Climatological Report (Annual)
Issued by NWS Portland, ME
Issued by NWS Portland, ME
000 CXUS51 KGYX 050140 CLACON PWMCLACON 000 TTAA00 GYX 030203 CLIMATE REPORT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GRAY ME 839 PM EST MON JAN 04 2021 ................................... ...THE CONCORD NH CLIMATE SUMMARY FOR THE YEAR OF 2020... CLIMATE NORMAL PERIOD: 1981 TO 2010 CLIMATE RECORD PERIOD: 1868 TO 2020 WEATHER OBSERVED NORMAL DEPART LAST YEAR`S VALUE DATE(S) VALUE FROM VALUE DATE(S) NORMAL ................................................................ TEMPERATURE (F) RECORD HIGH 102 07/03/1966 07/04/1911 LOW -37 02/16/1943 HIGHEST 96 07/27 96 0 96 07/20 07/19 08/11 LOWEST -8 12/19 -15 7 -10 02/02 AVG. MAXIMUM 60.4 58.0 2.4 57.2 AVG. MINIMUM 37.2 34.8 2.4 35.2 MEAN 48.8 46.4 2.4 46.2 DAYS MAX >= 90 25 11.5 13.5 10 DAYS MAX <= 32 25 45.3 -20.3 52 DAYS MIN <= 32 164 167.0 -3.0 165 DAYS MIN <= 0 5 14.8 -9.8 9 PRECIPITATION (INCHES) RECORD MAXIMUM 57.99 2008 MINIMUM 24.17 1965 TOTALS 33.28 40.61 -7.33 45.45 DAILY AVG. 0.09 0.11 -0.02 0.12 DAYS >= .01 111 130.9 -19.9 143 DAYS >= .10 57 78.4 -21.4 92 DAYS >= .50 27 27.0 0.0 28 DAYS >= 1.00 6 9.3 -3.3 12 GREATEST 24 HR. TOTAL 1.89 12/17 SNOWFALL (INCHES) RECORDS TOTAL 128.4 1956 TOTALS 59.9 61.4 -1.5 54.7 SINCE 7/1 32.0 17.1 14.9 SNOWDEPTH AVG. 2 DAYS >= TRACE 44 30.0 14.0 52 DAYS >= 1.0 10 16.2 -6.2 21 GREATEST SNOW DEPTH 21 12/18 24 HR TOTAL 25.6 12/17 DEGREE DAYS HEATING TOTAL 6528 7236 -708 7210 SINCE 7/1 2442 2747 -305 2740 COOLING TOTAL 726 452 274 492 FREEZE DATES RECORD EARLIEST 08/29/1986 LATEST 06/26/1979 EARLIEST 09/27 LATEST 05/14 ................................................................ WIND (MPH) AVERAGE WIND SPEED 6.0 HIGHEST WIND SPEED/DIRECTION 38/320 DATE 06/06 HIGHEST GUST SPEED/DIRECTION 52/310 DATE 06/06 SKY COVER AVERAGE SKY COVER 0.44 AVERAGE RH (PERCENT) 66 WEATHER CONDITIONS. NUMBER OF DAYS WITH THUNDERSTORM 19 HEAVY RAIN 23 RAIN 38 LIGHT RAIN 112 FREEZING RAIN 3 LT FREEZING RAIN 4 HEAVY SNOW 1 SNOW 8 LIGHT SNOW 41 FOG 155 FOG W/VIS <= 1/4 MILE 44 HAZE 25 - INDICATES NEGATIVE NUMBERS. R INDICATES RECORD WAS SET OR TIED. MM INDICATES DATA IS MISSING. T INDICATES TRACE AMOUNT. && THE YEAR BEGAN WITH MILD WEATHER AND 6 INCHES OF SNOW LEFT ON THE GROUND FROM A WINTER STORM JUST BEFORE THE NEW YEAR. A BIG WARM UP CAME IN MID JANUARY WHEN CONCORD WARMED INTO THE 60S FOR TWO STRAIGHT DAYS. THIS CUT THE SNOW DEPTH BY MORE THAN HALF. A COUPLE OF STORMS BROUGHT SOME LIGHT SNOWS A FEW DAYS LATER WITH SOME COLDER AIR MOVING IN AFTERWARD. THE COLDEST TEMPERATURE WAS 3 BELOW ZERO ON JANUARY 21. THE MILD WEATHER RETURNED AT THE END OF JANUARY ALONG WITH SOME RAIN. AFTER A FEW MILD DAYS IN FEBRUARY, CONCORD SAW A STRETCH OF WINTRY WEATHER AS MULTIPLE STORMS BROUGHT SNOW AND FREEZING RAIN TO THE CITY. SNOW WAS OBSERVED ON 8 STRAIGHT DAYS FROM FEBRUARY 6 THROUGH 13 WITH A FEW ROUNDS OF BRIEFLY COLDER WEATHER. ALTHOUGH THE TEMPERATURE DROPPED BELOW ZERO THREE MORE TIMES, THE COLD NEVER LASTED VERY LONG. THE COLDEST TEMPERATURE WAS 5 BELOW ON FEBRUARY 15. THE SNOW DEPTH PEAKED AT 11 INCHES IN THE LAST PART OF FEBRUARY BEFORE MILD WEATHER AND MORE RAIN BEGAN REDUCING IT. EVEN WARMER WEATHER WAS OBSERVED IN MARCH WITH 62 RECORDED ON MARCH 3 AND THEN 71 ON MARCH 9. THIS WARM WEATHER ENSURED THAT THE LAST TRACE OF THE WINTER SNOW PACK WAS GONE BY THE MORNING OF MARCH 11. THE WEATHER TURNED CHILLY AGAIN IN LATE MARCH WITH A FEW MORE ROUNDS OF SNOW. THE HEAVIEST WAS ON MARCH 23 AND 24 WHEN 7 INCHES FELL. THE MILD LATE MARCH TEMPERATURES ENSURED THAT THIS SNOW DIDN`T LAST LONG. MORE FREQUENT STORMY WEATHER WAS OBSERVED IN THE FIRST PART OF SPRING. A NEW STORM SYSTEM WOULD BRING RAIN OR WINTRY WEATHER JUST ABOUT EVERY WEEK. NEARLY AN INCH OF RAIN AND SOME SNOWFLAKES FELL ON MARCH 29 WITH ANOTHER STORM DROPPING NEARLY AN INCH OF RAIN ON APRIL 2 AND 3. A WEEK LATER RAIN CHANGED TO SNOW ON APRIL 9 WITH ALMOST 1 INCH OF PRECIPITATION MEASURED. THIS ALSO BEGAN A SHIFT TOWARD COOLER CONDITIONS WHICH LASTED FOR SEVERAL WEEKS WITH THE FREQUENT STORMS CONTINUING. NEARLY AN INCH OF RAIN FELL ON APRIL 13. ALTHOUGH THERE WERE A FEW MILD DAYS, MOST DAYS WERE COOL WITH SHOWERS AND EVEN SNOWFLAKES CONTINUING LATE INTO THE SPRING. IN FACT ON MAY 9 RAIN CHANGED TO SNOW WITH 0.4 INCHES ACCUMULATING. THIS WAS THE FIRST MEASURABLE SNOWFALL IN MAY IN MORE THAN 50 YEARS. THE LAST FREEZE OF THE SPRING OCCURRED ON MAY 14. SUDDENLY IN MID MAY THE FREQUENT STORMY WEATHER SHUT OFF. THE PERSISTENT TROUGH WHICH BROUGHT THE COOL AND STORMY WEATHER SHIFTED TO THE EAST. INSTEAD, FREQUENT COOL, DRY AIR MASSES SPILLED DOWN OUT OF CANADA. THE LAST SIGNIFICANT RAINFALL WAS ON MAY 15 WHEN HALF AN INCH FELL. BARELY ANY RAIN FELL AGAIN FOR MORE THAN A MONTH CAUSING THE RAPID ONSET OF DROUGHT CONDITIONS IN THE AREA. TEMPERATURES DURING THIS PERIOD WERE FREQUENTLY WARM DURING THE DAY AND COOL AT NIGHT DUE TO THE DRY AIR MASSES WHICH DOMINATED THE PERIOD. WHILE THERE WERE A FEW HOT DAYS IN LATE MAY INCLUDING 91 ON MAY 27, THE TEMPERATURE ACTUALLY FELL ALL THE WAY TO 33 DEGREES ON THE MORNING OF JUNE 1. THE FIRST CONSISTENTLY HOT STRETCH OF WEATHER CAME IN THE MIDDLE OF JUNE. CONCORD TOPPED 90 DEGREES ON 5 OUT OF 6 DAYS FROM JUNE 18 THROUGH 23. AS THE TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY BEGAN TO CLIMB, FINALLY SOME DROUGHT RELIEF ARRIVED AT THE END OF JUNE. FROM JUNE 28 THROUGH 30 MORE THAN 2 INCHES OF RAIN FELL AS A SLOW MOVING LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM BROUGHT FREQUENT SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. UNTIL THESE DROUGHT RELIEVING RAINS, CONCORD WAS EXPERIENCING ITS DRIEST PERIOD ON RECORD FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. SUCH CONSISTENTLY DRY WEATHER WAS UNPRECEDENTED FOR THE SPRING WHICH IS TYPICALLY THE RAINIER TIME OF YEAR. THE TABLE BELOW LISTS THE LEAST PRECIPITATION OBSERVED DURING THIS STRETCH OF TIME. LEAST PRECIPITATION MAY 16 THROUGH JUN 27 (SINCE 1868)... RANK PRECIP YEAR 1 0.28 2020 <=== 2 0.89 1964 3 0.96 1899 4 1.34 1873 5 1.37 1914 ALTHOUGH THE DROUGHT RELIEVING RAINS ENDED, MORE FREQUENT SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS IN JULY KEPT THE DROUGHT FROM ADVANCING AS RAPIDLY. BY MID JULY THE TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY BEGAN TO BUILD. CONCORD SAW THREE STRAIGHT DAYS IN THE 90S FROM JULY 18 THROUGH 20, AND THEN 4 STRAIGHT DAYS AT 90 OR ABOVE FROM JULY 26 THROUGH 29. THERE WAS A BRIEF BREAK FROM THE HEAT WHEN TROPICAL STORM ISAIAS MOVED THROUGH ON AUGUST 4. ALTHOUGH NOT MUCH RAIN FELL, THE WIND GUSTED TO 42 MPH. THE HEAT AND HUMIDLY RETURNED QUICKLY AFTER THE STORM. CONCORD AGAIN REACHED 90 DEGREES OR HOTTER ON 5 OUT OF 6 DAYS FROM AUGUST 9 THROUGH 14. A COLD FRONT ON AUGUST 15 BROUGHT A BREAK FROM THE HEAT. ALTHOUGH THERE WERE A FEW MORE HOT DAYS IN LATE SUMMER AND EARLY FALL, THE PERSISTENT SUMMER HEAT WAS OVER. SUMMER 2020 WAS THE WARMEST IN MORE THAN 140 YEARS AT CONCORD DRIVEN LARGELY BY HOT AFTERNOON TEMPERATURES. THE FOLLOWING TABLE LISTS THE NUMBER OF 90 DEGREE DAYS ANNUALLY AT CONCORD. MOST ANNUAL DAYS 90 DEGREES OR HOTTER (SINCE 1868)... RANK DAYS YEAR 1 30 1955 2 27 1978 27 1870 4 26 2010 5 25 2020 <=== 25 2016 25 2002 25 1988 25 1966 25 1949 AFTER THE MORE FREQUENT RAINS OF LATE JUNE AND EARLY JULY, THE DRY WEATHER HAD GRADUALLY BEGAN TO RETURN LATER IN THE SUMMER. NEARLY AN INCH OF RAIN FELL ON AUGUST 29, BUT THIS WOULD BE THE LAST SIGNIFICANT RAINFALL IN MORE THAN A MONTH AS DROUGHT CONDITIONS INTENSIFIED AGAIN IN SEPTEMBER. A SERIES OF COLD FRONTS BROUGHT DRY, CONTINENTAL AIR MASSES INTO THE REGION. THIS OFTEN BROUGHT WARM DAYS AND OCCASIONALLY COOL NIGHTS. THE FIRST FREEZE OF THE SEASON CAME ON SEPTEMBER 19, WITH THE TEMPERATURE DROPPING INTO THE 20S FOR 4 STRAIGHT NIGHTS. AFTER BOTTOMING OUT AT 27 ON SEPTEMBER 22, THE TEMPERATURE WARMED ALL THE WAY UP TO 80 DEGREES THE VERY NEXT DAY. FINALLY AFTER 4 WEEKS OF DRY WEATHER A STORM SYSTEM BROUGHT MORE THAN HALF AN INCH OF RAIN ON SEPTEMBER 30. THIS BEGAN A SHIFT IN THE WEATHER PATTERN AS MORE FREQUENT STORMINESS RETURNED IN OCTOBER. FREQUENT FRONTAL SYSTEMS BROUGHT A TOPSY TURVY TEMPERATURE PATTERN WITH OCCASIONAL WARMTH REPLACED BY COLD. THE FIRST SIGNIFICANT STORM BROUGHT MORE THAN AN INCH OF RAIN ON OCTOBER 13. ANOTHER STORM BROUGHT MORE THAN AN 1.5 INCHES ON OCTOBER 16 AND 17. MORE CONSISTENT COLD WEATHER AT THE END OF OCTOBER BROUGHT THE FIRST ACCUMULATING SNOW OF THE SEASON JUST BEFORE HALLOWEEN WITH JUST UNDER 1 INCH OF SNOW MEASURED ON OCTOBER 30. THE TEMPERATURE FELL ALL THE WAY TO 16 DEGREES ON HALLOWEEN. WHILE THE COOL WEATHER PERSISTED INTO THE FIRST PART OF NOVEMBER, CONCORD WAS ABOUT TO EXPERIENCE ON OF ITS MOST INTENSE AND LONG LASTING LATE SEASON WARM SPELLS ON RECORD. BEGINNING ON NOVEMBER 5 CONCORD SAW THE TEMPERATURE TOP 70 DEGREES FOR 7 STRAIGHT DAYS. THE WARMEST WAS 77 DEGREES ON NOVEMBER 7. A COLD FRONT ON NOVEMBER 12 BROUGHT THIS UNUSUAL LATE SEASON WARMTH TO AN END AND BROUGHT THE COLD WEATHER BACK INTO THE AREA. BY THE 18TH THE TEMPERATURE DID NOT EVEN WARM ABOVE FREEZING ALL DAY. THE MORE FREQUENT STORMY WEATHER RETURNED IN MID NOVEMBER. NEARLY AN INCH OF RAIN FELL ON NOVEMBER 23 AND AGAIN ON NOVEMBER 26 AND 30. AFTER SOME BRIEF MILD WEATHER INCLUDING 64 DEGREES ON DECEMBER 1, THE NEXT STORM SYSTEM BROUGHT A HEAVY WET SNOWFALL ON DECEMBER 5 AND 6. ALTHOUGH ONLY 4.5 INCHES OF SNOW WAS MEASURED, THE LIQUID EQUIVALENT PRECIPITATION WAS NEARLY 1.5 INCHES. THIS STICKY SNOW BROUGHT DOWN TREE LIMBS AND POWER LINES IN THE REGION. THE NEXT BIG STORM CAME ON DECEMBER 17 WHEN 25.6 INCHES WAS MEASURED IN A LITTLE MORE THAN 12 HOURS. THIS WAS THE GREATEST SINGLE DAY SNOWFALL ON RECORD AT CONCORD. THE TEMPERATURE BOTTOMED OUT AT 8 BELOW ZERO A FEW DAYS LATER ON DECEMBER 19. WARMER WEATHER RETURNED JUST BEFORE CHRISTMAS AND BY CHRISTMAS MORNING THE NEXT SIGNIFICANT STORM HAD ARRIVED. MORE THAN 1.5 INCHES OF RAIN FELL ON CHRISTMAS DAY ALONG WITH MILD TEMPERATURES. WHEN IT WAS ALL OVER ONLY 2 INCHES OF SNOW WAS LEFT ON THE GROUND WITH MILD CONDITIONS CONTINUING THROUGH THE END OF THE YEAR. THE AVERAGE TEMPERATURE FOR THE YEAR WAS 48.8 DEGREES WHICH WAS 2.4 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL AND THE 5TH WARMEST YEAR ON RECORD. THE WARMEST YEAR WAS 49.3 DEGREES IN 2016. THE COLDEST WAS 1918 AT 41.1 DEGREES. THE FOLLOWING TABLE LISTS THE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES FOR EACH MONTH OF 202 INCLUDING DEPARTURES FROM NORMAL. AVERAGE TEMPERATURES BY MONTH IN 2020 MONTH MAXIMUM MINIMUM AVERAGE NOTES JANUARY 37.3 (+6.5) 19.1 (+8.7) 28.2 (+7.6) FEBRUARY 36.9 (+2.0) 18.0 (+4.2) 27.5 (+3.2) MARCH 49.1 (+5.3) 26.4 (+3.9) 37.8 (+4.7) APRIL 53.2 (-4.2) 32.0 (-0.7) 42.6 (-2.5) MAY 69.6 (+0.7) 42.5 (-0.1) 56.1 (+0.3) JUNE 81.6 (+4.2) 53.5 (+1.0) 67.6 (+2.7) JULY 86.1 (+3.8) 62.8 (+5.1) 74.5 (+4.5) 3RD WARMEST AUGUST 83.5 (+2.6) 56.5 (+0.4) 70.0 (+1.5) SEPTEMBER 75.7 (+3.1) 47.4 (0.0) 61.5 (+1.5) OCTOBER 60.1 (-0.4) 38.2 (+2.4) 49.1 (+0.9) NOVEMBER 53.8 (+5.4) 28.6 (+0.4) 41.2 (+2.9) DECEMBER 38.3 (+2.0) 21.7 (+4.5) 30.0 (+3.2) ANNUAL 60.4 (+2.4) 37.2 (+2.4) 48.8 (+2.4) 5TH WARMEST THE AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMPERATURE OF 48.8 DEGREES WAS THE 5TH WARMEST ON RECORD FOR CONCORD. THE FOLLOWING TABLE LISTS THE WARMEST AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMPERATURES AT CONCORD. WARMEST ANNUAL AVERAGE TEMPERATURE (SINCE 1868)... RANK AVE YEAR 1 49.3 2016 2 49.2 1878 3 49.1 2012 49.1 1877 5 48.8 2020 <=== 48.8 1880 7 48.7 2010 48.7 1998 9 48.6 1870 10 48.4 2006 THE GROWING SEASON, AS DEFINED AS THE LONGEST CONSECUTIVE DAYS ABOVE FREEZING, LASTED FOR 128 DAYS IN 2020 FROM MAY 14 THROUGH SEPTEMBER 19. THIS IS 8 DAYS SHORTER THAN THE NORMAL OF 136 DAYS AND THE SHORTEST GROWING SEASON SINCE 2013. THE LONGEST GROWING SEASON WAS 172 DAYS IN 2018. THE SHORTEST WAS ONLY 86 DAYS IN 1979. A TOTAL OF 33.28 INCHES OF PRECIPITATION FELL WHICH WAS 7.33 INCHES BELOW NORMAL. THE HEAVIEST PRECIPITATION FELL AT THE END OF JUNE WHEN PERSISTENT SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS DROPPED 2.14 INCHES FROM JUNE 28 THROUGH 30. CONCORD SAW 5 CONSECUTIVE MONTHS WITH SIGNIFICANTLY BELOW NORMAL PRECIPITATION FROM MAY THROUGH SEPTEMBER LEADING TO DROUGHT CONDITIONS. THE WETTEST MONTH WAS DECEMBER WHEN MULTIPLE STORM SYSTEMS BROUGHT HEAVY RAIN AND SNOW. THE DRIEST YEAR ON RECORD WAS IN 1965 WHEN ONLY 24.17 INCHES OF PRECIPITATION WAS RECORDED. THE WETTEST WAS IN 2008 WITH 57.97 INCHES. THE FOLLOWING TABLE LISTS THE PRECIPITATION AND SNOWFALL AMOUNTS FOR EACH MONTH OF 2020 INCLUDING DEPARTURES FROM NORMAL. MONTHLY PRECIPITATION AND SNOWFALL TOTALS FOR 2020 MONTH PRECIPITATION SNOWFALL NOTES JANUARY 1.95 (-0.75) 8.8 (-9.3) FEBRUARY 2.69 (+0.07) 11.1 (-1.2) MARCH 2.62 (-0.65) 7.6 (-3.5) APRIL 3.67 (+0.26) T (-2.8) MAY 1.90 (-1.76) 0.4 (+0.4) 6TH SNOWIEST JUNE 2.32 (-1.37) 0 JULY 2.10 (-1.64) 0 AUGUST 1.50 (-1.68) 0 SEPTEMBER 0.91 (-2.47) 0 OCTOBER 4.26 (+0.22) 0.8 (+0.8) 9TH SNOWIEST NOVEMBER 4.15 (+0.43) T (-2.6) DECEMBER 5.21 (+2.01) 31.2 (+16.7) 7TH SNOWIEST ANNUAL 33.28 (-7.33) 59.9 (-1.5) THERE WERE 6 DAYS WHICH RECORDED AT LEAST 1.00 INCH OF PRECIPITATION WHICH WAS 3.3 DAYS FEWER THAN NORMAL. THE FOLLOWING TABLE LISTS THE DAYS WHICH RECEIVED AT LEAST 1.00 INCH OF PRECIPITATION IN 2020. DAYS WITH AT LEAST 1.00 INCH OF PRECIPITATION IN 2020 DAY PRECIPITATION JUNE 28 1.31 OCTOBER 13 1.34 NOVEMBER 30 1.44 DECEMBER 5 1.48 DECEMBER 17 1.89 DECEMBER 25 1.61 SNOWFALL STATISTICS ARE NORMALLY LISTED BY SEASON RATHER THAN BY CALENDAR YEAR. HOWEVER, 2020 SAW 59.9 INCHES OF SNOW WHICH WAS 1.5 INCHES BELOW NORMAL. THE HEAVIEST SNOWSTORM WAS ON DECEMBER 17 WHEN 25.6 INCHES WAS RECORDED, THE GREATEST SINGLE DAY SNOWFALL ON RECORD AT CONCORD. THERE WERE 10 DAYS WHICH RECORDED AN INCH OR MORE OF SNOWFALL INCLUDING 2 DAYS WITH AT LEAST 6 INCHES. THE FOLLOWING TABLE LISTS THE DAYS WHICH RECEIVED 6 INCHES OR MORE OF SNOWFALL IN 2020. DAYS WITH AT LEAST 6 INCHES OF SNOWFALL IN 2020 DAY SNOWFALL MARCH 23 6.2 DECEMBER 17 25.6 SNOW DEPTH WAS CONSISTENT FROM JANUARY 1 THROUGH THE BEGINNING OF MARCH. THE PEAK DEPTH WAS 11 INCHES IN THE LAST PART OF FEBRUARY. THE LAST TRACE OF THE WINTER SNOW PACK MELTED BY THE MORNING OF MARCH 11, ALTHOUGH THERE WERE A FEW LATE SEASON SNOWFALLS AFTER THIS POINT. SNOW RETURNED WITH A SNOWSTORM ON DECEMBER 5 AND INCREASED TO A MAXIMUM DEPTH OF 21 INCHES ON DECEMBER 18. AFTER WARM WEATHER AND RAIN FOR CHRISTMAS THERE WAS ONLY 2 INCHES LEFT ON THE GROUND AT THE END OF THE YEAR. THE FOLLOWING DAILY RECORDS WERE SET OR TIED IN 2020... DATE RECORD PREVIOUS JAN 11 61 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 58 IN 1980 JAN 12 67 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 61 IN 1885 MAR 3 62 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 62 IN 1880 (TIED) APR 27 40 - COOLEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 42 IN 1933 AND OTHERS MAY 9 42 - COOLEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 43 IN 1966 MAY 9 0.4 - MOST SNOWFALL TRACE IN 1977 AND 1966 MAY 29 70 - WARMEST LOW TEMPERATURE 64 IN 1987 JUN 23 94 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 94 IN 1975 AND 1888 (TIED) JUL 11 72 - WARMEST LOW TEMPERATURE 72 IN 1911 AND OTHERS (TIED) SEP 19 28 - COLDEST LOW TEMPERATURE 30 IN 1990 AND OTHERS SEP 20 27 - COLDEST LOW TEMPERATURE 28 IN 1993 AND 1979 SEP 21 27 - COLDEST LOW TEMPERATURE 28 IN 1962 SEP 28 65 - WARMEST LOW TEMPERATURE 64 IN 1881 NOV 8 75 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 72 IN 1895 NOV 9 75 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 74 IN 1945 NOV 10 76 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 73 IN 1931 NOV 11 73 - WARMEST HIGH TEMPERATURE 70 IN 2002 NOV 30 1.44 - GREATEST PRECIPITATION 1.18 IN 1923 DEC 17 25.6 - GREATEST SNOWFALL 8.6 IN 1970 DEC 25 1.61 - GREATEST PRECIPITATION 1.05 IN 2002 $$ KIMBLE