As I expected last year.... this year in the "Rainy City" (San Antonio) it will look a lot more like 2007 and 2002 or 2010.
baseline bum
Still nothing near 100 in the long term forecast for San Antonio, now going into July
https://weather.com/weather/tenday/l...4a40fb45222c37
As I expected last year.... this year in the "Rainy City" (San Antonio) it will look a lot more like 2007 and 2002 or 2010.
Hmmmmmm are you a COBOL developer?
Pretty early to be calling that when our May and early June were way worse than those Augusts. Looks like we're getting saved for a while by that low in the gulf but not buying there will be more like it to keep July through early September at bay. Not really buying Days 8-14 of that forecast either yet. Has been nice having temps 96-98 though lately with daytime dewpoints in the high 60s, so much better than 102 with daytime dewpoints in the mid 70s before that low pushed the horrendous Mexico heat dome away that was dominating us a couple weeks ago.
Thank god for COVID normalizing remote work. If I ever have to commute again please just ing shoot me.
81... eighty-one... EIGHTY-ONE.... as in Kobe Bryant's eighty-one... is the forecast high this coming Wednesday for SAT... in the latter half of June... in San Antonio!! That's incredible!! I don't think we had a high temperature nearly that low so deep into summer at all the last two years.
That's like March weather, although the low temp is summery
Knew these 96 and 97 forecasts through the first week of July were going to be BS. Looks like it's back to over the top hot summer again after a couple of weeks of being only a little hotter than average summer.
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Still, not as hot as last year.
Also, rain in the forecast, which is different from last year or 2011, 2022, even 2018. Also, a lot more clouds.
Probably not, but last year we had 9 days of 100+ through June 26th; this year we have had 7 days of 100+ through June 26th so not out of the question.
Hit 100 today so up to 8 days in 2024 at 100+, and that rain is a pretty useless prediction almost two weeks out.
Welp I did say 47 or more = Trump victory, and after tonight that looks like all but a wrap.
By the way they asked Trump about climate and he dodged the question, talking about Afghanistan and immigration or whatever, and briefly noted that we had "cleaner water and air" under his administration. Whereas Biden seemed to offer real, albeit tired, solutions, and brought up the Paris climate accord issue. Trump said it was "too expensive" and said he would only keep the USA in that if India and China and Russia joined. Lol.
ROFL guy who hires illegals ranting about illegal immigration constantly.
Jan 21, 2025 he's promised to start "drilling like never before", fracking like never before, immediately start the keystone pipeline again, and re-withdraw from the Paris climate accord
Better get used to 110 highs with 125 heat index being your average summer's day in May in south Texas.
Hmmm... was that graphic from 2009?
I remember that was the last time before 2021 that Portland/Seattle had that massive heat wave that got them over 100, but in 2021 San Antonio didn't get anywhere near 106.
Portland goes 100+ about five times a year now man.
Absolutely nothing compared to last year, and with Beryl barrelling down on us likely to soak and flood the city next week, we'll probably not even make the top ten this year.
We're still going at quite a bit faster pace than average over the last 30 years which is 21 days for the year and we're at 11 right now in early July and the only things that have stopped our 100 degree days are Alberto and now looking like maybe Beryl. If we keep getting tropical storms every 2.5 weeks we probably won't finish too high above average but otherwise are you expecting anything other than a wall of 100s after mid July until and through the end of August if the tropical storms and hurricanes start going to Mississippi, Florida, the Carolinas, etc?
Last edited by baseline bum; 07-04-2024 at 06:31 PM.
Possibly, but it could also be a wall of 80s and 90s like 2016 or 2021, even without hurricane strikes. 2022 wasn't even terrible in August/September.
There's also the possibility that Beryl morphs into a subtropical mesoscale jet stream and parks over South/Central Texas like what happened around this time of year in 2022 and gives us a month of straight rain days.
2022 was wall to wall 100s in July, it beat out August 2011 for the hottest month ever recorded in San Antonio at the time. 80s and 90s seem pretty unlikely considering we jumped right back to 99-102 a week after Alberto.
Latest model runs have Beryl turning north to the point the center passes east of town now instead of west, which has warmed next week's forecast significantly![]()
Looks like you counted your chickens way too early now with Beryl rapidly tracking east in the latest modeling. Wouldn't be surprised if when NOAA's new forecasts come out tomorrow if we don't have a single day in the 80s projected, especially if it tracks further east than it is now (with the center of the cone hitting land around Port Aransas).
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our rain chances are plummeting too
Yeah just saw KENS-5 weather anything west of about Converse looks like they'd get 1.5" max, and if you're around 1604 west of town could be like half an inch from the entire storm. UC went from 6" to 8" yesterday to about 3" on today's forecast and figure by tomorrow's forecast when this storm tracks farther east it'll really look grim. Ugh sucks likely being on the weak side of the hurricane most likely now.
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