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Published: June 05, 2008 08:41 am
Weather Watch
By MARK HANOK
June began with delightfully
cool weather, but now
we’re getting a major change
to a weather pattern that’s
much more typical of the
middle of summer.
The jet stream has pushed
far to the north, and the very
warm and humid air that
has been in the southern
Great Plains has moved
northeastward. Temperatures
will average well above
normal right through early
next week.
On Friday morning, a
warm front will lift north of
our region, followed by a
southwesterly flow of very
warm, increasingly humid
air. Clouds early in the morning
will give way to partly to
mostly sunny skies during
the afternoon, with highs
from 85 to 90 degrees.
A weak cold front will stay
to our north and west on Saturday,
keeping any showers
and thunderstorms over
western and northern New
York. We’ll get partly sunny
skies and highs in the middle
80’s, along with moderately
humid conditions.
A very warm and humid
southwesterly flow will prevail
on Sunday, with mostly
sunny skies and highs from
85 to 90 degrees. Look for
more of the same on Monday,
with partly sunny skies and
highs from 85 to 90 degrees.
A cold front may bring a
few showers and thunderstorms
on Monday night and
Tuesday morning, then clearing
Tuesday afternoon. A
northwesterly flow of cooler,
drier air will take over for
the middle of the week.
The combination of high
pressure centered in the
Ohio Valley and an intensifying
storm over Labrador
brought stellar May weather
to the Cooperstown area and
the entire Northeast on
Thursday. For the second
straight day, there wasn’t so
much as a cloud in sight, and
brilliant sunshine continued
all day, with desert-dry air,
and excellent visibility.
Early in the morning, the
lowest temperatures in the
state were found in our area,
with lows near 30 degrees
and frost in valley locations.
Just like the high desert, afternoon
temperatures rebounded
to the mid-70s.
In the Western Catskills
and Cooperstown area, Friday
seemed like the high
desert, with crystal clear
skies and lows in the mid-30s
early in the morning, then
mostly sunny through early
afternoon, with a high
around 80 degrees. During
the late afternoon, skies were
mostly cloudy as the warm
front approached from the
west.
May ended with a variety
of weather in our area on
Saturday, as a warm front
crossed central New York
during the morning. Mostly
local weather forecasts called
for cloudy skies and occasional
showers and thunderstorms,
but the rain was limited
to a few hours in the late
morning, then a few widely
scattered thunderstorms in
the early afternoon. The high
was 76 degrees at our weather
station in Otego, before a
15-minute thunderstorm
moved through the area.
As a cold front moved
through the western Southern
Tier, drier air pushed
eastward ahead of the front,
and the rain shifted to the
south, with severe thunderstorms
in Virginia, Maryland,
and the Delmarva Peninsula,
and thunderstorms
and heavy rain from southeastern
Pennsylvania to central
New Jersey.
In Otsego County, skies
were partly to mostly sunny
during the mid and late afternoon,
with temperatures
around 70 degrees. As the
cold front crossed the region,
there were a few scattered
showers in the early evening,
then clearing with a drier
northwesterly flow.
The Western Catskills
and the Cooperstown area
got some of the coolest air in
the nation to begin June on
Sunday. A summer-like
weather pattern prevailed
across most of the nation,
but as low pressure tracked
eastward to northern Maine,
a light, upsloping northwesterly
flow kept temperatures
about 10 degrees cooler than
normal in Otsego County.
For a change, there was actually
more cloudiness than
our weather forecast had indicated,
since there was a
cold pool of air associated
with an upper-level trough
that was stronger than expected,
as it moved through
central and eastern New
York. Skies were mostly
cloudy along with intervals
of sunshine; highs were only
in the middle 60s.
Monday was an absolutely
magnificent June day in
the Cooperstown area and
throughout most of the
Northeast, with high pressure
centered over West Virginia,
and a light northwest
flow of mild, dry air. Skies
were mostly sunny with
highs in the mid-70s.
Ahead of a strong upperlevel
low over eastern Colorado,
and along a stationary
front, severe thunderstorms
developed during the afternoon
and evening across
eastern Montana and western
and central South Dakota.
To the south, the mercury
soared to 101 degrees at Austin,
Texas and to 97 degrees
at Houston.
A large storm system in
the center of the nation, and
a stationary front extending
eastward to the Ohio Valley,
provided for a long corridor
of severe thunderstorms
from the southern Great
Plains to the mid-Mississippi
Valley all the way to Indiana
and Ohio on Tuesday.
During the early evening,
there several tornadoes reported
in northern Missouri
and central Illinois, and
three-inch hail in western
Nebraska; additional thunderstorms
developed in central
and eastern Virginia.
As a cold front moved
slowly southward on a line
from northern New England
to Lake Erie, skies were
mostly sunny all morning in
our region, with temperatures
in the upper 70s by
noon.
Then clouds rolled in
ahead of the front, and skies
were mostly cloudy in the
mid- and late afternoon, then
light showers arrived just
before sunset.
Mark Hanok is an Otego based
meteorologist. You
can visit him on the World
Wide Web at http://members.
aol.com/weathergazette.
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