
Sunday morning lows (minimum temperatures) around the state of Minnesota:
53 Twin Cities (normal low is 63).
43 St. Cloud (new record low for July 19).
37 International Falls (new record, old record was 43 F, set in 1958)
TEMPERATURE IN F: :PCPN:
================================
1 2 3 4 5 6A 6B 7
DY MAX MIN AVG DEP HDD CDD WTR
================================
1 76 58 67 -2 0 2 0.00
2 80 59 70 1 0 5 0.00
3 80 58 69 0 0 4 0.00
4 81 56 69 0 0 4 0.00
5 83 53 68 -1 0 3 0.00
6 82 56 69 0 0 4 0.02
7 81 56 69 0 0 4 0.00
8 81 56 69 -1 0 4 0.00
9 77 62 70 0 0 5 0.00
10 85 55 70 0 0 5 0.08
11 76 52 64 -6 1 0 0.00
12 76 50 63 -7 2 0 0.00
13 77 47 62 -8 3 0 0.00
14 79 58 69 -1 0 4 1.28
15 73 54 64 -6 1 0 0.00
16 66 51 59 -11 6 0 0.00
17 64 54 59 -11 6 0 T
18 68 48 58 -12 7 0 0.00
July Data for St. Cloud from the National Weather Service.
* 3.8 degrees F. cooler than average so far.
* 11 of 18 days: cooler than average, largest extremes came third week of July.
* Only 3 days with more than a trace of rain reported. The vast majority of our 1.4" of rain fell on July 14
* 9 mornings in July waking up to temperatures cooler than 55 F.

I woke up Sunday morning, slowly, nervously lifting one eyelid, carefully peering under the slats in the shades covering the bedroom window - catching my breath as I lunged for a closer look. Please God. Let it be sunny. The people need hope! Let this magnificent day live up to its name. That's right, Sun-Day. Let it be. I opened the other eyelid and exhaled with relief, no, something closer to pure unadulterated joy. The sun was out, shining in all its glory, casting shadows, the excited chatter from my visiting nephews and nieces out in the living room was a good sign. So like everyone else in the state we attempted to make up for lost time and Saturday's hideous cabin fever by rushing out onto the lake, along with a couple of million other Minnesotans. I'm still waiting for the day the DNR installs traffic lights out on 'Tonka. Note to self: probably NOT a good idea taking your 80 year old mother in law to Big Island, dragging a circular, 8-person float behind our boat. Man, did I ever get some curious stares (but my dear "Nanna" had a ball). No one spoke of Friday's wind chill or Saturday's gray disappointment. Mass, collective amnesia strikes again. That's the only reason this state keeps on going, btw. It's because of our capacity, refined over the years, to forget even the most egregious weather trauma, turn the other cheek (yes, facial cheek) and focus on the positive and good, ignore/downplay/poo-poo the bad.
Because if someone told you that for 3-4 months out of the year it's going to sting when you open the front door - and you'll have to hold your breath until the heater gets going - and spring can last for a day or two - and when summer finally does show up (some time in June, usually) it's magnificent, except for the drippy humidity levels, and the mosquitoes, so big they walk with a limp, and the DVD-size hailstones and roaring tornadoes and quality time spent curled up in your basement.....that, and oh yeah, an occasional taste of early October in mid July, complete with 30s, furnaces clicking on, even some patchy frost and records up north.
Yesterday was a tonic for the soul. I was counting my blessings, atmospheric and otherwise, all day, out with my family and my wife's twin sister's family in visiting from Washington. Friday and Saturday these visiting 'kin kept looking at me - all of us, in fact - like we were halfwits, as if to say, "why are you putting up with this crap?" Today they got their answer, like a 2x4 across the forehead. They understood. Blue sky, little wind, low humidity, unlimited visibility, even the bugs seemed especially well-behaved. The mercury climbed to 75 at St. Cloud and 78 in the Twin Cities, but held at 64 in Grand Marais with a chilly breeze wafting off Superior. Farther west Canby boasted 80 degrees, and more of the state should sample 80 later today with sun most of the day.
Another frontal boundary arrives with potentially heavy showers/thunderstorms late tonight into part of Tuesday, the timing is still tricky, but Tuesday morning's "rush hour" may be anything but. Several inches of rain is expected over parts of central Minnesota, less amounts closer to the Twin Cities, Duluth and Rochester. Remember we're in a moderate/severe drought, down anywhere form 2-4" of rain since June 1, closer to 6" since April 1, so bring it on!

The next clipper-like disturbance dropping southeastward out of Canada may rile up a shower or storm anytime late Friday, before a drier, cooler, lower-humidity breeze whips up behind the front Saturday, temperatures probably stunted in the 70s once more. It's hard to fathom, but that same GFS model is painting another unusually vigorous, another chilly, rainy, stormy swirl over the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest from next weekend into the first few days of next week. Maybe it's El Nino, perhaps it's something else, but it's just uncanny how the atmosphere wants to keep getting locked in a pattern that favors almost autumnlike weather from the Dakotas to New England, while much of the south, west (and oddly enough: Alaska) bakes under record heat. Enough speculation, just know that no 90s are shaping up, quite the opposite with temperatures quite a bit cooler than average for late July. Wait, how the heck did it get to be late July?
Is it just me, or have you noticed that ever summer seems to fly by a little bit faster?
Not fair.
This is when I'd like to have a (bigger) remote control and put my life into slow motion....
Savor days like yesterday (and today). When you think back to the good 'ol days, I hope it looks something like today did.
Paul's Outlook
Today: Warm sun much of the day, breezy. Winds: south 10-20, gustier PM. High: 81
Tonight: Clouds increase, growing chance of showers and heavy thunderstorms. Locally heavy rainfall possible with a few of these storms. Low: 60
Tuesday: Lingering showers and T-storms early, then partial clearing. High: 78
Wednesday: Mix of clouds and sunshine, warmer. High: 81
Thursday: Plenty of sunshine, a nice dose of summer! High: 84
Friday: Ample sun, chance of late-day T-showers. High: 85
Saturday: Cooler under a partly sunny sky. T-storms possible far southern MN. High: 78
Sunday: Mostly cloudy with showers, windy and cool again. High: 73
Monday: Stalled pattern once more....Mostly cloudy and showery, a damp wind. High: 72
No comments:
Post a Comment