here along the ofb. I'm starting to think there's something legitimately broken here that makes it not rain
There's something about this area that makes it harder when you're dealing with random tstorm activity. I don't know if it's some kind of boundary in the soil or some elevation change or what, but there is definitely something that promotes the destruction of convection over this area.
 
There's something about this area that makes it harder when you're dealing with random tstorm activity. I don't know if it's some kind of boundary in the soil or some elevation change or what, but there is definitely something that promotes the destruction of convection over this area.
There's definitely a soil transition zone that corresponds to an elevation drop off. But why that would kill storms....no clue

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There's definitely a soil transition zone that corresponds to an elevation drop off. But why that would kill storms....no clue

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That's it, you found it!! I don't know either unless it somehow works to promote sinking on a very localized scale. Maybe my label of this being the Sink Zone isn't too far off base lol.
 
Too early to talk about our winter? Winter battle zone incoming! LolView attachment 120222
It’s never too early to speculate on winter! I’m predicting this winter up here will be amazeballs! Just based on the normal/ wet summer, we should roll that right on into winter! My prediction for Dubuque is :
20”+ by January
60” + winter total! ⛄
 
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