A partly cloudy, chilly, breezy Sunday and sunny, milder Monday update for West Rockville Maryland for Sunday April 29 and Monday April 30, 2018

A partly cloudy, chilly, breezy Sunday and sunny, milder Monday update for West Rockville Maryland for Sunday April 29 and Monday April 30, 2018

I had a variety of curve balls thrown at me on Sunday and went to bed very early for me so I did not send a report out for Sunday till this combined Sunday/Monday effort right now. Sorry about that. Information will be necessarily condensed. No rain fell as the month of April finished out dry, along with the start of a warm up as we head into the month of May. It appears that Mother Nature is turning on the heat this coming first week of May, as high temps will be hitting at least 80° most of the days of this week.  Sunday was a blustery, chilly day, with plenty of afternoon cumulus and stratocumulus covering the sky a good part of the time. Temps held in the low 50s after starting out in the low 40s. Overnight into Monday skies cleared, the wind lessened and temps dropped into the upper 30s by sunrise. Monday was a milder day, with full sun and temps approaching the 70° mark. The Sunday maximum temperature was only 53.4 @ 1531 while the Sunday minimum temperature was 42.4 @ 0638. The Monday maximum temperature warmed up to 69.5 @ 1649 while the Monday minimum temperature was 38.9 @ 0703. The dew point temperatures remained quite low both days, ranging from a low of 22° on Monday @ 0538 and 31° on Sunday @ 0504 up to highs of 40° on Sunday and 34° on Monday, both recorded at midnight (0000). The barometric pressure climbed from a low of 29.97″ on Sunday at 0000 up to a high of 30.25″ on Monday at 0824. The intermediate high reading on Sunday was 30.19″ at 2136 while the intermediate low reading on Monday was 30.06″ at 1854. Relative humidity had both its extreme values on Monday, ranging from a high of 72% at 0011 and a low of 20% at 1549. Intermediate highs and lows on Sunday were a high of 70% at 2351 and a low of 48% at 1535.


Remember now you can get the VP2 data on Weatherlink. You can access the data through http://www.weatherlink.com/user/walrusman444

I am posting daily to weather underground. My ID is KMDROCKV200 and my station is called “Gardens of Traville.” Data is online, normally just about in real-time. The web address for my data on weather underground is: https://www.wunderground.com/personal-weather-station/dashboard?ID=KMDrockv200#history/ I contribute daily to cocorahs as Rockville 2.8 WNW, Station ID MD-MG-115 on https://www.cocorahs.org/  Please remember that Weather Underground does not report snow data, and reflects what is recorded automatically through the tipping bucket VP2 gauge. I use the data I post to cocorahs as my “official” precipitation total each day
.  
I watched “The Perfect Storm” over the weekend, a real classic in my book on a big ocean storm and on the swordfish industry in the North Atlantic by 2 classic fishing boats out of Gloucester MA and a sailboat floundering in Hurricane Grace on its way north from Bermuda. Also a lot about Coast Guard search and rescue, with thrilling in water rescues and showing the incredible dangers of fishing in the North Atlantic during very rough seas and tough competition for the swordfish catches that were getting hard to come by.Sunday was partly to mostly cloudy, breezy and quite cool, especially for my daughter who was at the Nats game downtown for the chilly afternoon game.
Temps only reached the low 50s after an early AM low in the low 40s.  Overnight into Monday skies cleared, breezes lessened and temps dropped into the upper 30s by sunrise. Monday was milder under mostly sunny skies, with high temps approaching the 70° mark. Low Monday night will not be as chilly, with lows in the mid-upper 40s. Tuesday starts the month of May with the warming trend continuing, with highs in the upper 70s and lows in the mid 50s under sunny skies. Wednesday warms up even more, under mostly sunny skies with highs in the mid 80s and lows in the mid 60s. Thursday heats up to near 90° under partly cloudy skies, with lows in the mid 60s. Friday looks partly cloudy and very warm, with high temps in the mid-upper 80s and lows in the low 60s. Saturday should cool off a bit under cloudier skies and a 60 POP for AM showers, highs in the mid 70s and lows in the mid 50s.On the Channel 4 radar at 0642 the 4 state mid-Atlantic region is clear at this time. Closest precipitation consists of widely scattered light showers that can be found in central New England and a more concentrated area of rain in western Iowa at this time.

As of 0642 Tuesday, the data from the VP2 (coming from the ground radiation shield about 4 feet off the ground just under and out from the balcony) and the Lakewood WX Bug station are as follows:

Clear, not as cool and calm – looks to be a nice day for a Tuesday !!

Station     Relative Location      Temp     RH    DP       BP        Wind   High/Low temp
VP2            Ground                     46.5°    61%  34°   30.19″R    NA     69.5/38.9 (Monday)
53.4/42.4 (Sunday)

The total precipitation in the cocorahs gauge was 0.00″ through midnight Monday. The VP2 tipping bucket rain gauge under my balcony recorded 0.01″ through midnight Monday.

Sunday and Monday’s precipitation was 0.00″

April precipitation 3.57″
April snowfall 0.0″ (will be reported till the end of April – I just brought in my snowboard Friday night)
The seasonal snowfall total is 12.0″.
Year-to-date precipitation total is 11.74″

 

WX Bug      Lakewood 4500 ft,    47    39    26    30.14″R     Calm   G WSW 2
140° from station              70/38 (Monday)  Missing for Sunday
The Lakewood rain gauge reported 0.00″ of precipitation on Sunday and Monday. However, it is now reporting a total of 3.93″ of precipitation for April and a 2018 year-to-date (YTD) amount of 14.81″. I still believe at times the great disparity between the Lakewood WX Bug station precipitation amount total for the month and year and my cocorahs gauge based data is that the Lakewood precip values are estimated/adjusted from radar.At 2400 obs Monday night the temperature from the VP2 was 57.6 RH 36% BP 30.12″R DP 30.8
Clear, not quite as cool, dry at 2400 Good morning from the clear, not as cool, and dry home of the snowless walrus early on this Tuesday at the start of the new month of May. Today’s featured image shows a few flowering trees from across the street at this time at the start of May. If I think about it, I will take a similar picture of these trees in a month at the start of June. 
 


 


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *