Cloudy Sunday Morning

It is partly cloudy this morning becoming partly sunny with highs in the mid 40's. We will have winds of about 10 mph out of the east, shifting to the Southeast later in the day.

Tonight it will become mostly cloudy with areas of fog moving in. Visibility will drop to ¼ mile at times. temps dropping to low 40's. Winds will  shift to the Southwest.

The readings outside right now are:

a relative humidity of 86% with a Dew Point of 33.6ºF.

The temperature is 37.6ºF, with a low wind chill at this time.

The wind velocity is presently between 1.3 mph and 8.0 mph out of the North.

Our Barometric pressure is 30.22 and rising.

Yesterday we had NO measurable precipitation

Visibility is 10.0 miles, is mostly cloudy, and a ceiling of 1,100 feet.

The information below is a re-post from two months ago. I'm posting it again because it may be informational for you.

Winter 2011-12 farmer's almanac

For the winter of 2011–12, the Farmers' Almanac is forecasting "clime and punishment," a season of unusually cold and stormy weather. For some parts of the country, that means a frigid climate; while for others, it will mean lots of rain and snow.

The upcoming winter looks to be cold to very cold for the Northern Plains, parts of the Northern Rockies, and the western Great Lakes. In contrast, above-normal temperatures are expected across most of the southern and eastern U.S. Near-normal temperatures are expected in the Midwest and Far West, and in southern

Florida.

A very active storm track will bring much heavier-than-normal precipitation from the Southern Plains through Tennessee into Ohio, the Great Lakes, and the Northeast. Because of above normal temperatures, much of the precipitation will likely be rain or mixed precipitation, although, during February, some potent East Coast storms could leave heavy snow, albeit of a wet and slushy consistency.

An active Pacific Storm track will guide storm systems into the Pacific Northwest, giving it a wetter-than-normal winter.

Drier-than-normal weather will occur in the Southwest and Southeast corners of the nation.

To see a more detailed long-range forecast for your area, pick up a copy of the 2012 Farmers' AlmanacFor the winter of 2011–12,

 

 

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