Today, we make history!

Shpongled

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Aug 30, 2001
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Seattle hits 102 -- Welcome to the hottest day ever!
4 p.m. Temperature: 102 degrees


It's a day for the weather history books. For on July 29, 2009, Sea-Tac Airport hit 102 degrees just after 2 p.m. for the hottest day on record in Seattle, with records stretching back to 1891

The previous records were 100 degrees set July 20, 1994, July 16, 1941, and June 9, 1955*.

It's the second all-time weather record set on Wednesday in Seattle. The lowest temperature recorded so far today was 71 degrees, and it's a safe bet we won't drop below that before midnight tonight. That means we have shattered the record for warmest low temperature which was set... Tuesday. (Well, tied last night at 69. The low was also 69 on Sept. 2, 1974). Put another way, this is the first day ever that the temperature failed to drop below 70 degrees at some point during the day. Miami would be so proud...


Too hot to play outside today!
(Incidentally, if you're wondering about the asterisk by the June 9, 1955 note above, technically speaking, that 100 doesn't count as an official 100 degree high. Why? Just like the 1941 reading, that was taken at the Downtown Federal Building. But in 1945, the official reporting station for Seattle was moved from the Federal Building to Sea-Tac Airport. So the 1955 Federal Building reading doesn't count as an official record.

It's sort of like pitching a no-hitter for 9 innings, then giving up a home run in the 10th. You accomplished the feat by usual standards, but the record books don't recognize it.)

Other all time records are poised to fall as well. Bellingham hit 95 after 1 p.m. breaking their all-time record high of 94 degrees. Others in jeopardy: Olympia's is 104 (they hit 101 Tuesday) and Portland's is 107 (they hit 106 on Tuesday)

Hot Weather News:

The heat is causing a myriad of problems across the Puget Sound area, aside from people scrambling to keep cool.

Snohomish PUD says three substations went out near Monroe, knocking out power to about 14,000 people in the Monroe area.
Officials say the heat caused transmission lines to sag into trees, causing brush fires. It also knocked out three substations.

They were able to get all but 2,500 back online by 2:15, but as power was coming back on, several transformers were reported on fire and torching the power poles, keeping firefighters busy across the city.

A flicked cigarette butt sparked a brush fire in the median of I-5 near Tukwila, the state patrol says.
Flames were seen shooting up from the trees between the north and southbound lanes near S. 200 Street. The fire was put out a short time later, with the help of a foaming truck from Sea-Tac Airport, but traffic was backed up as far as eight miles through the afternoon as firefighting vehicles were blocking lanes to fight the fire.

Firefighters were also busy in West Seattle and Auburn battling house fires. The West Seattle one broke out around 1 p.m. in the 5200 block of 45th Ave. SW. People were inside when the fire started, but all got out safely. Two firefighters reportedly required treatment for heat exhaustion.
About an hour later, a fire broke out in a home in the 600 block of 24th Street SE in Auburn. A neighbor called 911 after seeing smoke and flames coming from the back of the home.

Firefighters rescued two dogs from the home, but one didn't survive. No word yet what caused that fire.

Want to buy an air conditioner or fan? Good luck!

Now that the region has suffered through the warmest night on record, thousands went in search of air conditioning and fans.

Lines were very long at several hardware and department stores -- including this line at the SoDo Sears store.

Why over 100 today?

We have the perfect heat scenario of an incredibly strong ridge of high pressure. That alone has been baking the Northwest into the 90s of late.

But Wednesday, we finally have the icing on the cake to make this the "perfect storm" of a heat wave -- the hot, east wind.

It took a while, but a thermal trough has finally developed that is drawing in the hot, dry east wind. Put the two together, and it's like mixing fire and oxygen.

Locally, the east wind makes it hotter for a few reasons. One, that air is coming from Eastern Washington, where is hot to begin with. Second, as that air crosses over the Cascades and then sinks down, it warms further. For those living along the foothills, this is akin to living at the end of a blow dryer and why your highs are among the hottest.

Now, as to why it's sticking around so long, the weather pattern over North America has two big features -- a big, big ridge of high pressure anchored along the western third (stretching from Baja to almost the Arctic Circle) and a big, big area of low pressure anchored over Hudson Bay.

Not only has that ridge baked the West Coast, but on the other end of the scale, that low has made life miserable for the rest of the nation east of Denver. There, summer has gone into hiding, with relentless rain and thunderstorms. New York City is on pace for one of their coldest July's ever.

With such exaggerated patterns, it's hard for them to budge because they are so strong they get stubborn. Incoming weather systems, typically weaker around here in summer anyway, are no match to move a ridge of this size, and then in turn, this ridge doesn't move to push the eastern low out of the way. It's like having a disabled semi jackknifed on the 520 bridge -- there's just not much room to move.

That ridge, in turn, keeps the thermal trough over our area. Heat waves usually don't go longer than two or three days because the ridge gets nudged east by the westerly flow of the planet, and once the thermal trough moves east of the Cascades, it opens the door for the cool west wind to kick up. But with the ridge so strong, it's able to hold back the ocean breezes and maintain the thermal trough right over Western Washington.

The last time we saw this pattern was 1977 and 1981, our two current heat wave champs. 1981 is notable for 5 days in a row over 90, including a 99 and 98, while 1977 had an 18 day period where it was over 79 every day (15 in a row over 80), 13 days over 85 (9 consecutive) and six days over 90 (4 consecutive).

The east wind should also at least eat away at some of this lingering humidity, but it'll still be a bit muggier than a normal heat wave - not that anything else is much normal about this heat anyway.

Record Check:

A quick list of other records that might fall this week:

Consecutive days at or over 90: 5 (Aug. 7-11, 1981). Current forecast: 4, Potential: 6
Consecutive days at or over 85: 9 (Aug. 5-13, 1977). Current forecast: 9. Potential: 11
Consecutive days at or over 80: 15 (July 30-Aug 13, 1977) -- Current forecast: 11, which stretches through the end of the extended forecast. Potential: ??? (Incidentally in the '77 streak, the 14th was 79, there were three more 80s afterward.
Number of 90 degree days in a month: 7 (July 1958)
. Current forecast: 6. Potential: 7
Number of 90 degree days in a year: 9 (1958)
. Through Tuesday: 5 with two more a slam dunk, and potential for a few more by next Monday. And there's still August and early Sept. yet.
Hottest July on record (high temperature): 81.4 degrees in 1958. (If current 7 day forecast verifies exactly, our avg. this month will be 81.25)
Seattle daily records: Wednesday: 95, Thursday: 94. Friday: 93
 
Ugh. It's only like 80 degrees here and I can't wait for fall/winter. I don't know how in the hell I grew up in Louisiana.
 
Seems like that's what everyone says. I'm starting to think I might be a weirdo.

You are shorter than average and lean, which gives you a relatively small mass to surface area ratio. You'll feel colder in the same weather than taller, heavier people.

Everyone says they prefer cold because Americans are fat bastards like me.
 
y'know, there are Canadians reading here. You could at least cater your measurement forms to cater to an international audience, you imperialistic cock :p but congrats anyways.
 
Numbers make my brain go akljhfaklsjfhasjhfjashfjashflashfjawhro;hio;2908urqwklaflawkfj.