My 2 cents: Sunday October 05, 2014 the 278th Day of Year - TopicsExpress



          

My 2 cents: Sunday October 05, 2014 the 278th Day of Year Frost Advisory in effect for the Pennyrile Region of West Kentucky, portions of Southern Illinois and Northwest Tennessee from 1AM-8AM Sunday morning. Temperatures will drop into the mid to upper 30s with calm winds. Protect any outdoor plants and sensitive vegetation. Highs on Sunday will return to the mid 70s with partly cloudy skies. Rain chances return Sunday night and Monday. Visit us on Facebook Please like us also https://facebook/CaldwellCountyKentuckyWxOps Jim ================================ Conditions @ Time 4:15 AM Current Temp. 40 Fair Feels Like 40 Today 73 Sunny 0% Precip. Tonight 51 Showers 30% Precip. Low Overnight 34.5ºF (1:50 am) Rain Yesterday 0.00 Monthly Rainfall 0.44 Humidity 82% Pressure 29.94 Wind from the S @ 2 mph UV Index 0 Dew Point 35 Visibility 10.0 Miles Sun Rise/Set 6:51 am / 6:28 pm ========================================== Radar: UKAWC Radar, NWS Radar (NEW!), SPC Radar, Regional Radar, SkyWarn, NEXRAD, LSI Heat Index Hazardous Weather Outlook For CALDWELL County, Kentucky 337 PM CDT SAT OCT 4 2014 DAY ONE THIS AFTERNOON AND TONIGHT ELEVATED FIRE CONDITIONS ARE POSSIBLE THIS AFTERNOON MAINLY IN THE MARK TWAIN NATIONAL FOREST OF SOUTHEAST MISSOURI. PLEASE SEE THE FIRE WEATHER FORECAST FOR MORE INFORMATION. A FROST ADVISORY HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR AREAS ALONG AND EAST OF A LINE FROM FAIRFIELD ILLINOIS TO CADIZ KENTUCKY. DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY A SMALL CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS IS FORECAST ACROSS THE REGION MONDAY. SEVERE WEATHER IS NOT EXPECTED. SMALL CHANCES OF THUNDERSTORMS ARE FORECAST WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY. LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL WILL BE THE PRIMARY CONCERN. SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER ACTIVATION IS NOT ANTICIPATED. HOWEVER REPORTS OF FROST SUNDAY MORNING WOULD BE GREATLY APPRECIATED. Kentucky County Hazardous Weather Outlook Podcasts (mp3) NWS Severe Weather Map , Convective Outlook Latest CALDWELL County, Kentucky Watches, Warnings and Advisories. 7-Day Forecast For CALDWELL County, KY 359 AM CDT SUN OCT 5 2014 FROST ADVISORY IN EFFECT UNTIL 8 AM CDT THIS MORNING TODAY PARTLY SUNNY. AREAS OF FROST IN THE MORNING. HIGHS IN THE LOWER 70S. SOUTHWEST WINDS 10 TO 15 MPH. TONIGHT PARTLY CLOUDY WITH A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS. LOWS AROUND 50. SOUTHWEST WINDS 5 TO 10 MPH. MONDAY A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND A SLIGHT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS IN THE MORNING THEN SHOWERS LIKELY AND A CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS IN THE AFTERNOON. HIGHS IN THE LOWER 70S. SOUTHWEST WINDS 10 TO 15 MPH. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 60 PERCENT. MONDAY NIGHT PARTLY CLOUDY. A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND A SLIGHT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS IN THE EVENING THEN A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AFTER MIDNIGHT. LOWS IN THE MID 50S. SOUTHWEST WINDS 5 TO 10 MPH. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 50 PERCENT. TUESDAY MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND A SLIGHT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHS IN THE UPPER 70S. SOUTHWEST WINDS 10 TO 15 MPH. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 50 PERCENT. TUESDAY NIGHT PARTLY CLOUDY WITH A SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS. LOWS IN THE MID 50S. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 20 PERCENT. WEDNESDAY PARTLY SUNNY WITH A SLIGHT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHS IN THE UPPER 70S. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 20 PERCENT. WEDNESDAY NIGHT PARTLY CLOUDY WITH A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. LOWS IN THE UPPER 50S. THURSDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHT MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHS IN THE UPPER 70S. LOWS AROUND 60. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 50 PERCENT. FRIDAY SHOWERS LIKELY AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHS IN THE LOWER 70S. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 60 PERCENT. FRIDAY NIGHT MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND ISOLATED THUNDERSTORMS. LOWS IN THE LOWER 50S. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 50 PERCENT. SATURDAY MOSTLY CLOUDY WITH A 50 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS. HIGHS IN THE UPPER 60S. Day 1 Precip, Day 2, 5 Day Total, Days 1-5, ALL ========================================= On This Day In Weather History... //////////////////////// OCTOBER 5TH HISTORIC WEATHER EVENTS ...1638... The journal of John Winthrop recorded that a mighty tempest struck eastern New England. This second severe hurricane in three years blew down many trees in mile long tracks. (David Ludlum) ...1786... The famous Pumpkin Flood occurred on the Delaware and Susquehanna Rivers. Harrisburg PA reported a river stage of twenty-two feet. The heavy rains culminated a wet season. (David Ludlum) ...1917... The temperature at Sentinel AZ soared to 116 degrees to establish an October record for the nation. (The Weather Channel) ...1972... Heavy rains, mostly the remnants of Tropical Storm Joanne, fell across much of Arizona. It was believed to be the first time in Arizona weather history that a tropical storm entered the state with its circulation still intact. The center was over Flagstaff early on the 7th. (3rd-7th) (The Weather Channel) ...1987... It was another day of scorching heat for the southwestern U.S. Afternoon highs of 102 degrees in Downtown San Francisco, and 104 degrees at Monterrey, established all-time records. The high of 101 degrees at San Jose was a record for October. Sacramento tied their record for October for the third time in the month, with a reading of 102 degrees. The high for the nation was 111 degrees at San Luis Obispo and Palm Springs. Twenty cities in the southeastern U.S. reported record low temperatures for the date, including Knoxville TN with a reading of 34 degrees. (The National Weather Summary) ...1988... Thirteen cities in the central U.S. reported record low temperatures for the date, including Duluth MN with a reading of 21 degrees. Goodland KS reported an afternoon high of 39 degrees. Showers over Upper Michigan produced an inch of snow at Marquette. (The National Weather Summary) ...1989... Showers and thunderstorms associated with Tropical Storm Raymond deluged southeastern Arizona with heavy rain. Up to four and a half inches of rain was reported north of Wilcox. Three- fourths of the streets in the town of Wilcox were left under eighteen inches of water, and damage exceeded a million dollars. Evening thunderstorms developing along a cold front produced severe weather in Oklahoma and the Texas panhandle. Thunderstorms produced high winds which gusted to 80 mph at White Deer TX, and resulted in one death at Pocasset OK. Thunderstorms produced golf ball size hail at Pampa TX and Lefors TX. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)  UKAWC Briefing Page
Posted on: Sun, 05 Oct 2014 09:27:22 +0000

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