Weather Sunday
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Started by metmike - June 9, 2019, 11:36 a.m.

June 9th......time ticks by faster and faster!!!   Do something to make somebody feel loved today!  Then, after observing the positive results,  make a good habit out of it!

 Scroll down and  enjoy the latest comprehensive weather to the max...... occurring because of the natural physical laws in our atmosphere.   


 Still no major heat in the forecast!!    Will the rains pick up again late in week 1??? Yes is the answer for the S.Plains to the southwest Cornbelt, maybe a bit south of the previously extremely wet areas and continuing into week 2.


Here are the latest hazards across the country.



Purple/Pink/blue on land is cold/Winter weather. Brown is wind,  Green is flooding. Gray is fog.  Reddish is a red flag advisory.  

Go to the link below, then hit the location/county on the map for details.

                          https://www.spc.noaa.gov/  Go to "hazards"                                                                                     

                   

 

 





US Weather Current Temperatures Map




      Wind map     Press down on this on the left with your cursor!

Legend

                                        

                          


Current Jet Stream


Low Temperatures Tomorrow Morning

Comments
By metmike - June 9, 2019, 11:37 a.m.
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Not far from average!

Temperature colors on the maps below still need to be adjusted down to cooler shades. 



   

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 11:39 a.m.
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Highs for days 3-7:


Cool start, then warming.  Hot out West.


http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/DAY3_MAX_filled.gif

https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/DAY4_MAX_filled.gif

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/DAY5_MAX_filled.gifhttp://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/DAY6_MAX_filled.gifhttps://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/DAY7_MAX_filled.gif

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 11:56 a.m.
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Most of the country on the cool side...........except hot West. Then getting closer to average by next weekend.


https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/medr_mean.shtml


http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/hpcmaxwbg.gif


https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/95Bwbg.gif

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 11:59 a.m.
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Weather maps for days 3-7 below


Reinforcing cold front in the middle of the week with very cool temps.

Wet southern stream system late week............heavy rains pick up again S.Plains to southwest Cornbelt.

https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/medr/5dayfcst_wbg_conus.gif

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:01 p.m.
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Last 24 hour precip top map

Last 7 day precip below that

https://www.wunderground.com/maps/precipitation/daily

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:04 p.m.
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Liquid equivalent precip forecasts for the next 7 days are below.


Another cold front in the middle of this week with some scat. light/moderate rains.

Then......................the next southern stream big rain maker shows up in the S.Plains later in the week, into the sw Cornbelt. 

Day 1 below:

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/fill_94qwbg.gif?1526306199054

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/fill_94qwbg.gif?1531339983148

Day 2 below:

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/fill_98qwbg.gif?1528293750112


http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/fill_98qwbg.gif?1531340045174


Day 3 below

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/fill_99qwbg.gif?1528293842764

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/fill_99qwbg.gif?1531340092706



Days 4-5 below:

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/95ep48iwbg_fill.gif?1526306162

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/95ep48iwbg_fill.gif?1531339379

 Days 6-7 below:

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/97ep48iwbg_fill.gif?1526306162

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/97ep48iwbg_fill.gif?1531339379

7 Day Total precipitation below:

http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.govcdx /qpf/p168i.gif?1530796126








http://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/p168i.gif?1530796126

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:07 p.m.
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Isolated Excessive Rainfall threat the next 2 days Southeast to Mid-Atlantic(to  Ohio Valley) with slow moving southern stream low.


Rains pick up later in the week in the S.Plains with some excessive rainfall risk then.   

   Mesoscale Precipitation Discussions

 

 

Current Day 1 ForecastCurrent Day 1 Excessive Rainfall Forecast
Valid 12Z 04/22/19 - 12Z 04/23/19

 

Day 1 Threat Area in Text Format  


  Day 2 and Day 3 Forecasts 
Current Day 2 ForecastCurrent Day 2 Excessive Rainfall Forecast
Valid 12Z 04/23/19 - 12Z 04/24/19

 

Day 2 Threat Area in Text Format 

 

Current Day 3 ForecastCurrent Day 3 Excessive Rainfall Forecast
By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:08 p.m.
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There is a small area in TX today.  

Minimal risk after that.

       

https://www.spc.noaa.gov/

Current Day 1 Outlook
        1630 UTC Day 1 Outlook             
                Forecaster: Thompson/Squitieri
Issued: 20/1624Z
Valid: 20/1630Z - 21/1200Z
Forecast Risk of Severe Storms: No Svr Tstms        
      
          Current Day 2 Outlook
          0600 UTC Day 2 Outlook               
                Forecaster: Broyles
Issued: 20/0546Z
Valid: 21/1200Z - 22/1200Z
Forecast Risk of Severe Storms: Marginal Risk        
      
          Current Day 3 Outlook
          0600 UTC Day 3 Outlook               
                Forecaster: Broyles
Issued: 20/0711Z
Valid: 22/1200Z - 23/1200Z
Forecast Risk of Severe Storms: Marginal Risk
      
          Current Day 4-8 Outlook
          Day 4-8 Convective Outlook       

                                    


By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:09 p.m.
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Current Dew Points

Decent moisture to the Ohio River Valley.


Current Dew Points

                                    

Latest radar loop


http://www.nws.noaa.gov/radar_tab.php

Doppler Radar National Mosaic Loop

                       


 

Upper Mississippi Valley sector loop

  


 (3400x1700 pixels - 2.2mb)
Go to: Most Recent Image

      

Central Great Lakes sector loop
Go to: Most Recent Image

                                  

    You can go to this link to see precipitation totals from recent time periods:


https://water.weather.gov/precip/


                              Go to precipitation, then scroll down to pick a time frame. Hit states to get the borders to see locations better. Under products, you can hit "observed" or "Percent of normal"      

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Precipitation compared to average for the last 7, 14, 30 and 60 days. 

The Cornbelt has been drying out and planting has been catching up this week.

Usually not updated for previous day until late the next day.

https://www.atmos.illinois.edu/~snodgrss/Ag_Wx.html

http://weather.agribleservices.com/ahps/7_day_percent.png


http://weather.agribleservices.com/ahps/14_day_percent.png

http://weather.agribleservices.com/ahps/30_day_percent.pnghttp://weather.agribleservices.com/ahps/60_day_percent.png

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:10 p.m.
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Soilmoisture anomaly:

These maps sometimes take a day to catch up to incorporate the latest data(the bottom map is only updated once a week)


https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/Soilmst_Monitoring/US/Soilmst/Soilmst.shtml#


      Daily Soil Moisture Pecentile       

        Daily Anomaly Soil Moisture (mm)

        Monthly Soil Moisture Changehttps://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/regional_monitoring/palmer.gif

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:12 p.m.
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Surprise, surprise, surprise!! Currently, there is 0%  of the Cornbelt/Midwest with drought. There is no place even slightly dry there. It has been dry(and very warm/hot) in the Southeast though which has some drought. The Southeast drought has really increased AGAIN on the June 6 update!!!!  However, drought relief is happening  with the current system for a bit longer.

The map below is updated on Thursdays.

 The market will be STILL be  keying on precip forecasts for planting concerns for the next couple of weeks.


https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/

           


    

Drought Monitor for conus

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:20 p.m.
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The top map is the Canadian ensemble average,  the maps below are the individual members that make up the average at the end of week 2.

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Each member is like the parent, Canadian model operational model.......with a slight tweek/variation in parameters. Since we know the equations to represent the physics of the atmosphere in the models are not perfect, its useful to vary some of the equations that are uncertain(can make a difference) to see if it effects the outcome and how.

The average of all these variations(ensembles) often yields a better tool for forecasting. It's always more consistent. The individual operational model, like each individual ensemble member can vary greatly from run to run.........and represent an extreme end of the spectrum at times. The ensemble average of all the members, because it averages the extremes.............from opposite ends of the spectrum.........changes much less from run to run.

End of week 2....................0z ensembles:
Analysis starting from a week ago, ending with today:


Last week+ of analysis, starting with the day farthest in the past. This is an end of week 2 forecast!


Last Friday: Still the deep trough along or off the West Coast to possibly the Gulf of Alaska(not as deep today) and the downstream ridging, building into the SouthCentral US(Plains).  Weak trough along the East Coast.

Saturday: Like yesterday. Upper level trough just off the West Coast and downstream ridge, possibly a significant heat ridge on some solutions. Rains could shut down under any upper level high downstream and could increase around the periphery from a strong Pacific  jet stream implied from the flow coming under the deep West Coast area trough. Not a clear indication of where heaviest rains might or where it will be dry but temperatures look to be warmer than average over almost all of the US.

Sunday:  The ensemble mean is more zonal today. There are variations/solutions with opposite extremes that help to offset each other but the  mean is not amplified. 

Monday:  A little more troughing in the Midwest to Northeast on this model, so cooler there today. Still zonal flow for the mean and a weak(er) trough along the West Coast. A positive anomaly in NW Canada.

Tuesday: SIGNIFICANT changes here late in week 2 vs yesterday on this model.....and only this model. Upper level ridge building in the South/Southeast and points northwestward adds alot of heat to the forecast. Strong jet stream tracking out of the Pacific COULD lead to heavy rains around the periphery of the upper level heat ridge.

Wednesday: Similar to yesterday but with less ridging in the South and Southeast............which is what the other........much cooler models have had.

Thursday: Wide spread in solutions. Trough just off the West Coast should be watched for connection to potential increase in heavy rains later in week 2. 

Friday: Hardly much change from yesterday but ridging in the Southeast that popped up on Tuesday, continues to go away on this model. Still a trough just off the West Coast. Not a hot pattern. Not a dry pattern. 

Saturday:  Looking cooler than yesterday on this model with a more pronounced northern stream upper level low Southeast Canada that extends south. Especially in combo with the upper level ridge in NW Canada to Alaska connection. Still a trough along or just off the West Coast. Will an upper level ridge build in the far south and a zone of heavy rains along the periphery of the ridge emerge?

Sunday: Upper level trough along the West Coast, which will modulate the  jet stream aimed towards the midsection. Ridge to the south will determine where organized storm events form...........around the periphery.  Much warmer in the Midwest/East than yesterday on this model with the northern stream influence not there on as many solutions. 

360h GZ 500 forecast valid on Jun 24, 2019 00 UTC

GZ 500 forecastGZ 500 forecastGZ 500 forecastGZ 500 forecast

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:25 p.m.
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0Z GFS Ensembles at 2 weeks:

Analysis,  starting with the oldest, ending with the most recent:


Last Friday: Still a great deal of variation with solutions. Best agreement might be upper level ridge in the Plains and upper level low somewhere in the vicinity of the PAC Northwest.

Saturday: Watching the West Coast trough/low and strong Pacific jet stream associated with that to tell us whats coming for mid June and beyond. Temperatures look quite warm over much of the country with no northern stream interactions.

Sunday: Trough along the West Coast less significant as well as down stream ridging less. Trough in the Northeast significant on half the solutions.

Monday: Not very decisive.

Tuesday: Not as significant with the heat ridge in the Southeast as the Canadian ensembles. A big spread in solutions.

Wednesday: Could it turn wet again late in week 2?  No major heat even though a few try to build a heat ridge in the south to southeast.

Thursday: Looks pretty wet later in week 2.  The 12z run was WARMER.

Friday: Widespread in solutions, especially with regards to the northern stream.

Saturday: A bit cooler today with the northern stream. Watching for the potential to turn wet again.

Sunday: The pick up in rains will actually be late in week 1 and this is a end of week 2 solution............which looks drier but low confidence. Slightly warmer than yesterday at this time frame...........but Saturday was cooler than Friday.  There really is nothing that stands out below as remarkable.

http://mp1.met.psu.edu/~fxg1/ENSHGT_0z/f360.gif

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:28 p.m.
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GFS Ensemble mean(average of all the individual solutions above).  The first map is a mid/upper level map. The 2nd one is a temperatures map at around 1 mile above the surface. These are anomalies(difference compared to average). The daily analysis starts with the oldest and ends with the latest.


Last Thursday: Positive anomaly in the N.Plains has weakened. Negative anomaly along the West Coast.  Great uncertainty but not as dry overall vs the last few days. 

Friday: Weak positive anomaly in the center of the country.........stronger at higher latitudes(Canada).  Weak negative anomaly along the West Coast, stronger one in Southeast Canada which mean cool in the Northeast. 

Saturday: The decent negative anomaly in Southeast Canada has filled in..........so that takes out the northern stream component and makes this high confidence for warmer than average. Negative anomaly along the West Coast is now more significant. This will help to modulate the jet streams location and determine where down stream ridging might be, along with the new zone for rains setting up around the periphery of the potential ridge. 

Sunday: A bit of a negative anomaly againt in Southeast Canada might bring cooler air to the Northeast and middle of the country.  The rest of the US has had previous anomalies filled in. 

Monday: Slight negative anomalies in Southeast Canada, if they grow would be a source of cool air. Negative anomaly along the southern West Coast could steer wet weather and a jet stream towards the Plains. 

Tuesday: Huge positive anomaly today in N/C Canada (and smaller one off the Pacific NW) is actually favorable for cooler air below it into the central and Northeastern US. 

Wednesday: Notable/strong positive anomaly in Canada with a modest one in Southeast Canada will likely be a source of northern stream cool air. Another modest negative anomaly from the Southwest US towards the C.Plains(with a trough along the southern West Coast........oh,oh, this could represent the makings of more heavy rains..IF another heat ridge builds in the Southeast. 

Thursday: Big positive anomaly in N.Canada back to Siberia. Modest negative anomaly Midwest to Northeast and off the Pacific Northwest coast.  Favorable for cool in the middle to Northeast and wet.  

The 12z run was WARMER!

Friday: Still the positive anomaly in N.Canada and around the Gulf of Alaska/Northeast Pacific. and a modest negative anomaly, one from the northern stream in Southeast Canada(cool air link?) another in the Southwest from the southern stream(potential for rains returning?)

Saturday: Northern stream positive anomaly north Canada to Alaska to  Northeast Pacific connects downstream to negative anomaly that has shifted farther southwest into the US today.......N.Plains/Upper Midwest to Southeast Canada...................so a cooler solution. 

Sunday.  Weaker positive anomaly from NW Canada to the Northeast Pacific. Another slight positive anomaly in the deep south, then an elongated, lengthy west to east negative anomaly in between going from the Southwest across the entire country to the East Coast. That will be associated with the storm track and jet stream. 

NCEP Ensemble t = 360 hour forecast


NCEP Ensemble t = 360 hour forecast producthttps://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/map/images/ens/t850anom_f360_nhbg.gif

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:31 p.m.
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Latest, updated graph/forecast for AO and NAO here, including an explanation of how to interpret them. 

Previous analysis, with the latest day at the bottom for late week 2 period.


Last Friday: AO, NAO, PNA all a smidgeon less than 0.  Nothing to write on a forum about. 

Saturday: All 3 are slightly negative again. Nothing they can tell us, other than nothing extreme and chilly weather is unlikely. 

Sunday: All 3 near to just less than 0. Nothing except to suggest less chance for anything extreme. 

Monday: AO, NAO and PNA all slightly negative............nothing to read from these indices other than lessening the risk  for an extreme pattern.

Tuesday: A change. AO and NAO now more negative and PNA positive would suggest cooler air from high latitudes has a better path towards middle latitudes in the middle of the country............but there is great uncertainty. 

Wednesday: AO is slightly negative again with a pretty negative NAO and slightly positive PNA means COOL is very likely. 

Thursday: AO slight negative. NAO moderatly negative, PNA positive. Favors widespread cool in the middle to eastern US. 

Friday: Negative AO and NAO suggest cool air.  PNA a tad positive. 

Saturday: Negative AO, especially negative NAO(means high confidence cool signal) and near 0 PNA.

Sunday: Pretty big changes. AO climbs back to near 0. NAO much higher than previous days and climbs towards zero at the end of the period. For sure this SUGGESTS that the cold forcing from the northern stream will be subsiding. PNA is solidly positive. 


https://www.marketforum.com/forum/top

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:36 p.m.
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National Weather Service 6-10 day, 8-14 day outlooks.


 Updated this afternoon. 

For sure quite cool in the midsection this afternoon with the 6-10 day, possible warmth along the Gulf Coast and very wet in a zone in between there..............where to put the heaviest rains is the question.

The early parts of the 11-15 day will still have that pattern. 



Temperature Probability


6 to 10 Day Outlook - Temperature Probability Precipitation Probability


  6 to 10 Day Outlook - Precipitation Probability


  


the 8-14 day outlooks
ArchivesAnalogsLines-Only FormatGIS Data

Temperature Probability

8 to 14 Day Outlook - Temperature Probability
8 to 14 Day Outlook - Precipitation Probability
By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:36 p.m.
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From Craig Solberg:

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:36 p.m.
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Craig Solberg@CraigSolberg                       

  

                                      Simply amazing; past 12 months the wettest on record for the Nation and EASILY the wettest on record for the Corn Belt. Precipitation 8.53" above normal for 1902/03 in the Corn Belt simply PALES in comparison to our most recent 12 month period...an incredible 13.88" above normal

                                                       

 

               

 

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:37 p.m.
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 Craig Solberg@CraigSolberg                  Jun 7              

  

  

                                     

Whatever the corn planting progress number is on Monday...this is what it will compare to:

                                                 

 

By metmike - June 9, 2019, 12:38 p.m.
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Previous discussion:               


                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: grains            

                     By metmike - June 1, 2019, 7:22 p.m.            

            To mcfarm who lives in Indianapolis:

Here are the rains the next 9 days, most of them from next weeks system.

It would be one thing if they fell quickly in one day........and we had alot of run off .......which is bad enough. However, falling over a 3-5 day period will maximize soil saturation, even on high ground. 


But there is one hope. Look at the sharp cut off I mentioned earlier. Chicago and Detroit may get ZERO rain from this event, while you get numerous inches of rain. IF this system were to track 300 miles farther south, then you would get ZERO rain and areas south of you would get the heavy stuff. 

The system is still several days away and the track is not certain. It looks bad for you on most solutions but some of them look good for you.

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                Re: Re: Re: Re: Weather Sunday            

       

                By pll - June 2, 2019, 11:10 a.m.            

            


Planting got back going here Saturday I think a good chunk of ground here in ECIL will get planted before next rain comes except for the real wet fields

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                                                   Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Weather Sunday            

           

                By metmike - June 2, 2019, 12:26 p.m.            

            

Thanks pll!

          

        +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                                                                                                                  

                Re: Re: Re: Weather Monday            

                                      

                By metmike - June 3, 2019, 1:02 p.m.            

            

                                Like                Reply            

                            

12Z GFS MUCH warmer and more CDD's with heat ridge in the East.....might be an outlier.

                                    


            

      

                Re: NG week of 6/3/19            

                            By WxFollower - June 3, 2019, 1:34 p.m.            

           

12Z GEFS said it is an outlier. NG back down on that from what I can tell.

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                  Re: Re: NG week of 6/3/19            

            

                By metmike - June 3, 2019, 1:36 p.m.            

            

Absolutely agree Larry!

Here's what that outlier,12z operational  GFS looked like:

Actually, it's very similar to the Summer of 1993!  Again, an outlier at this point. The Canadian ensembles moved slightly in that direction and with an upper level trough along the West Coast, there is the potential for amplification similar to this last GFS operational model("potential" is often the reason for outlier solutions, when they over amplify a feature)

The outlier late week 2 pattern features a huge heat ridge in the East and jet stream configuration very similar to 1993.  





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                Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Weather Monday            

            

                By metmike - June 3, 2019, 3:28 p.m.            

     

The 12z Euro is an outlier in the complete opposite direction. It has a huge heat ridge from the West Coast, across the Rockies to the N.Plains that completely shuts down all of the rain, except for heavy rains in the Southeast over the drought areas, where it would be welcome.

The GFS had the heat ridge in the East, exactly where the EURO has an upper level trough and very cool temps with hot HUMID air streaming north feeding into strong jet coming out of an upper level trough, exactly where the Euro has an upper level ridge. 

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                            Re: Re: Re: Re: Weather Thusday            

                                       

                By mcfarmer - June 6, 2019, 1:11 p.m.            

            

              Perfect corn weather here.

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Thanks mcfarmer. I know that you sold some corn earlier on one of our spikes higher. We could make new highs later this Summer but you have to feel pretty dang good about your crop in IA right now.  What country is that.?

                         +++++++++++++++++++++++++           


                                        

                Re: Weather Friday            

                            By wglassfo - June 7, 2019, 7:03 p.m.            

            

Our local weather forcast shows 30% chance of rain on June 9 increasing to 80% on June 10 [Great Lakes]

June 10 is the cut off date anybody will plant corn and have any hope of missing frost. Assuming normal to good growing conditions, that is still taking a chance on frost and the latest we have ever planted corn. One customer has bu sold and not enough planted to fill contracts, thus the worry.

We  planted beans today on the only dry ground we had

So: To make it interesting

We have 200 plus acres that everybody wants planted on June 9 before the June 10 rain

Even more frustrating they want to  start at 12 o'clock noon, June 9 to let the soil dry as much as possible

This is scattered over 4 plots of ground 15 miles apart with one plot only 10 acres but the closest to our home farm. The largest is 100 acres of touch and go clay ground but our sweet corn customer. Our most important customer with 700 acres of total custom work

No way can we please everybody as it takes time to move from farm to farm

If we miss June 10 rain then everybody is happy but with the recent rains, every 3 days, nobody wans to be left out

Our last rain was Wednesday

I have no idea if that 200 acres will be dry but the phone lit up today.

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                Re: Re: Weather Friday            

       

                By metmike - June 7, 2019, 11:16 p.m.            

            

            Thanks Wayne.

I hope you miss the rain but chances start increasing for you late on June 9th and look pretty likely on June 10th.


The map below is at the end of the day June 9th with 24 hour rains that day, followed by the end of June 10th with 24 hour rains...............looks bad on June 10th, probably starting the night before.........but things can change.