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NOAA released their US climate summary for June 2019 today. It shows that June and the year to date average temperature were both near normal in temperature for the contiguous US. Precipitation in June was in the wettest third of all years but not record-setting. The January through June period was 3.74 inches above normal,…
Posted in: Climate summaries -
From 2012 to 2018 I worked as a grant-funded agricultural climatologist on USDA-funded projects looking at the impacts of the changing climate on agriculture in the Southeast. There are a lot of negative impacts that are expected in the future due to warmer temperatures (especially nighttime temperatures), higher humidity, and more frequent floods and droughts,…
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Brad Haire reported in the Southeast Farm Press today that the recent rain that has spread across Georgia in the last few weeks has helped improve corn conditions in the 20% of corn in the state that is not irrigated. A three-week dry spell had farmers worried about yield, but those producers have been relieved…
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The Southeast Regional Climate Center has released their monthly climate report for June 2019. You can find it at https://sercc.com/SoutheastRegionMonthlyClimateReportJune2019.pdf. Enjoy!
Posted in: Climate summaries -
The Southeast Regional Climate Hub recently released a recording of David Zierden’s talk on agricultural resilience to hurricanes, first given at their workshop in November 2018. Zierden is the Florida State Climatologist and a long-time colleague of mine. You can view the 35-minute video at https://mediasite.video.ufl.edu/Mediasite/Play/c953658392a741d1b3f7a287886cfd7a1d.
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
It’s official! North Carolina set a new record for annual rainfall in 2018 when Mount Mitchell reported 139.94 inches of rain. That’s over 11 feet! You can read about how the rainfall was observed and what it takes to get a new record certified at the blog of the State Climate Office of North Carolina…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
The Atlantic has been pretty quiet so far this tropical season, but that may be about to change. A low pressure center now located along the border of Georgia and Tennessee is expected to slowly drift south over the eastern Gulf of Mexico in the next few days. The warm water there could lead to…