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A Look Back At Local Weather Shows Something Surprising

Today is June 8, 2018, and the forecast is for mostly sunny skies with the high temperatures in the low 80’s F (27.7 C). While thinking about this, it came to mind that four years ago on this day, a late snowstorm dumped several inches of snow in our front yard.

This got me to wondering how last month, May, stacked up historically in our little town. Certainly, this year has felt cooler and wetter than average so far, but not extremely so.

As expected, May of this year was way off the mark for record highs and lows. We did get well above our average amount of precipitation, though. The average amount of rain and/or snow that we receive in May is 1.86 inches. This year, we received almost double that amount. The flooding of our river has been called a century event, so it doesn’t happen often.

The weather records regarding temperatures are pretty interesting, though. Record high temperatures were set in 2006 for four days out of the month; May 16 through May 19. Those record high temperatures were, in order, 92, 93, 93, and 93 F. All other record highs, except for one, occurred prior to 2000. The one other exception was a temperature of 96 set on May 25, 2001.

Of the remaining 26 days of the month, seven of the high-temperature records were set in the 1930’s. Five were set in the 1940’s. One was set in the 1950’s. Six were set in the 1960’s, all in 1966. None were set in the 1970’s. Three were set in the 1980’s. None were set in the 1990’s.

It is probably easiest to view when the records were set, by decade, as written below:

1920’s     1

1930’s     7

1940’s     5

1950’s     1

1960’s     6

1970’s     0

1980’s     3

1990’s     0

2000’s     6

2010’s     0

I’m getting to why I find this interesting. I’ll also mention that while three of the low-temperature records were set in the last 30 years, over half of them were set in 1916 and 1918.

This is only one month out of the year and it is only the temperature facet of weather. However, I’ve been hearing global warming alarmists saying repeatedly that the entire world has been experiencing catastrophic global warming since the 1980’s and that it is getting much worse.

The problem is that the weather records show no such thing, locally. Again, this is just one month and it is only locally, but if the entire globe is warming catastrophically, it should show up here, too, every month of the year.

What the actual record shows, though, is that high-temperature records were only set six times since 2000, once in 2001 and five times in 2006. In the past 12 years, no high-temperature records have been set locally. The fact that 12 high-temperature records were set in the 1930’s and 1940’s is a good indicator that it was hotter in the 1930’s and 1940’s, on average, than it has been since 1990, almost the last 30 years.

These records came from the weather bureau, so they are official records. The records aren’t showing a catastrophic warming here. Quite the opposite; the records are showing that it was hotter 80-90 years ago.

I’ve looked at the actual records for a different month, a few months ago, and the records show the same thing.

The 1930’s must have been a horrendously hot, dry time. Of course, that was also when the ‘Dust Bowl’ occurred, too.

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What do you think?

Written by Rex Trulove

6 Comments

    • I agree, but you can’t argue a point that is based on logic to a person who bases their opinion on emotion. They treat it like, “Don’t confuse me with the facts.”

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        • Yes, and he was also very hypocritical, in the process. Telling people that they *must* reduce their carbon footprint when he is producing more CO2 than 10 average families is going way overboard. Nobody seems to care.

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        • I agree with you and I don’t believe that he deserved a Nobel. It virtually made Nobel prizes worthless. Then again, NOAA admitted to falsifying the data (they call it ‘adjusting’ the data) and nobody cares. It comes back to that quote. They don’t want to be confused by the facts.