WGN-TV Chief Meteorologist Tom Skilling and the WGN Weather Center staff provide daily coverage of weather in the Chicago area.

August 2006 Archives

Meteorological Autumn

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Cloudiest meteorological summer in 9 years

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For astronomers, autumn begins in three weeks at 11:03 p.m. Friday, September 22. That’s the instant the sun’s most direct rays fall on the equator—the so called autumnal equinox. From that point forward through winter, these direct rays will shift into the southern hemisphere allowing colder air to accumulate over sections of the northern hemisphere.
But, for meteorologists and climatologists, Sept. 1 appears a more natural demarcation between the summer and autumn seasons. From today (Sept. 1) through the coming three months, normal daily highs will decline from 78° to 40.
Meteorological summer 2006 closed at midnight, finishing 1.5° above normal—the 35th warmest summer of the past 136. The area received just 61% of its possible sun as a result of more than usual summer cloudiness—the most of any summer in 9 years. 67% is considered normal.
-Tom Skilling WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather Update

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The 1930's “Dust Bowl”

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August closes 24° cooler than its 99°open

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August 2006 closes far differently than it opened. Though the month has averaged 74.3°—nearly 2.5° warmer than normal—it’s closing on a cool note. Thursday’s predicted 75° high is 24° below the blistering 99° reading recorded here on Aug. 1. The sizzling temperature was part of the summer’s hottest spell of weather and led to a number of heat related deaths. In stark contrast, NE winds around the southern flank of a sprawling Canadian high, sweep off Lake Michigan Thursday. It marks the 17th day this month to feature lake winds winds. No other August in the past 73 years (since 1933) has featured as many days with east or northeast winds here.
With the current pattern locked in place beyond Labor Day (next Monday), at least 12 consecutive days of 70s seem a good bet here by mid-next week, making the pre-autumn cool spell the areas longest in 12 years.
-Tom Skilling-WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather Update

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Moisture pumped into Chicago

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Perpetual rainfall on Earth

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Midway’s 69° Tuesday: The chilliest Aug. 29 in 41 years

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Autumn was in the air again Tuesday. October-level temperatures paid the Chicago area a visit for a second consecutive day. Midway Airport’s 69° high temperature was the coolest on an August 29 in 41 years—since a 66° high in 1965. The reading ranks among the three coolest for the date since weather observations began at Midway in 1928. The late summer “chill” is especially noticeable coming at the end of a season in which 61% of daily average temperatures have finished above normal.
By early next week, Chicago will have logged 11 consecutive highs below 80°—its longest pre-autumn cool spell in 12 years.
Late arriving reports on Monday’s deluge indicate even heavier rain totals than first reported across southern sections of the metro area. Among the heaviest totals were 3.50” at Hammond, Lansing and Munster, 3.13” at Park Forest, 3.32” at Morris and 2.84” at Rensselaer, Ind.
-Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather Update

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Ernesto affecting Chicago weather

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Hurricanes and Aruba in January/February

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Last Wednesday's t-storm damage

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These Beverly Shores, Indiana damage photos further underscore the fury of last Wednesday evening's microburst-generating thunderstorm. These are but the latest images to illustrate the devastating effect of last Wednesday evening's 100+ m.p.h. wind-generating thunderstorm complex as it roared onshore in northwest Indiana from Lake Michigan. Curt Kendall has sent along these photos from Beverly Shores, Indiana along with the following e-mailed comments:

"On Wednesday evening (August 23), I arrived home in Beverly Shores at 5:45. I took out my leaf blower and started blowing leaves off the steps and driveway. It started to sprinkle. At 6:00 the tornado sirens went off, I thought it seemed strange. At 6:01, I turned on the TV and an emergency announcement said that a tornado was headed toward Beverly Shores and Pines, Indiana and it would hit at 6:05. By 6:05, the winds were over 100 miles per hour, the rain was falling horizontally. Trees started to fall. My stainless steel gas grill was picked up and thrown across the yard. By 6:10, the winds slowed and my neighborhood devastated."

Many thanks to Curt for sharing his harrowing experience in one of the worst storms to sweep any section of our area in some time.

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PHOTO COURTESY: Curt Kendall

Jack and Kate Anderson share this spectacular August 28, 2006 sunset on their lake in Watersmeet, MI. Seldom, they tell us, is the lake so calm you have such a spectacular reflection of the sky visible!

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PHOTO COURTESY: Jack and Kate Anderson, Watersmeet, MI

Wind-driven rain—well over 2" of it Monday across Chicago’s southern suburbs and one of this summer’s seven heaviest rainfalls—pushed August precipitation tallies across a large swath of the metro area to nearly five times higher than the same period a year ago. Monday’s 1.08" at Midway Airport brought the month’s total at the South Side site to 7.08"—the sixth greatest August rainfall on the books since observations began there in 1928. Flooding was reported along the Little Calumet River and Thorn Creek in the hardest hit areas. South suburban Lansing was drenched by 2.71" while Highland Indiana tallied 2.50" and Joliet recorded 2.47".
The rain fell in the midst of an October-level afternoon chill. Northeast winds gusted as high as 38 m.p.h. at Calumet Harbor and 35 m.p.h. at Gary while NOAA’s offshore buoy 30 miles east of Kenosha rode 5 ft. waves.
-Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather Update

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Ernesto not the storm first feared

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Lightning inside tornadoes

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We've posted images of the damage inflicted by the thunderstorms that swept into Michigan City and the areas surrounding last Wednesday. What we've not posted are distant views of the storms responsible for that evening's severe weather—at least not until now! National Weather Service Cooperative Observer Roberta Slaby sends us these eyecatching photos of the towering cumulonimbus cloud responsible which spawned the damage in Michigan City. This view of the thunderhead is from 60 miles away in Bourbannais. (For those outside the Chicago area viewing these photos and not familiar with our local geography, Bourbannais is located 48 miles south of Chicago's Loop in Kankakee County). These photos were taken around 6:30 pm--about an hour after the first supercells rolled into Indiana off Lake Michigan. Roberta points to the "alpenglow" effect evident in these remarkable shots---that's the orangish glow often seen on snow covered mountaintops especially in winter as the sun sets. Radar scans at the time this photo was taken indicated cloud tops near 50,000 feet and cloud to ground lightning discharges approaching 690 with this storm complex and other thunderstorms within a 225 mile radius of Chicago.
-Tom Skilling, Chief Meteorologist, WGN-TV

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PHOTO COURTESY: Roberta and Ed Slaby, NWS Cooperative Observer, Kankakee, Illinois

Relief for Chicago, anxiety for Florida

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Days of mugginess are ending in Chicago as a drier northeast flow sets in for the better part of the week. Dew points plunged from near 70º early Sunday to around 60º by evening as the drying out process began. However, one more shot of showers will skirt the city Monday as a weather disturbance slips by to the south before several days of sunny and pleasant weather set in.
Storminess moved south with the humid air, bringing tornadoes, hail and torrential rain to parts of the southern Midwest. Several flash floods stranded motorists in portions of Missouri and southern portions of Illinois and Indiana Sunday. An inch and a half of rain in just 40 minutes closed roads in North Kansas City Sunday evening.
Meanwhile, Ernesto—temporarily weakened to a tropical storm after interaction with Haiti’s mountainous terrain—is expected to regain hurricane strength Monday as it crosses Cuba and takes aim at Florida.
--By Steve Kahn, WGN Weather Center Meteorologist

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HURRICANES IN SEPTEMBER

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HURRICANES DO HIT HAWAII

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August to exit on a warm, dry note

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A sluggish front hung up across Chicago for several days has spawned repeat waves of potent showers and thunderstorms. While the city proper has escaped the bulk of the rain since last Thursday’s dousing, surrounding areas have not, with a trail of storm damage from northwest Illinois to northwest Indiana. All that should change by Tuesday as the front finally exits the region.
On Monday, rain should target downstate and brush the south suburbs. By Tuesday high pressure should depresses the rain south of the Ohio River, ensuring sunny, warm and less humid weather for the final days of August and meteorological summer 2006.
While Chicago’s weather improves with time, Gulf Coast residents are in a state of heightened alert as strengthening Tropical Storm Ernesto churns west through the Caribbean threatening to become a major hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico.
-Steve Kahn-WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather update

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Chicago's hot summer of 1953

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World's greatest annual rainfall

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Thundery downpours top 3-5” near Rockford/Belvidere

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The week’s third wave of organized severe weather blasted areas northwest of Chicago Friday with thundery rains peppered by literally thousands of cloud-to-ground lightning strikes while bombarding areas in Boone and Winnebago counties with cascades of 1” diameter hail. The blinding downpours resulted as thunderstorms erupted repeatedly over four hours across a multicounty area of north-central Illinois. Deluges began around 2 p.m. near Rockford and continued nearly non-stop through 6 p.m. Two inches of rain hit the area around Illinois Highway 251 and the U.S. 20 bypass, while nearby Pecatonica recorded 1.15” of rain in just 15 minutes. But the heaviest rain appears to have hit near Belvidere where at least one unofficial report indicated 5.50” had fallen. A roof was blown off a house and a semi was overturned in Boone County; widespread flooding was reported there as well. High winds also downed trees and power lines in Genoa.
--By Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Chief Meteorologist

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HINT OF AUTUMN EARLY NEXT WEEK?

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SNOW IN JULY?

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Garry England shares these photos with us of the widespread damage at Michigan City's Washington Park Zoo in the wake of Wednesday's 106 m.p.h. thunderstorm gust. Wind velocity data off the National Weather Service's powerful Romeoville-based radar at the time signaled a strong rotary circulation near that area, and the National Weather Service is asking anyone with photos or video of a tornado or funnels to contact Warning Coordination Meteorologist Jim Allsopp: jim.allsopp@noaa.gov

--By Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Chief Meteorologist

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Grapefruit-size hail, twisters hit Dakotas, Minnesota

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Severe weather troubles weren’t limited to the Chicago area Thursday. Nearly 24 twisters, some with multiple vortices (smaller twisters rotating within a larger vortex) skipped across the Dakotas and Minnesota with thunderstorms which bombarded the region with mammoth hailstones. The hail reached 4.25 inches in diameter—the size of grapefruit—at New Prague, Minn., and Selfridge, S.D. And in Stanton, N.D., the hail is reported to have destroyed vehicles and induced severe structural damage to some buildings. Northfield, Minn., was pounded for 20 minutes by hail which varied from golf ball to softball size. Crop damage was reportedly severe in the hardest hit areas. That’s not surprising: No form of weather has historically inflicted heavier damage to U.S. crops other than flooding.
Lake and Mc Henry counties in Illinois hosted the area’s heaviest rains Thursday. Hebron, Ill., where 0.80” had fallen in the preceding 32 days, was walloped by 2.40”.
--By Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Meteorologist

RETURN OF WARMTH THREATENS T-STORMS

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MOONBOWS

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Storm described as the worst in memory by many in Michigan City, Indiana downs trees, powerlines; National Weather Service survey team suspects damage straightline wind induced

Chicago Tribune photographer John Smierciak shares these shots of Wednesday night's storm damage in Michigan City. John reports he took these photos at Washington Park next to the marina in Michigan City. A Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory wind sensor there recorded an extraordinary gust at the height of last night's storms of 106 mph. A trained spotter reported a tornado touchdown around 6:12 pm. However, the National Weather Service's Steve Eddy, Warning Coordination Meteorologist, and John Taylor, lead forecaster---both from the Northern Indiana NWS Forecast Office--have been on scene surveying the damage across northwest Indiana. Their observations and those of a helicopter overflight of the area suggest the trees knocked down are oriented in the same direction, a signature of straightline wind damage. A full report on the damage produced by that storm will be issued later today. Subsequent storms in the Chicago area produced 1.20" of rain at Midway Airport, reports the site's official NWS observer Frank Wachowski, bringing the South Side's August rainfall tally to 6.00"--the 9th heaviest since observations began there in 1928. Other storms across Wisconsin overnight have produced rain gauge measurements of 4"+ rain near Madison at Cottage Grove and Reedsburg in southern Wisconsin. There are Doppler rain estimates across the Badger State as high as 9-10" in areas over which t-storms have trained overnight and Thursday morning. Many thanks to former intern Chuck Heaver for his many reports from the scene in northwest Indiana last evening. Thanks, as always, to Jim Allsopp, our Chicago National Weather Service Warning Coordination Meteorologist for information on the ongoing storm survery there.

Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Chief Meteorologist


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Gary Lawrence picks up wood from a roof that crashed into his antique shop from a closed factory in the backround while John Stelke looks at his van which was damaged by falling trees outside his home. Photos provided by John Smierciak

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Damage on the lakefront in Washington Park next to the marina.

Lightning Strike Photos

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Viewer Robert Fesus of Round Lake captured these amazing photos this morning of the storm cells that rolled through.

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Valaparaiso was among the northern Indiana communities swept by Wednesday evening's powerful thunderstorms. These photos, submitted to us by Gerry Jasinski, show quarter-size hailstones covering the ground at his home. Hailstones in other sections of northern Indiana reached diameters as large as 2.5"—large enough to be termed "tennis-ball size".
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PHOTO COURTESY: Gerry Jasinski, Valparaiso, Indiana

Tornado, gusts to 106 m.p.h., huge hail pound NW Indiana

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Boats were snapped from moorings, a semi-trailer was flipped and at least two cars of a freight train in Michigan City were blown off the tracks as the area’s most powerful summer thunderstorms began roaring ashore Wednesday evening. Hail the size of tennis balls crashed to earth in the stormy downpours which were delivered by wind gusts so powerful as to be almost off the charts here. A Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory anemometer (wind sensor) near the harbor in Michigan City clocked a gust of 106 m.p.h. at about the time (6:12 p.m.) a trained observer reported a tornado touchdown in the city. Only the rarest of the planet’s estimated 50,000 daily thunderstorms produce triple digit wind speeds. The report of a touchdown was bolstered by the presence a Tornado Vortex Signature (TVS) on the National Weather Service’s powerful Doppler Radar—an indication of an especially strong rotation.
-Tom Skilling WGN-TV Meteorologist

Powerful storm Wednesday

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More thunderstorms ahead

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Heat Lightning

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Warmest in 18 days Tuesday; now on to 90°

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Tuesday’s 87° high at both O’Hare and Midway was the city’s warmest temperature in the 18 days since the 89° high on Aug. 4. While only 7° above normal, only two Aug. 22 daytime highs have been any warmer here in the past 30 years. The 87° reading here was the same high recorded at Oklahoma City Tuesday. But there, the reading was significant because it marked the first time in 56 days readings failed to exceed 90°.
Cordoba, Alaska, on the state’s southern coast, has been swamped by 13” of rain in just the past two days. Like Chicago, August is southern Alaska’s wettest month. But the rains of the past two weeks have been extraordinary from the southeast Alaska Panhandle north to the Alaska Range. Normally the result of typhoon remnants, this year’s rains have been spawned by non-tropical systems and have buried glaciers above the 4,000 ft. level under snow.
-Tom Skilling

Downpours in Alaska

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Waves of thunderstorms ahead

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Seasonable August 2006 among warmest 20%

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After this month’s blazing start with highs in the upper 90s and lows near 80º, August has taken on a much more temperate nature. Daytime highs have fluctuated between the upper 70s and upper 80s with overnight lows mostly in the 50s and 60s.
Despite the fact that the city has not experienced a 90º day in nearly three weeks, and Monday’s 55º low was the chilliest since July 7, August 2006—with a current average temperature running at 75.2º—still ranks as this city’s 27th warmest of the 136 on record since 1871.
Readings the rest of the week should cluster in the 80s, possibly reaching 90º on Friday.
An isolated shower may accompany Tuesday’s frontal passage, but the city’s best threat for additional rain is from late Wednesday into Saturday. Dew points will be on the rise during this period and the increased moisture levels will aid thunderstorm development as a series of fronts pass the area.
-Steve Kahn-WGNTV meteorologist

Weather Update

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Chicago's 80° temperatures

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Chicago's Summer of 1943

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Heat and humidity return here midweek

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The southern tip of cool Canadian high pressure will be reinforced by a cold front Tuesday, begin to retreat north Wednesday, and reside north of the U.S.-Canada border by Thursday.
Temperatures will average only about 3 degrees above normal through Wednesday, but from that point on a significant increase in heat and humidity can be expected. The mean jet stream flow and storm track is forecast to shift north, allowing warmer and more moist air into the Midwest. Computer models suggest this pattern may persist the better part of a week with temperatures during that period averaging some 8 to 10 degrees above normal.
Humidity will be high with dew points in the upper 60s to lower 70s, and there will be an almost daily chance of showers or storms. As is the nature of convective storms, some parts of area will get more rain than others—but there is a good chance August’s almost 1-1/2 inch official rainfall deficit will be erased by month’s end.
--By Paul Dailey, WGN Weather Center Meteorologist

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CHICAGO CLIMATOLOGY THIS WEEK

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CHICAGO’S HIGHEST TEMPERATURE

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Skies improve for Chicago’s Air and Water show

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Persistent low-level cloudiness that covered Chicago yesterday and held over the area last night will thin out as it slowly drifts south and east this morning. The influence of high pressure centered over the western Great Lakes will finally result in abundant sunshine this afternoon. Visibilities will be unlimited along the lakefront, but gusty northeast winds could make near shore waters a little choppy. During the week ahead temperatures at O’Hare’s official observation site are forecast to reach at least 80° each day, allowing the string of 80s to reach 15 by next Saturday. Nearly an inch of rain fell at O’Hare (0.85 inch) late Friday and early Saturday, but the monthly precipitation is still over an inch below normal (totals are much above normal in southern sections). Showers and t-storms associated with a cold front Tuesday and then a warmer more humid unstable air mass later in the week could significantly cut this deficit.
-Paul Dailey, WGN-TV meteorologist

Hurricane Katrina revisited

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Thunderstorms and Chicago's rainfall

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Global warming cycles

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Muggy air to shroud Saturday’s Air and Water Show in haze

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Saturday opens with muggy 70° dew points and relative humidities flirting with 100%—an indication the atmosphere is saturated with moisture. That moisture fueled overnight downpours and had reduced visibilities late Friday to an eighth of a mile at times near Waukegan. For areas adjacent to Lake Michigan, fog vulnerability is a major issue because air and water temperatures equal the dew point—and the dew point marks the temperature at which fog forms. With only limited wind Saturday, the prospect of sweeping clouds and haze from the sky with a push of dry air is low. That’s why it’s a good bet the first day of the Air and Water Show is to feature extensive haze, a good deal of cloudiness, and in some lakeside locations, the potential for fog.
Temperatures, as a result of all the moisture in the air, remained above 70° Friday for the 30th time this year at Midway—nearly twice the normal of 16 to date. Only seven years since 1928 have logged more 70°-plus overnight lows.
--By Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Meteorologist

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DON'T COUNT 90s OUT JUST YET...

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LONGEST STREAK OF 80°-PLUS HIGHS

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August is the month most prone to 1”+ rains in Chicago

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More rain falls in August on average than in any other month of the year here. August’s 4.62” tally is nearly an inch higher than runner-up April’s 3.68”.
By this time of year, months of warm weather have allowed a huge volume of moisture to accumulate in the atmosphere over the U.S.—moisture which can be harnessed by thunderstorms that tend to move more slowly than their counterparts at other times of the year. This makes them especially prolific rain-producers. More 1”+ and 2”+ downpours have soaked Chicago in August than in any other month. The month is 3.5 times more likely to generate a 1”+ rain than February (the month with the fewest days of heavy precipitation historically) and 45 times more likely than February to host a 2”+ rain.
Interestingly, rainfall Friday will bring the number of days of measurable precipitation since records began in Chicago back in November, 1870 to 16,850.
-Tom Skilling

Weather update

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Thundery rains ahead

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More rain on Thursdays?

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Cumulonimbus clouds produce the thunderstorms we experience on the ground. Larry Jahn of Macomb, IL photographed this cumulonimbus along a frontal system on a flight from Seattle to O'Hare around 4:30 pm Wednesday, August 2 while passing over Iowa. Ironically, it wasn't Larry's last encounter with this weather system. After a quiet arrival in Chicago shortly taking this picture, the same disturbance unleashed thunderstorms on Chicago "with a vengeance", Larry reports, canceling a connecting flight to Moline. Cumulonimbus clouds are the tallest on the planet and can reach altitudes of 70,000 ft. at times. The cloud pictured here appears to be about 30,000 ft. tall. Thanks for the photos, Larry!
-Tom Skilling


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PHOTO COURTESY: Larry Jahn, Macomb, Illinois

Wyoming Wildfires create their own weather

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The air heated by this Wyoming wildfire, captured by Tim and Sarah Sandman while driving toward their home in Buffalo, is behind the formation of the towering cumulus clouds evident at the top of the smoke plume. Heating encourages air to become buoyant and rise. Water vapor within the rising air cools with height, a process which leads to cloud formation as moisture condenses into droplets and becomes visible as a cloud. Thunderstorms have been known to develop above fires. Many thanks to Tim and Sarah for a chance to see wildfire-induced cloud formation through these photographs.
-Tom Skilling

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PHOTO COURTESY: Tim and Sarah Sandman

August rain at Midway six times O’Hare’s

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South Siders, soaked on more than one occasion by August downpours, may find the dry weather gripping the city’s North Side this month hard to believe. But, rainfall at Midway Airport is running more than six times the amount which has fallen at O’Hare Field. The dry conditions extend to an impressive swath of the metro area north of I-88. Summer rain distribution is often a feast or famine affair. But, the variation since August 1 is truly eye-catching, ranging from 4.40" at Midway to just 0.72" at O’Hare. Only one year since 1990 has been drier at O’Hare—1999 with 0.67" to date. The disparity has only emerged in recent weeks. O’Hare’s 18.45" total since March 1 equals the 135 year average since 1871.
Rain has been in anything but short supply over the monsoon drenched Southwest. Tucson, Arizona’s 7.84" since June 15 makes it that area’s wettest monsoon season in over half a century—since 10.54” in 1955.
-Tom Skilling

Weather update

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Thundery rain system

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Distance of Mars from Earth

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Clouds to overtake area later Thursday

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The 100% of possible sunshine recorded at Midway Tuesday marked only the 6th day of Chicago’s Meteorological Summer (June 1-Aug. 31) that 100% sunshine was recorded and the only such day in August. Abundant sunshine is expected again today as northeast Illinois remains under the influence of a strong, dry high pressure area that covers the Great Lakes area and is centered over Lower Michigan. Tuesday, the dry air mass led to a large difference in high-low temperature readings that approached 30° well inland, away from the sheltering influence of Lake Michigan and Chicago’s urban “heat island”. However, after a sunny start to the day Thursday, clouds are expected to overspread the Chicago area in advance of an approaching cold front with showers and thunderstorms possible that night. Heavy downpours could result in 1"+ rains at some metro locations Friday.
-Paul Dailey WGNTV Meteorologist

Humid air arrives Friday

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Current South Atlantic Weather Pattern

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17-Year Cicadas

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Summer 2006: +1.8° above normal; 33rd warmest of 135 years

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For a month with a reputation of delivering its heat with lots of haze and humidity, Tuesday’s warm temperatures, low humidities and haze-free sunshine seem anomalies. Were it not for the wisps of high clouds predicted Tuesday afternoon off distant thunderstorms, the day would become only the 6th of meteorological summer (since June 1) to deliver the Chicago metro area 100% of its possible sun.
Quite a spread has developed between daytime and nighttime temperatures over the past 24 hours—a variation predicted to reoccur Tuesday and Tuesday night. With moisture levels as low as they are, the air takes on the character of a desert environment in the sense that it warms quickly by day then cools rapidly once the sun sets. With just 2 weeks left in the three month meteorological summer period, the season is running a modest 1.8° above the average since 1871 and ranks 33rd warmest of the past 135 years.
-Tom Skilling

Weather update

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Earthquakes and weather

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A quiet week of 80s on tap for Chicago

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A more tranquil weather regime is taking shape across the Chicago area this week as the atmosphere temporarily settles into a rather quiet and seasonable pattern. Extremes of heat or cold are not in the cards, and except for some thunderstorms early Monday and again late in the week, precipitation is not expected. Instead it appears that daytime temperatures will bounce about through the 80s.
Monday morning’s thunderstorms here will be the remnants of storm clusters that moved through the Mississippi Valley Sunday evening. Hail as large as golf balls pelted portions of southern Iowa and northern Missouri, while winds up to 70 m.p.h. downed trees and power lines; torrential downpours caused some street flooding.
Record heat was confined to south Florida Sunday with blistering highs of 99º at West Palm Beach and 96º at Miami, which followed a record-tying morning low of 81º there.
--By Steve Kahn, WGN Weather Center Meteorologist

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CHICAGO'S HOTTEST SUMMERS

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THE HARVEST MOON

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Stuck inside the 80s for upcoming week

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Hot 90º weather is on hiatus as Chicagoans look ahead to a seasonably warm week with daily highs fluctuating within the 80s. Signs are subtle, but as daylight shortens, the atmosphere is slowly beginning to shift to a more fall-like pattern as meteorological summer winds down. Record heat was confined to Florida Saturday, while chilly morning lows established new records at Eugene, Ore. (43º), Hartford, Conn. (47º), Avoca, Penn. (48º) and Eureka, Cal. (47º).
Last week’s rains in the Chicago area targeted west and south sections while northern areas were left high and dry. Just the opposite was true 19 years ago when northwest portions were inundated by as much as 9.35” of rain in the Great O’Hare Flood of Aug. 13-14, 1987.
Rainfall chances this week appear limited to a Monday frontal passage and scattered activity late in the week as higher dew point air invades the region.
-Steve Kahn, WGN-TV Meteorologist

August Rainfall

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70°+ dew points in Chicago

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Time zones

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Comfortable: Coolest Saturday here since June 10

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This weekend is to rank among the summer’s most beautiful and most comfortable since early June. Today is likely to be the first Saturday in which the “official” high fails to reach 80° since June 10. And, the coolest inland lows tonight in the metro area—i.e. the Fox Valley, DeKalb, Morris, Kankakee and Valparaiso—may end up not far from the record low of 51° set only two years ago in 2004.
Two days of northeast winds have sent the oppressively humid air responsible for Thursday’s thundery downpours packing. The atmosphere, from which 2.10” of water could have been squeezed earlier this week, holds a quarter that amount (0.50”) Saturday, a development obvious in the complete absence of haze. Interestingly, the driest air of all resides above 6,000 feet where relative humidities are predicted at a bone-dry 13% or less. Some of that dry air sinks to the surface and moves inland Saturday afternoon once daytime heating takes hold.
--By Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Meteorologist

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CANADIAN HIGH BRINGS COOLER AIR TO NORTHEAST U.S.

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NO ALL-DAY RAINS IN JULY/AUGUST

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Thursday's downpours fill this Park Forest rain gauge

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Photos courtesy: Dan Alsager, Park Forest, Illinois

The deluges which swept sections of the Chicago metro area hit Chicago's South Side and south suburban areas especially hard Thursday. That's evident from Dan Alsager's rain gauge in Park Forest pictured here. Dan snapped these shots and relayed them to me at 6 p.m. Thursday evening. Park Forest wasn't alone with big rains. A late-arriving report on Thursday's rainfall from Barbara Rogers in Valparaiso, Ind., indicates her rain gauge had collected 5.4" of rain. Dr. Jim Angel, Illinois' state climatologist at the Midwestern Regional Climate Center indicates the 2.43" in 78 minutes at Midway Airport and on Chicago's South Side in repetitive ("training") thunderstorms Thursday evening works out to be a one-in-ten-year rain!
--Tom Skilling

78 minute 2.28” South Side deluge: Heaviest in 4 years

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The heaviest rain to hit the city’s South Side in four years began modestly Thursday in the midst of the evening rush hour. Sprinkles started falling across the area just after 5 p.m. But within two hours a full scale deluge was underway. Repetitive downpour-generating t-storms were to sweep southwestward over a narrow 20 mile wide corridor extending south from the Eisenhower Expressway westward into northern Will County. Strengthening NE winds appeared to provoke the rainy atmospheric set-up which unleashed 2.28" of rain on Midway Airport in just 78 minutes. A process known as “speed convergence” contributed to the area’s latest cloudburst. Strong NE winds off the low-friction environment of Lake Michigan converged once onshore with lighter winds slowed by friction produced by the land. Towering thunderstorms resulted halting the Sox game and flooding the Archer/63rd street intersection.

Thursday's Storms

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A new hot spell in sight

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Supercells

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A fast-moving, bow-shaped (on radar) squall line, which exploded to life in eyecatchingly unstable air overnight in Nebraska and Iowa late Wednesday night, raced eastward overnight and Thursday morning, embedded within a strong west to east jet stream traversing the U.S. The squall line's forward flank, shown in this photo taken by Debbie Stacoviak (thanks Debbie!) moving into west suburban Naperville around 9:30 a.m. Thursday morning, produced prolific lightning and driving downpours. Among the mid-morning cloud to ground lightning strikes reported beneath the storm's radar-scanned 55,000 ft.tall cloud tops, were two involving automobiles on I-55 and I-80. Lightning reportedly shattered one vehicle's windows near Gardner, well southwest of downtown Chicago.
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PHOTO COURTESY: Debbie Stacoviak, Naperville, Illinois

Meanwhile, Jeremy Hylka of Joliet reported that downpours generated standing water and indicated transformers failed in the storm's ferocious lightning, prompting some power outages. Street flooding was rampant for a time late Thursday morning after nearly 2" of rain. The downpour-generating squalls then advanced into Indiana, reaching that area around midday. Behind the eruption of violent late-summer thunderstorms overnight were atmospheric energy levels over the western midwest which were "off the charts" by late Wednesday night at the same time dew points (a measure of atmospheric moisture) surged to steamy near 80-degree-levels over a corridor of central Illinois back into Iowa. Moisture build-ups of this magnitude, referred to as "dew point pooling", occur as winds converge on an area, concentrating moisture in a limited corridor and enhancing the upward air motion which sets storm formation in process. Vastly elevated energy ("CAPE", an acronym for "Convective Available Potential Energy") levels were calculated from weather balloon "soundings" over Iowa, Nebraska and extreme southern Minnesota, ominously suggesting an environment in which warm, humid air was likely to ascend at stunning rates, producing towering thunderstorms of noteworthy intensity in the process. Among PRELIMINARY rainfalls from Thursday morning's storms are:

2.00" Valparaiso, IN
1.85" Joliet
1.00" Romeoville (NWS-Chicago)
1.00" Wilmington
0.09" Midway Airport
0.18" Oak Brook
Trace O'Hare International

Canadian high pressure takes over in the days ahead, lowering temperatures and eventually dropping high humidity levels.

August cool spells rarely mark the end of hot weather here

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Residents of the Plains, scorched by blistering heat, would no doubt pay for the “cooler”, more comfortable air headed for Chicago in coming days. To characterize the weather ahead as “cool” is relative. The 70s predicted Friday and much of Saturday are actually seasonable—but a far cry from last week’s near 100°. Cool spells in August don’t mark the end of hot weather. Eight 90s typically occur from this point forward.
Oklahoma City hasn’t experienced a temperature below 90° since June 26. Fifteen of the past 16 days have exceeded 100°. New records were established Thursday at Joplin (102°) and Vichy/Rolla (100°) in Missouri and in Mississippi at Greenwood (102°) and Vicksburg (101°).
Downpour-generating rains flared at the periphery of the hot air. Lincoln was swamped by 1.77” Wednesday while a record-breaking 2.79” drenched Evansville, Indiana.
-Tom Skilling

Weather update

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Cooler Canadian air on the way

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Not always ‘cooler by the lake’

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Coolest temp here in 28 days—only a week after deadly heat

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Few here would have thought Tuesday’s official 78° Chicago high temperature was possible so soon after last week’s deadly intense heat. There’s been only one daytime reading in the past 28 days—a 77° high back on July 21—which has been lower. The cooler air arrived within a Canadian high pressure responsible for producing nighttime temperatures in the low 40s in northwest Wisconsin.
Careful observers here no doubt note the first subtle signs that summer is maturing and that autumn draws closer. Wednesday hosts 67 fewer minutes of daylight after six weeks during which days have grown shorter. Days, once 913 minutes in length as summer commenced on June 21, have shrunk to 846 minutes and the sun treks across Chicago skies 8% lower in the sky. This reduces the solar energy August sunlight delivers by 11% compared to June, the month with the most energetic sunlight.
-Tom Skilling

Hurricane Season Update

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July 2006 Cloudiness vs. Normal

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VICTORY IN THE 2006 RACE TO MACKINAC ISLAND!

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The Crew of the Eagle wins this year's Race to Mackinac Island.
It's with special pride we congratulate the crew of the sailboat "Eagle" for their victory in this year's challenging Chicago to Mackinac Island Sailboat race. What an accomplishment on the part of these dedicated mariners and how proud we are that this crew was among the mariners who joined us ahead of the race in the WGN-TV/Tribune Weather Center for our annual weather briefings. This year's briefings took place Thursday and Friday evenings, July 20 and 21.

The crew competed against 300 sailboats and their crews, which underscores the magnitude of the accomplishment. Shawn O'Neill and his father Jerry of the Eagle's crew tell us that they sailed across the finish line at Mackinac Island just four seconds ahead of their closest challenger. The win followed a 43 hour and 333 mile trek the length of Lake Michigan to Mackinac Island. Shawn, Jerry and their dedicated crew were among the mariners who joined us this year—and in years past as well—in the WGN/Tribune Weather Office for our annual Mackinac Race briefings the Thursday and Friday before the 300+ mile July 24, 2006 trek up the lake began. Our visits and briefings with Mackinac racers has been a part of our July here for many years now and always rank among the highlights of each year here in the office. Few watch or understand the weather better than those who take on the Great Lakes—and the mariners who participate in the Mackinac Race rank among this region's most accomplished mariners. Their's is clearly a mission conducted with true passion!

Congratulations to the crew of the Eagle and all who participated in this year's Chicago to Mackinac Race! Look forward to seeing many of you here in the office ahead of next year's race!
--Tom Skilling


The Eagle and its crew cross the finish line on Mackinac Island at 11:23 a.m. Monday, July 24.
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PHOTO COURTESY: Ann O'Neill

The Eagle in full sail against Chicago's skyline as viewed from Lake Michigan
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PHOTO COURTESY: Lu O'Neill

Here's the happy crew assembled July 24 this year after victory on board the Eagle in Mackinac harbor
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PHOTO COURTESY: Ann O'Neill

CREW MEMBERS:
Back row left to right: Bill Zeiler, Boris Bonutti, Shawn O'Neill, Jan Promer, Michael Cook, Doug Warren
Front row left to right: Doug Gifford, Bork Maronn, Jerry O'Neill

66% of summer days and 14 of past 15 months above normal

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Only a week ago, brutally hot temperatures punished the area with a fifth consecutive day of 90° readings. Chicago was in the grip of the season’s most oppressive and ultimately deadly heat wave. This week’s weather couldn’t be more different.
Tuesday’s 84° predicted high on the heels of an 86° Monday promises the restoration of of late summer “thermal sanity”—which arrived amid thundery cloudbursts late this past Wednesday—intact.
Overall, Summer 2006 temperatures—those which have occurred since June 1—are firmly in surplus territory. Two-thirds of days have been warmer than normal and August is on its way to becoming the 14th of the past 15 months to post a temperature surplus.
News that Chicago is well into its latest “warm” month follows Monday’s announcement from NOAA that July finished 2nd warmest of any on record in the U.S. since 1895.
-Tom Skilling

July 2006 Heat

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Brutal heat retreats to Plains

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Scent of Rain

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Upper Michigan's Whitefish Bay area was swept last week by this storm. Adam Kern of Highland, Indiana was camping when sudden windshift hit in conjunction with this tumultuous looking shelf-cloud sweeping into the area. Adam shares his photographs of the storm with us. Such clouds form as cool air surging out the leading edge of a thunderstorm cools the air to condensation. High straight-line winds are common beneath such features, part of the thunderstorm's "outflow".
--Tom Skilling


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PHOTO COURTESY: Adam Kern

The beauty of summer near the Canadian border area has been captured in these June, 2006 photos of Moose Lake in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area of Ely, Minnesota forwarded to us by Roberta Schommer of Lake Forest, Illinois. Beautiful sunsets occur frequently there, Roberta reports--and, incidentally, the fishing's reported to be wonderful! Many thanks, Roberta!
--Tom Skilling
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Post-storm sky in the Boundary Waters region of northern Minnesota in the wake of high winds and lightning with a June, 2006 thunderstorm:
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PHOTO COURTESY: Roberta Schommer

A week of highs in the 80s ahead for Chicago

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Daily high temperatures will hold in the 80s and vary less than 10 degrees if forecasts pan out the next seven days. Overall readings look to average nearly 2 degrees above normal.
A cold front that moved slowly through the metro area Sunday gave mostly light showers on the order of a tenth to two-tenths of an inch of rainfall. Remnant cloud cover from that cold front will drift out of the area later tonight, leaving northern Illinois under the influence of high pressure Tuesday and Wednesday.
Computer models agree that a complex low pressure system will then move east out of the northern and central Plains, spreading clouds over northeast Illinois and providing several periods of showers and thunderstorms Thursday and Friday that could add up to over an inch of rain before precipitation ends early Saturday.
Next weekend may find Chicago under weak high pressure with significant low pressure systems to the east and west.
--By Paul Dailey, WGN Weather Center Meteorologist

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EXPLAINING ATLANTIC HURRICANES

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IDEAL WEATHER LOCATIONS

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Storms possible today and later in the week

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Ahead of a cold front approaching from the northwest, a warm southwesterly flow will pull moist unstable air into Illinois today. Saturday saw a couple tornadoes and numerous reports of large hail in North Dakota and Minnesota ahead of the front, and severe storms could redevelop over northeast Illinois this afternoon and early evening. The front is expected to slowly move through and just south of the area overnight with remnant clouds and showers possibly hovering over southern portions tomorrow. Tuesday and Wednesday will see the area under the influence of high pressure. Then a complex low pressure system is forecast to move east out of the northern and central plains. This will result in extensive cloud cover along with showers and thunderstorms here the remainder of the week. Tropical Storm Chris made landfall in eastern Cuba Saturday, and has become just a weak low pressure system.
-Paul Dailey, WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather Update

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Lightning Rods

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Lightning Strikes

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Heat’s returning, but summer 2.2 degrees behind 2005

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It’s hard to imagine only days after bidding one of the hottest air masses here in 11 years adieu that Summer 2006 could possibly be averaging cooler than a year ago. But, it’s true. Temperatures since June 1 are running 2.2 degrees behind last year. And, while the set of 90°-plus highs predicted Saturday and Sunday are to produce the Chicago area’s third warmest weekend of the 10 since the season began, the city’s official tally of fifteen 90s lags behind last year’s 19 to date.
Friday’s 28 percent late-day relative humidity underscored the dramatic decline in atmospheric moisture of the past two days. The once oppressive tropical rain forest-like 76° dew point midweek had yielded to dry 48° dew point air. To the eye, the area’s haze-shrouded midweek horizons were sharply defined Friday. Humidities went into an afternoon free-fall as air heated by strong August sunshine ascended, tugging cooler air off Lake Michigan and encouraging dry air aloft to sink to the ground.
--By Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Meteorologist

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MUGGY AIR/T-STORMS TO RETURN

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DRIEST MONTHS IN CHICAGO

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HAZY IN THE SMOKIES

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My meteorological colleague Richard Koeneman shares this shot with us Friday of summer haze in the Smoky Mountains of western North Carolina. High temperatures hit 90° at the 3,600-foot level southeast of Asheville while Asheville proper (at 2,100 feet above sea level) registered a 91° high. The air is humid with dew points Friday afternoon in the upper 60s.
--By Tom Skilling, WGN-TV Meteorologist

Relief! The coolest morning in 10 days greets Chicagoans

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The hum of air conditioners, dominant here for more than a week, faded dramatically Thursday afternoon with the arrival of an air mass bearing 44% the moisture of its humid predecessor and responsible for temperatures which “felt” 24-degrees cooler. Chicago’s Friday morning 60s are the area’s coolest readings of the past 10 days. The 2"+ deluge (2.03" at Midway Airport) responsible for the weather shift which lambasted the area Wednesday night into early Thursday, qualifies as the city’s heaviest 24 hour rain tally on the South Side since November 18, 2003.
Plunging temps aren’t limited to the Midwest. A mammoth 1,500 mile swath of the U.S., involving all or parts of 20 states, is in on the stunning weather change. The eastward-charging cool air will extinguish record highs like Thursday’s 101° at Washington, D.C., 100° at Central Park in New York City and 100° at Baltimore, Maryland.
-Tom Skilling

Cooler Temperatures

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Regular rains ahead for Chicago

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Lightning's effect on jet airplanes

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Many thanks to Bob Shah for this shot of Wednesday evening's approaching storms. A rainshaft is visible. Thunderstorms were proliferating explosively at the time of Bob's photo, literally developing overhead as Chicago's heat wave was preparing to break.
Tom Skilling
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PHOTO COURTESY: Bob Shah

Extreme heat all too often departs grudgingly amid an explosion of thundery downpours. That was certainly the case Wednesday night. Some areas registered 1.50" of rain in 55 minutes time, enough to produce flooding and standing water. Thunderstorms, radar-scanned at 52,000 ft. tall, roared into the area, generating a breathtaking lightning show. At the height of the storms around 9-10 pm, lightning flashed continuously in many locations. Up to 1,200 cloud to ground strokes were measured within a 225 mile radius of Chicago--much of it focused in northern Illinois and Indiana (and that count doesn't include counting intra-cloud or cloud to cloud discharges, which aren't measured by lightning-detection systems) in a single ten minute period. Two of those discharges are captured in these dramatic photos provided to us by Chuck Hagen of Oak Lawn, Illinois. The cloud to ground strikes were taken by Chuck near a power station in Bedford Park at the height of last night's storms around 10 p.m. Preliminary reports indicate the top rain tallies in the area included 1.97" at Midway Airport and 2.01" at Willow Springs. The rains have ended the 6-day string of 90-degree plus days which included two days just a degree shy of 100-degrees. By comparison, Thursday's post-storm temperature at O'Hare is 72-degrees--a stunning 25-degree pullback from Wednesday's stifling 97-degree high and its dangerous 100-degree heat indicies!

-Tom Skilling

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PHOTOS COURTESY: Chuck Hagen, Oak Lawn, Illinois

Nick Bilski shares these shots with us of ominous skies as thunderstorms erupted Wednesday night in the heat and humidity. Within hours, temperatures had plunged 15-20-degrees thanks to thunderstorm downpours and outflows.
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PHOTO COURTESY: Nick Bilski

Lightning in Blue Island Wednesday night

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Another view of Wednesday's spectacular lightning show from Rob Anderson of Blue Island. Thanks Rob!
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PHOTO COURTESY: Rob Anderson

Heat wave breaks with downpours and lightning

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Deadly heat surrendered its six day grip on Chicago grudgingly amid waves of thundery downpours from clouds 52,000 ft. tall—towering atmospheric behemoths which generated one of summer’s most spectacular lightning shows to date. Area cloud to ground lightning strokes, which flashed at a rate of 300 every 10 minutes around 7 p.m. had quadrupled to some 1,200 strokes only an hour later, evidence of the stunning rate at which t-storms were multiplying.
Radar screens, completely free of precipitation through late Wednesday afternoon came to life in less than an hour as clusters of thunderstorms overcame the rain-suppressing atmospheric “cap” (warm air aloft).
Downpours swamped Berwyn with 1.50” in only 55 minutes while t-storm gusts downed trees and cut power in south suburban Matteson and Frankfort.
-Tom Skilling-WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather Update

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Warmth returns this weekend

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Lake Michigan upwelling drops shoreline temperatures

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These spectacular shelf cloud images submitted to us by John and Cathy Torchia as a mid-June thunderstorm moved into Peru, Illinois, may offer a glimpse of things to come over at least part of the Chicago metro area Wednesday night. Storms threaten to erupt along an incoming cold front, prompting severe thunderstorm watches mid-afternoon Wednesday just west of Chicago. They may be extended east into Chicago later this afternoon and Wednesday night. This means the area may undergo a thundery end stormy Wednesday night transition to much cooler air----temps will drop 20-degrees---for Thursday. Chicago and a wide swath of northern Illinois, far northwest Indiana, the southeastern half of Wisconsin, the southeast half of Iowa and northern third of Missouri are threatened by active, potentially severe thunderstorm clusters driven by excessive heat, 2+" of evaporated atmospheric moisture, converging low-level winds topped off by moderately strong westerly jet stream winds. Storms appear the greatest threat in the Chicago area beginning later this evening into Wednesday night. Development will be closely monitored because the existing atmospheric set-up has been known to set up "training" of thunderstorm cells over distinct corridors---referring to the arrival of repetitive waves of thunderstorms which produce huge rain tallies over comparatively narrow corridor. Note: Chicago's shoreline Lake Michigan water temperatures have PLUNGED 21-degrees in under 24 hours as Wednesday's gusty SW winds have push warm surface water away from the shoreline, promoting the temperatures slashing UPWELLING of deeper, much cooler water. The current lakeshore water temperature is 58-degrees----it was 79-degrees at its peak Tuesday.
-- Tom Skilling

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City wilts a 2nd day in 10 hours of 100°+ heat indexes

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Chicago enters a sixth day of 90s Wednesday and the third consecutive day of brutal heat and humidity. It’s part of a dome of heat which first entered the national spotlight weeks ago as a wildfire-producer in the West, then grew even more ominous as temperatures within it surged ever-higher and heat related deaths began to mount. By late Tuesday, sections of 29 states were in its grip.
Chicago logged a rare second official 99° high Tuesday—a reading 16° above normal and only a degree shy of the day’s record. Sets of readings at such oppressive levels have occurred here only 13 of the past 135 years.
The last 6 days has produced the most oppressive heat here since the deadly 1995 episode, and constitutes the second warmest late July/early August period on record since 1871.
Area heat indexes Tuesday soared to 120° at Gary and 117° at Northerly Island.
-Tom Skilling-WGN-TV Meteorologist

Weather Update

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Altitude of Clouds

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