162 NOUS45 KABQ 180010 PNSABQ NMZ501>540-180110- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ALBUQUERQUE NM 610 PM MDT FRI JUN 17 2011 PRELIMINARY PEAK WIND GUST REPORTS ACROSS NORTH AND CENTRAL NEW MEXICO FOR THE LAST 16 HOURS. ...COUNTY... PEAK GUST TIME/DATE OF LOCATION /MPH/ MEASUREMENT ...BERNALILLO... SEDILLO 53 237 AM 6/17 ...CATRON... MOGOLLON 1 WSW 41 513 PM 6/17 - MOGOLLON RAWS. ...CIBOLA... PINE HILL 1 WSW 41 334 PM 6/17 - RAMAH RAWS. ...MCKINLEY... GALLUP 3 WNW 40 153 PM 6/17 - KGUP ASOS. ...SANDOVAL... PLACITAS 1 ESE 48 302 PM 6/17 ...SAN MIGUEL... LAS VEGAS 6 NE 40 1253 PM 6/17 - KLVS ASOS. ...TORRANCE... MORIARTY 8 WNW 67 240 AM 6/17 CLINES CORNERS 1 SSE 43 853 AM 6/17 - KCQC ASOS. && FOR A COMPLETE LISTING OF SIGNIFICANT WEATHER REPORTS...PLEASE VISIT THE NWS WEBSITE AT WEATHER.GOV/ABQ/?N=EVENTMAP. $$ SHY  492 NOUS43 KFSD 180016 PNSFSD IAZ001>003-012>014-020>022-031-032-MNZ071-072-080-081-089-090-097- 098-NEZ014-181230- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD 716 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH SAFETY RULES... A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH MEANS THAT CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF SEVERE WEATHER IN THE DESIGNATED AREA. DURING A WATCH THERE IS NO CAUSE FOR IMMEDIATE CONCERN. YOU SHOULD GO ABOUT YOUR NORMAL BUSINESS...BUT BE ON THE LOOKOUT AND KEEP UP TO DATE ON THE LATEST WEATHER DEVELOPMENTS. PUBLIC SAFETY OFFICIALS SHOULD ACTIVATE PREARRANGED PLANS. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING...ON THE OTHER HAND...MEANS THAT A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM HAS BEEN SIGHTED OR INDICATED BY RADAR. PEOPLE IN THE PATH OF THE STORM SHOULD TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTION TO SAFEGUARD THEMSELVES AND THEIR FAMILY. TECHNICALLY SPEAKING...A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM IS DEFINED AS HAVING WIND GUSTS WHICH EXCEED 58 MPH AND/OR HAIL AT LEAST 1 INCH IN DIAMETER. HOWEVER...AS THESE STORMS DEVELOP...THEY CAN BE ACCOMPANIED BY TORNADOES. LISTEN TO NOAA WEATHER RADIO OR OTHER LOCAL MEDIA TO LEARN IF A WARNING HAS BEEN ISSUED FOR YOUR AREA. ALSO...KEEP A CLOSE WATCH ON THE THUNDERSTORMS AS TORNADOES CAN FORM QUICKLY. IF YOU SEE A TORNADO...MOVE QUICKLY INTO A BASEMENT. IF NONE IS AVAILABLE...SEEK SHELTER IN A SMALL INTERIOR ROOM ON THE LOWEST FLOOR AND STAY AWAY FROM OUTSIDE WALLS...DOORS AND WINDOWS. IN SCHOOLS...FACTORIES OR OTHER INSTITUTIONAL TYPE BUILDINGS... STAY OUT OF AUDITORIUMS AND GYMNASIUMS. $$  386 NOUS45 KBOU 180037 PNSBOU A PREVIEW OF DENVER'S JULY WEATHER NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER CO 530 PM MDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...JULY IS NORMALLY A STORMY MONTH IN DENVER... DENVER'S WEATHER IS NOTORIOUS FOR BEING CHANGEABLE. HOWEVER ...THIS IS NOT THE CASE DURING JULY. MOST JULY MORNINGS ARE SUNNY WITH CLOUDS DEVELOPING DURING THE LATE MORNING AND EARLY AFTERNOON. BY MID AFTERNOON... THUNDERSTORMS HAVE DEVELOPED OVER THE FOOTHILLS AND DRIFT ACROSS THE DENVER METRO AREA AND ONTO THE EASTERN PLAINS. SOME OF THESE STORMS CONTINUE TO DEVELOP AND REACH SEVERE STATUS. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CONTAINING LARGE HAIL ...STRONG GUSTY WINDS AND HEAVY DOWNPOURS ARE NOT UNCOMMON DURING JULY FOR THE DENVER METRO AREA. THE WORST HAIL STORM ON RECORD IN DENVER HISTORY MOVED ACROSS THE WESTERN SECTIONS OF THE CITY ON JULY 11TH, 1990. THIS FEROCIOUS STORM DROPPED BASEBALL TO SOFTBALL SIZED HAIL AND CAUSED MILLIONS OF DOLLARS WORTH OF PROPERTY DAMAGE. JULY IS THE STORMIEST MONTH OF THE YEAR WITH THUNDERSTORMS OCCURRING ABOUT EVERY THIRD DAY OR USUALLY 11 DAYS PER MONTH. MOST OF THE RAINFALL DURING THE MONTH IS THE RESULT OF SLOW MOVING THUNDERSTORMS WHICH CAN CAUSE PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS TO VARY TREMENDOUSLY AT DIFFERENT LOCATIONS ACROSS THE METRO AREA. IT IS NOT UNUSUAL FOR SOME AREAS OF THE CITY TO RECEIVE TWO OR THREE TIMES AS MUCH PRECIPITATION AS OTHER AREAS. FLASH FLOODING IS ALSO QUITE POSSIBLE DURING JULY. JULY IS ALSO THE DENVER MONTH THAT HAS THE MOST 90 DEGREE CONSECUTIVE DAYS. THERE HAVE BEEN 15 TIMES WHERE CONSECUTIVE STREAKS OF 10 OR MORE 90 DEGREE DAYS HAVE EITHER BEEN ENTIRELY IN JULY OR AT LEAST STARTED IN JUNE AND FINISHED IN JULY OR THE STREAK BEGAN IN JULY AND FINISHED UP IN AUGUST. THE HIGHEST CONSECUTIVE STREAK OF 90 DEGREE DAYS IS 18 DAYS AND IT OCCURRED TWICE. ONCE IN 1901 FROM JULY 6TH THROUGH JULY 23RD AND AGAIN IN 1874 FROM JULY 1ST TO JULY 18TH. MORE RECENTLY...17 CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE DAYS OCCURRED IN 2000 FROM JUNE 29TH THROUGH JULY 15TH. THE 90 DEGREE STREAK RECORD THAT HAS HELD ITS OWN SINCE 1901 (AND 1874) WAS BROKEN DURING JULY 2008. THE RECORD STREAK OF 18 CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE DAYS GAVE WAY TO 19 DAYS FROM JULY 13TH THROUGH JULY 31ST. THE STREAK DID NOT END ON JULY 31ST. IN FACT, IT CONTINUED RIGHT ON INTO AUGUST AND FINISHED WITH A TOTAL OF 24 CONSECUTIVE 90 OR HIGHER DEGREE DAYS. EVEN WITH ALL THE 90 DEGREE OR HIGHER DAYS, JULY 2008 ONLY FINISHED AT NUMBER 3 IN THE TOP 10 WARMEST AND ALSO THE 3RD DRIEST DENVER JULY. JULY 2005 WAS A RECORD HEAT SETTING MONTH. SIX RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE WERE SET...ALL IN THE 100'S. IN FACT ON JULY 20TH...THE MERCURY SOARED TO 105 DEGREES TYING THE ALL TIME DENVER HIGH TEMPERATURE SET ON AUGUST 8TH 1878 AND BREAKING THE 102 RECORD FOR JULY 20TH. OTHER RECORDS WERE 102 DEGREES ON THE 16TH. 101 ON THE 19TH. 105 ON THE 20TH. 104 ON THE 21ST. 102 ON THE 22ND. 102 ON THE 23RD AND 101 DEGREES ON THE 30TH. JULY 2005 BECAME THE 2ND HOTTEST JULY AND ALSO THE 2ND HOTTEST DENVER MONTH. THERE WERE 25 DAYS REGISTERING 90 DEGREES OR HIGHER WHICH TIES THE 3RD MOST EVER WITH 1963. ...DENVER'S JULY 2010 WAS WET AND WARM BUT NOT RECORD SETTING... IT WAS A WET MONTH FOR DENVER DURING JULY 2010. 3.70 INCH OF LIQUID COLLECTED IN THE RAIN BUCKET WHICH WAS A MERE 0.01 INCH FROM TIEING THE 10TH WETTEST DENVER JULY. THIS TOTAL WAS 1.54 INCHES ABOVE THE NORMAL JULY AMOUNT OF 2.16 INCHES. THE WETTEST JULY WAS 6.41 INCHES SET BACK IN 1965. THE DRIEST JULY WAS AN INCREDIBLE 0.01 INCH RECORDED IN 1901. DURING JULY 2010 THERE WERE 13 DAYS WITH MEASURABLE MOISTURE WHICH IS 0.01 INCH OR MORE. FIVE DAYS RECORDED A TENTH OR MORE...TWO DAYS HAD A HALF AN INCH OR MORE AND THERE WERE 2 DAYS THAT ACTUALLY MEASURED MORE THAN AN INCH. 1.84 INCHES OF RAINFALL ON JULY 4TH SET A NEW 24 HOUR CALENDAR DAY RECORD BREAKING THE OLD RECORD OF 1.44 INCHES SET IN 1909. THE 24 HOUR DENVER RAINFALL RECORD IS 6.53 INCHES RECORDED BETWEEN THE 21ST AND 22ND OF MAY IN 1876. IT WAS ALSO A WARM JULY IN DENVER DURING 2010. NOT WARM ENOUGH TO GET THE TOP TEN WARMEST (76.4 DEGREES IN 1980) BUT STILL IT WAS 1.0 DEGREE ABOVE THE NORMAL OF 73.4 DEGREES. THE MONTH FINISHED WITH AN AVERAGE TEMPERATURE OF 74.4 DEGREES. THE WARMEST DENVER JULY WHICH IS ALSO THE HOTTEST DENVER MONTH SINCE 1872 OCCURRED IN 1934 WITH AN AVERAGE MERCURY READING OF 77.8 DEGREES. THE COLDEST JULY WAS 67.4 DEGREES REGISTERED IN 1895. THERE WERE 18 DAYS THAT REGISTERED TEMPERATURES 90 DEGREES OR HIGHER WITH ONE RECORD SETTING 102 DEGREE TEMPERATURE RECORDED ON JULY 17TH. ALSO WORTH MENTIONING... THERE WAS ONE 90 DEGREE STREAK OF 8 DAYS FROM JULY 12TH THROUGH THE 19TH. MERCURY READINGS DURING THE MONTH RANGED FROM THE RECORD SETTING 102 DEGREES DOWN TO 3 READINGS OF 53 DEGREES. FOURTEEN THUNDERSTORMS WERE OBSERVED AT THE DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT OF WHICH ONE PRODUCED PEA TO MARBLE SIZE HAIL AT THE AIRPORT. THE HAIL WAS RECORDED ON JULY 4TH. FOUR DAYS HAD LIGHT FOG WITH ONE DAY RECORDING VISIBILITY DOWN TO 1/4 MILE OR LESS. THE PEAK WIND FOR THE MONTH OCCURRED TWICE...48 MPH ON THE 4TH AND THE 30TH FROM DIRECTIONS OF 060 (NE) AND 340 (NW) RESPECTIVELY. HIGHEST SEA-LEVEL PRESSURE WAS 30.20 INCHES ON THE 7TH WHILE THE LOWEST PRESSURE WAS 29.46 INCHES ON THE 3RD. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE 30-DAY OUTLOOK MODELS SUGGEST THAT PRECIPITATION DURING JULY 2011 WILL BE AT OR NEAR NORMAL AMOUNTS WHILE TEMPERATURES WILL BE AT OR SLIGHTLY ABOVE NORMAL. FOR PLANNING PURPOSES... DENVER'S CLIMATOLOGICAL NORMALS ARE LISTED BELOW. DENVER'S CLIMATOLOGICAL STATISTICS ARE LISTED BELOW: (NORMALS BASED ON 1971-2000 DATA) ...TEMPERATURE... AVERAGE HIGH........................... 88.0 AVERAGE LOW............................ 58.7 MONTHLY MEAN........................... 73.4 DAYS WITH HIGH 90 OR ABOVE............. 15 DAYS WITH HIGH 32 OR BELOW............. 0 DAYS WITH LOW 32 OR BELOW............. 0 DAYS WITH LOWS ZERO OR BELOW........... 0 ...PRECIPITATION... MONTHLY MEAN........................... 2.16 INCHES DAYS WITH MEASURABLE PRECIPITATION...... 9 AVERAGE SNOWFALL........................ 0* DAYS WITH 1.0 INCH OR MORE SNOWFALL..... 0* *N0TE: NO SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED IN DENVER DURING JULY. ...MISCELLANEOUS JULY AVERAGES... HEATING DEGREE DAYS................. 1 COOLING DEGREES DAYS................ 261 WIND SPEED.......................... 8.3 MPH WIND DIRECTION...................... SOUTH DAYS WITH THUNDERSTORMS............. 11 DAYS WITH DENSE FOG................. 0* *LESS THAN 1 PERCENT OF SUNSHINE POSSIBLE........ 71 ...EXTREMES FOR JULY... RECORD HIGH...... 105 DEGREES 7/20/2005 (TIES AS HOTTEST DENVER TEMPERATURE WITH AUGUST 8, 1878) RECORD LOW....... 42 DEGREES 7/04/1903 7/31/1873 WARMEST............................. 77.8 DEGREES 1934 *****WARMEST MONTH IN DENVER HISTORY***** COLDEST.................................. 67.4 DEGREES 1895 MOST COOLING DEGREE DAYS................. 405 2005 LEAST COOLING DEGREE DAYS................ 181 2009 MOST HEATING DEGREE DAYS..(SINCE 1899)... 42 1972 LEAST HEATING DEGREE DAYS.(SINCE 1899)... 0 (MULTIPLE YEARS) WETTEST................................... 6.41 INCHES 1965 MAXIMUM 24 HOUR RAINFALL................. 3.43 INCHES 1951 DRIEST................................... 0.01 INCH 1901 SNOWIEST................................. 0* MAXIMUM 24 HOUR SNOWFALL................. 0* LEAST SNOWIEST........................... 0* *NOTE: ***NO SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED IN DENVER DURING JULY. BENTON  438 NOUS45 KBOU 180041 PNSBOU A PREVIEW OF DENVER'S JULY WEATHER NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER CO 530 PM MDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...JULY IS NORMALLY A STORMY MONTH IN DENVER... DENVER'S WEATHER IS NOTORIOUS FOR BEING CHANGEABLE. HOWEVER ...THIS IS NOT THE CASE DURING JULY. MOST JULY MORNINGS ARE SUNNY WITH CLOUDS DEVELOPING DURING THE LATE MORNING AND EARLY AFTERNOON. BY MID AFTERNOON... THUNDERSTORMS HAVE DEVELOPED OVER THE FOOTHILLS AND DRIFT ACROSS THE DENVER METRO AREA AND ONTO THE EASTERN PLAINS. SOME OF THESE STORMS CONTINUE TO DEVELOP AND REACH SEVERE STATUS. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CONTAINING LARGE HAIL ...STRONG GUSTY WINDS AND HEAVY DOWNPOURS ARE NOT UNCOMMON DURING JULY FOR THE DENVER METRO AREA. THE WORST HAIL STORM ON RECORD IN DENVER HISTORY MOVED ACROSS THE WESTERN SECTIONS OF THE CITY ON JULY 11TH, 1990. THIS FEROCIOUS STORM DROPPED BASEBALL TO SOFTBALL SIZED HAIL AND CAUSED MILLIONS OF DOLLARS WORTH OF PROPERTY DAMAGE. JULY IS THE STORMIEST MONTH OF THE YEAR WITH THUNDERSTORMS OCCURRING ABOUT EVERY THIRD DAY OR USUALLY 11 DAYS PER MONTH. MOST OF THE RAINFALL DURING THE MONTH IS THE RESULT OF SLOW MOVING THUNDERSTORMS WHICH CAN CAUSE PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS TO VARY TREMENDOUSLY AT DIFFERENT LOCATIONS ACROSS THE METRO AREA. IT IS NOT UNUSUAL FOR SOME AREAS OF THE CITY TO RECEIVE TWO OR THREE TIMES AS MUCH PRECIPITATION AS OTHER AREAS. FLASH FLOODING IS ALSO QUITE POSSIBLE DURING JULY. JULY IS ALSO THE DENVER MONTH THAT HAS THE MOST 90 DEGREE CONSECUTIVE DAYS. THERE HAVE BEEN 15 TIMES WHERE CONSECUTIVE STREAKS OF 10 OR MORE 90 DEGREE DAYS HAVE EITHER BEEN ENTIRELY IN JULY OR AT LEAST STARTED IN JUNE AND FINISHED IN JULY OR THE STREAK BEGAN IN JULY AND FINISHED UP IN AUGUST. THE HIGHEST CONSECUTIVE STREAK OF 90 DEGREE DAYS IS 18 DAYS AND IT OCCURRED TWICE. ONCE IN 1901 FROM JULY 6TH THROUGH JULY 23RD AND AGAIN IN 1874 FROM JULY 1ST TO JULY 18TH. MORE RECENTLY...17 CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE DAYS OCCURRED IN 2000 FROM JUNE 29TH THROUGH JULY 15TH. THE 90 DEGREE STREAK RECORD THAT HAS HELD ITS OWN SINCE 1901 (AND 1874) WAS BROKEN DURING JULY 2008. THE RECORD STREAK OF 18 CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE DAYS GAVE WAY TO 19 DAYS FROM JULY 13TH THROUGH JULY 31ST. THE STREAK DID NOT END ON JULY 31ST. IN FACT, IT CONTINUED RIGHT ON INTO AUGUST AND FINISHED WITH A TOTAL OF 24 CONSECUTIVE 90 OR HIGHER DEGREE DAYS. EVEN WITH ALL THE 90 DEGREE OR HIGHER DAYS, JULY 2008 ONLY FINISHED AT NUMBER 3 IN THE TOP 10 WARMEST AND ALSO THE 3RD DRIEST DENVER JULY. JULY 2005 WAS A RECORD HEAT SETTING MONTH. SIX RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE WERE SET...ALL IN THE 100'S. IN FACT ON JULY 20TH...THE MERCURY SOARED TO 105 DEGREES TYING THE ALL TIME DENVER HIGH TEMPERATURE SET ON AUGUST 8TH 1878 AND BREAKING THE 102 RECORD FOR JULY 20TH. OTHER RECORDS WERE 102 DEGREES ON THE 16TH. 101 ON THE 19TH. 105 ON THE 20TH. 104 ON THE 21ST. 102 ON THE 22ND. 102 ON THE 23RD AND 101 DEGREES ON THE 30TH. JULY 2005 BECAME THE 2ND HOTTEST JULY AND ALSO THE 2ND HOTTEST DENVER MONTH. THERE WERE 25 DAYS REGISTERING 90 DEGREES OR HIGHER WHICH TIES THE 3RD MOST EVER WITH 1963. ...DENVER'S JULY 2010 WAS WET AND WARM BUT NOT RECORD SETTING... IT WAS A WET MONTH FOR DENVER DURING JULY 2010. 3.70 INCH OF LIQUID COLLECTED IN THE RAIN BUCKET WHICH WAS A MERE 0.01 INCH FROM TIEING THE 10TH WETTEST DENVER JULY. THIS TOTAL WAS 1.54 INCHES ABOVE THE NORMAL JULY AMOUNT OF 2.16 INCHES. THE WETTEST JULY WAS 6.41 INCHES SET BACK IN 1965. THE DRIEST JULY WAS AN INCREDIBLE 0.01 INCH RECORDED IN 1901. DURING JULY 2010 THERE WERE 13 DAYS WITH MEASURABLE MOISTURE WHICH IS 0.01 INCH OR MORE. FIVE DAYS RECORDED A TENTH OR MORE...TWO DAYS HAD A HALF AN INCH OR MORE AND THERE WERE 2 DAYS THAT ACTUALLY MEASURED MORE THAN AN INCH. 1.84 INCHES OF RAINFALL ON JULY 4TH SET A NEW 24 HOUR CALENDAR DAY RECORD BREAKING THE OLD RECORD OF 1.44 INCHES SET IN 1909. THE 24 HOUR DENVER RAINFALL RECORD IS 6.53 INCHES RECORDED BETWEEN THE 21ST AND 22ND OF MAY IN 1876. IT WAS ALSO A WARM JULY IN DENVER DURING 2010. NOT WARM ENOUGH TO GET THE TOP TEN WARMEST (76.4 DEGREES IN 1980) BUT STILL IT WAS 1.0 DEGREE ABOVE THE NORMAL OF 73.4 DEGREES. THE MONTH FINISHED WITH AN AVERAGE TEMPERATURE OF 74.4 DEGREES. THE WARMEST DENVER JULY WHICH IS ALSO THE HOTTEST DENVER MONTH SINCE 1872 OCCURRED IN 1934 WITH AN AVERAGE MERCURY READING OF 77.8 DEGREES. THE COLDEST JULY WAS 67.4 DEGREES REGISTERED IN 1895. THERE WERE 18 DAYS THAT REGISTERED TEMPERATURES 90 DEGREES OR HIGHER WITH ONE RECORD SETTING 102 DEGREE TEMPERATURE RECORDED ON JULY 17TH. ALSO WORTH MENTIONING... THERE WAS ONE 90 DEGREE STREAK OF 8 DAYS FROM JULY 12TH THROUGH THE 19TH. MERCURY READINGS DURING THE MONTH RANGED FROM THE RECORD SETTING 102 DEGREES DOWN TO 3 READINGS OF 53 DEGREES. FOURTEEN THUNDERSTORMS WERE OBSERVED AT THE DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT OF WHICH ONE PRODUCED PEA TO MARBLE SIZE HAIL AT THE AIRPORT. THE HAIL WAS RECORDED ON JULY 4TH. FOUR DAYS HAD LIGHT FOG WITH ONE DAY RECORDING VISIBILITY DOWN TO 1/4 MILE OR LESS. THE PEAK WIND FOR THE MONTH OCCURRED TWICE...48 MPH ON THE 4TH AND THE 30TH FROM DIRECTIONS OF 060 (NE) AND 340 (NW) RESPECTIVELY. HIGHEST SEA-LEVEL PRESSURE WAS 30.20 INCHES ON THE 7TH WHILE THE LOWEST PRESSURE WAS 29.46 INCHES ON THE 3RD. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE 30-DAY OUTLOOK MODELS SUGGEST THAT PRECIPITATION DURING JULY 2011 WILL BE AT OR NEAR NORMAL AMOUNTS WHILE TEMPERATURES WILL BE AT OR SLIGHTLY ABOVE NORMAL. FOR PLANNING PURPOSES... DENVER'S CLIMATOLOGICAL NORMALS ARE LISTED BELOW. DENVER'S CLIMATOLOGICAL STATISTICS ARE LISTED BELOW: (NORMALS BASED ON 1971-2000 DATA) ...TEMPERATURE... AVERAGE HIGH........................... 88.0 AVERAGE LOW............................ 58.7 MONTHLY MEAN........................... 73.4 DAYS WITH HIGH 90 OR ABOVE............. 15 DAYS WITH HIGH 32 OR BELOW............. 0 DAYS WITH LOW 32 OR BELOW............. 0 DAYS WITH LOWS ZERO OR BELOW........... 0 ...PRECIPITATION... MONTHLY MEAN........................... 2.16 INCHES DAYS WITH MEASURABLE PRECIPITATION...... 9 AVERAGE SNOWFALL........................ 0* DAYS WITH 1.0 INCH OR MORE SNOWFALL..... 0* *N0TE: NO SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED IN DENVER DURING JULY. ...MISCELLANEOUS JULY AVERAGES... HEATING DEGREE DAYS................. 1 COOLING DEGREES DAYS................ 261 WIND SPEED.......................... 8.3 MPH WIND DIRECTION...................... SOUTH DAYS WITH THUNDERSTORMS............. 11 DAYS WITH DENSE FOG................. 0* *LESS THAN 1 PERCENT OF SUNSHINE POSSIBLE........ 71 ...EXTREMES FOR JULY... RECORD HIGH...... 105 DEGREES 7/20/2005 (TIES AS HOTTEST DENVER TEMPERATURE WITH AUGUST 8, 1878) RECORD LOW....... 42 DEGREES 7/04/1903 7/31/1873 WARMEST............................. 77.8 DEGREES 1934 *****WARMEST MONTH IN DENVER HISTORY***** COLDEST.................................. 67.4 DEGREES 1895 MOST COOLING DEGREE DAYS................. 405 2005 LEAST COOLING DEGREE DAYS................ 181 2009 MOST HEATING DEGREE DAYS..(SINCE 1899)... 42 1972 LEAST HEATING DEGREE DAYS.(SINCE 1899)... 0 (MULTIPLE YEARS) WETTEST................................... 6.41 INCHES 1965 MAXIMUM 24 HOUR RAINFALL................. 3.43 INCHES 1951 DRIEST................................... 0.01 INCH 1901 SNOWIEST................................. 0* MAXIMUM 24 HOUR SNOWFALL................. 0* LEAST SNOWIEST........................... 0* *NOTE: ***NO SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED IN DENVER DURING JULY. BENTON  776 NOUS45 KBOU 180055 PNSBOU A PREVIEW OF DENVER'S JULY WEATHER NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER CO 530 PM MDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...JULY IS NORMALLY A STORMY MONTH IN DENVER... DENVER'S WEATHER IS NOTORIOUS FOR BEING CHANGEABLE. HOWEVER ...THIS IS NOT THE CASE DURING JULY. MOST JULY MORNINGS ARE SUNNY WITH CLOUDS DEVELOPING DURING THE LATE MORNING AND EARLY AFTERNOON. BY MID AFTERNOON... THUNDERSTORMS HAVE DEVELOPED OVER THE FOOTHILLS AND DRIFT ACROSS THE DENVER METRO AREA AND ONTO THE EASTERN PLAINS. SOME OF THESE STORMS CONTINUE TO DEVELOP AND REACH SEVERE STATUS. SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CONTAINING LARGE HAIL ...STRONG GUSTY WINDS AND HEAVY DOWNPOURS ARE NOT UNCOMMON DURING JULY FOR THE DENVER METRO AREA. THE WORST HAIL STORM ON RECORD IN DENVER HISTORY MOVED ACROSS THE WESTERN SECTIONS OF THE CITY ON JULY 11TH, 1990. THIS FEROCIOUS STORM DROPPED BASEBALL TO SOFTBALL SIZED HAIL AND CAUSED MILLIONS OF DOLLARS WORTH OF PROPERTY DAMAGE. JULY IS THE STORMIEST MONTH OF THE YEAR WITH THUNDERSTORMS OCCURRING ABOUT EVERY THIRD DAY OR USUALLY 11 DAYS PER MONTH. MOST OF THE RAINFALL DURING THE MONTH IS THE RESULT OF SLOW MOVING THUNDERSTORMS WHICH CAN CAUSE PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS TO VARY TREMENDOUSLY AT DIFFERENT LOCATIONS ACROSS THE METRO AREA. IT IS NOT UNUSUAL FOR SOME AREAS OF THE CITY TO RECEIVE TWO OR THREE TIMES AS MUCH PRECIPITATION AS OTHER AREAS. FLASH FLOODING IS ALSO QUITE POSSIBLE DURING JULY. JULY IS ALSO THE DENVER MONTH THAT HAS THE MOST 90 DEGREE CONSECUTIVE DAYS. THERE HAVE BEEN 15 TIMES WHERE CONSECUTIVE STREAKS OF 10 OR MORE 90 DEGREE DAYS HAVE EITHER BEEN ENTIRELY IN JULY OR AT LEAST STARTED IN JUNE AND FINISHED IN JULY OR THE STREAK BEGAN IN JULY AND FINISHED UP IN AUGUST. THE HIGHEST CONSECUTIVE STREAK OF 90 DEGREE DAYS IS 18 DAYS AND IT OCCURRED TWICE. ONCE IN 1901 FROM JULY 6TH THROUGH JULY 23RD AND AGAIN IN 1874 FROM JULY 1ST TO JULY 18TH. MORE RECENTLY...17 CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE DAYS OCCURRED IN 2000 FROM JUNE 29TH THROUGH JULY 15TH. THE 90 DEGREE STREAK RECORD THAT HAS HELD ITS OWN SINCE 1901 (AND 1874) WAS BROKEN DURING JULY 2008. THE RECORD STREAK OF 18 CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE DAYS GAVE WAY TO 19 DAYS FROM JULY 13TH THROUGH JULY 31ST. THE STREAK DID NOT END ON JULY 31ST. IN FACT, IT CONTINUED RIGHT ON INTO AUGUST AND FINISHED WITH A TOTAL OF 24 CONSECUTIVE 90 OR HIGHER DEGREE DAYS. EVEN WITH ALL THE 90 DEGREE OR HIGHER DAYS, JULY 2008 ONLY FINISHED AT NUMBER 3 IN THE TOP 10 WARMEST AND ALSO THE 3RD DRIEST DENVER JULY. JULY 2005 WAS A RECORD HEAT SETTING MONTH. SIX RECORD HIGH TEMPERATURE WERE SET...ALL IN THE 100'S. IN FACT ON JULY 20TH...THE MERCURY SOARED TO 105 DEGREES TYING THE ALL TIME DENVER HIGH TEMPERATURE SET ON AUGUST 8TH 1878 AND BREAKING THE 102 RECORD FOR JULY 20TH. OTHER RECORDS WERE 102 DEGREES ON THE 16TH. 101 ON THE 19TH. 105 ON THE 20TH. 104 ON THE 21ST. 102 ON THE 22ND. 102 ON THE 23RD AND 101 DEGREES ON THE 30TH. JULY 2005 BECAME THE 2ND HOTTEST JULY AND ALSO THE 2ND HOTTEST DENVER MONTH. THERE WERE 25 DAYS REGISTERING 90 DEGREES OR HIGHER WHICH TIES THE 3RD MOST EVER WITH 1963. ...DENVER'S JULY 2010 WAS WET AND WARM BUT NOT RECORD SETTING... IT WAS A WET MONTH FOR DENVER DURING JULY 2010. 3.70 INCH OF LIQUID COLLECTED IN THE RAIN BUCKET WHICH WAS A MERE 0.01 INCH FROM TIEING THE 10TH WETTEST DENVER JULY. THIS TOTAL WAS 1.54 INCHES ABOVE THE NORMAL JULY AMOUNT OF 2.16 INCHES. THE WETTEST JULY WAS 6.41 INCHES SET BACK IN 1965. THE DRIEST JULY WAS AN INCREDIBLE 0.01 INCH RECORDED IN 1901. DURING JULY 2010 THERE WERE 13 DAYS WITH MEASURABLE MOISTURE WHICH IS 0.01 INCH OR MORE. FIVE DAYS RECORDED A TENTH OR MORE...TWO DAYS HAD A HALF AN INCH OR MORE AND THERE WERE 2 DAYS THAT ACTUALLY MEASURED MORE THAN AN INCH. 1.84 INCHES OF RAINFALL ON JULY 4TH SET A NEW 24 HOUR CALENDAR DAY RECORD BREAKING THE OLD RECORD OF 1.44 INCHES SET IN 1909. THE 24 HOUR DENVER RAINFALL RECORD IS 6.53 INCHES RECORDED BETWEEN THE 21ST AND 22ND OF MAY IN 1876. IT WAS ALSO A WARM JULY IN DENVER DURING 2010. NOT WARM ENOUGH TO GET THE TOP TEN WARMEST (76.4 DEGREES IN 1980) BUT STILL IT WAS 1.0 DEGREE ABOVE THE NORMAL OF 73.4 DEGREES. THE MONTH FINISHED WITH AN AVERAGE TEMPERATURE OF 74.4 DEGREES. THE WARMEST DENVER JULY WHICH IS ALSO THE HOTTEST DENVER MONTH SINCE 1872 OCCURRED IN 1934 WITH AN AVERAGE MERCURY READING OF 77.8 DEGREES. THE COLDEST JULY WAS 67.4 DEGREES REGISTERED IN 1895. THERE WERE 18 DAYS THAT REGISTERED TEMPERATURES 90 DEGREES OR HIGHER WITH ONE RECORD SETTING 102 DEGREE TEMPERATURE RECORDED ON JULY 17TH. ALSO WORTH MENTIONING... THERE WAS ONE 90 DEGREE STREAK OF 8 DAYS FROM JULY 12TH THROUGH THE 19TH. MERCURY READINGS DURING THE MONTH RANGED FROM THE RECORD SETTING 102 DEGREES DOWN TO 3 READINGS OF 53 DEGREES. FOURTEEN THUNDERSTORMS WERE OBSERVED AT THE DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT OF WHICH ONE PRODUCED PEA TO MARBLE SIZE HAIL AT THE AIRPORT. THE HAIL WAS RECORDED ON JULY 4TH. FOUR DAYS HAD LIGHT FOG WITH ONE DAY RECORDING VISIBILITY DOWN TO 1/4 MILE OR LESS. THE PEAK WIND FOR THE MONTH OCCURRED TWICE...48 MPH ON THE 4TH AND THE 30TH FROM DIRECTIONS OF 060 (NE) AND 340 (NW) RESPECTIVELY. HIGHEST SEA-LEVEL PRESSURE WAS 30.20 INCHES ON THE 7TH WHILE THE LOWEST PRESSURE WAS 29.46 INCHES ON THE 3RD. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE 30-DAY OUTLOOK MODELS SUGGEST THAT PRECIPITATION DURING JULY 2011 WILL BE AT OR NEAR NORMAL AMOUNTS WHILE TEMPERATURES WILL BE AT OR SLIGHTLY ABOVE NORMAL. FOR PLANNING PURPOSES... DENVER'S CLIMATOLOGICAL NORMALS ARE LISTED BELOW. DENVER'S CLIMATOLOGICAL STATISTICS ARE LISTED BELOW: (NORMALS BASED ON 1971-2000 DATA) ...TEMPERATURE... AVERAGE HIGH........................... 88.0 AVERAGE LOW............................ 58.7 MONTHLY MEAN........................... 73.4 DAYS WITH HIGH 90 OR ABOVE............. 15 DAYS WITH HIGH 32 OR BELOW............. 0 DAYS WITH LOW 32 OR BELOW............. 0 DAYS WITH LOWS ZERO OR BELOW........... 0 ...PRECIPITATION... MONTHLY MEAN........................... 2.16 INCHES DAYS WITH MEASURABLE PRECIPITATION...... 9 AVERAGE SNOWFALL........................ 0* DAYS WITH 1.0 INCH OR MORE SNOWFALL..... 0* *N0TE: NO SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED IN DENVER DURING JULY. ...MISCELLANEOUS JULY AVERAGES... HEATING DEGREE DAYS................. 1 COOLING DEGREES DAYS................ 261 WIND SPEED.......................... 8.3 MPH WIND DIRECTION...................... SOUTH DAYS WITH THUNDERSTORMS............. 11 DAYS WITH DENSE FOG................. 0* *LESS THAN 1 PERCENT OF SUNSHINE POSSIBLE........ 71 ...EXTREMES FOR JULY... RECORD HIGH...... 105 DEGREES 7/20/2005 (TIES AS HOTTEST DENVER TEMPERATURE WITH AUGUST 8, 1878) RECORD LOW....... 42 DEGREES 7/04/1903 7/31/1873 WARMEST............................. 77.8 DEGREES 1934 *****WARMEST MONTH IN DENVER HISTORY***** COLDEST.................................. 67.4 DEGREES 1895 MOST COOLING DEGREE DAYS................. 405 2005 LEAST COOLING DEGREE DAYS................ 181 2009 MOST HEATING DEGREE DAYS..(SINCE 1899)... 42 1972 LEAST HEATING DEGREE DAYS.(SINCE 1899)... 0 (MULTIPLE YEARS) WETTEST................................... 6.41 INCHES 1965 MAXIMUM 24 HOUR RAINFALL................. 3.43 INCHES 1951 DRIEST................................... 0.01 INCH 1901 SNOWIEST................................. 0* MAXIMUM 24 HOUR SNOWFALL................. 0* LEAST SNOWIEST........................... 0* *NOTE: ***NO SNOWFALL EVER RECORDED IN DENVER DURING JULY. BENTON  616 NOUS43 KTOP 180121 PNSTOP PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TOPEKA KS 821 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...STORM SAFETY INFORMATION.... A SEVERE WEATHER WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN TOPEKA FOR A PORTION OF KANSAS. IN THE INTEREST OF PUBLIC SAFETY...THE FOLLOWING SAFETY INFORMATION IS PROVIDED. A WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR SEVERE WEATHER DEVELOPMENT WITHIN IN THE WATCH AREA. THERE IS NO CAUSE FOR IMMEDIATE CONCERN...AND YOU MAY GO ABOUT YOUR NORMAL BUSINESS. STAY INFORMED OF THE WEATHER SITUATION. KNOW YOUR COUNTY...NEARBY CITIES...AND LOCAL LANDMARKS WHETHER AT HOME OR IF YOU ARE ON THE ROAD. LISTEN TO WEATHER RADIO OR LOCAL MEDIA FOR UPDATED WEATHER INFORMATION. A WARNING MEANS A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM OR TORNADO HAS BEEN OBSERVED OR IS INDICATED BY DOPPLER WEATHER RADAR. IF A WARNING IS ISSUED FOR YOUR LOCATION...IMMEDIEATELY PUT YOUR EMERGENCY SAFETY PLAN INTO ACTION. ...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS MAY PRODUCE... STRONG DAMAGING WINDS...DAMAGING DOWNBURST WINDS ASSOCIATED WITH A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WILL BE GREATER THAN 60MPH. GO INDOORS OR INTO A BASEMENT OR STORM SHELTER AND STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS. LARGE HAIL...DESTRUCTIVE HAIL ASSOCIATED WITH A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WILL BE GREATER THAN ONE INCH IN DIAMETER. GO INDOORS OR INTO A BASEMENT AND STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS. HEAVY RAIN...HEAVY RAIN MAY PRODUCE FLASH FLOODING QUICKLY. AVOID LOW LYING AND POOR DRAINAGE AREAS. BE CAUTIOUS WHEN DRIVING AT NIGHT AS ROADS COULD BE WASHED OUT. TURN AROUND...DONT DROWN. DEADLY LIGHTNING...LIGHTNING IS AN UNDERRATED KILLER. WHEN LIGHTNING THREATENS...GET INDOORS AND AWAY FROM WINDOWS...STAY AWAY TREES OR TOWERS... AND AVOID LAKES AND BOATS TORNADOES...TORNADOES ARE NATURES MOST VIOLENT STORMS. THE BEST SHELTERS ARE A BASEMENT OR UNDERGROUND STORM SHELTER...ON THE LOWEST FLOOR IN THE MIDDLE OF THE BUILDING...OR IN AN INTERIOR HALLWAY OR DESIGNATED SHELTER AREA. AVOID WINDOWS...MOBILE HOMES...AND LARGE OPEN SPACES LIKE A GYMNASIUM OR AUDITORIUM. IF ON THE ROAD...DRIVE TO FIND SAFE SHELTER. AS A LAST RESORT EITHER ABANDON VEHICLES AND GET INTO A DITCH OR STAY BELTED IN YOUR VEHICLE CROUCHED BELOW THE WINDOW LINE. AGAIN...STAY INFORMED OF THE WEATHER SITUATION. KNOW YOUR COUNTY...NEARBY CITIES...AND LOCAL LANDMARKS WHETHER AT HOME OR ON THE ROAD. LISTEN TO WEATHER RADIO OR LOCAL MEDIA FOR UPDATED WEATHER INFORMATION. $$  127 NOUS43 KBIS 180144 PNSBIS NDZ035-180730- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 845 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 815 PM CDT FRIDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 18.58 FEET. $$  375 NOUS43 KTOP 180159 PNSTOP KSZ008>012-020>024-026-034>040-054>056-058-059-180500- REPUBLIC-WASHINGTON-MARSHALL-NEMAHA-BROWN-CLOUD-CLAY-RILEY- POTTAWATOMIE-JACKSON-JEFFERSON-OTTAWA-DICKINSON-GEARY-MORRIS- WABAUNSEE-SHAWNEE-DOUGLAS-LYON-OSAGE-FRANKLIN-COFFEY-ANDERSON- INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...MARYSVILLE...HIAWATHA...CONCORDIA... CLAY CENTER...MANHATTAN...ABILENE...JUNCTION CITY...TOPEKA... LAWRENCE...EMPORIA...OTTAWA 859 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TOPEKA KS 859 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...WARNING POLYGONS AND RADAR DATA NOT BEING DISPLAYED ON WEB PAGES... DUE TO TECHNICAL ISSUES WITH A WEB SERVER...WARNING POLYGONS AND RADAR DATA ARE NOT CURRENTLY BEING DISPLAYED ON NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WEBSITES INCLUDING HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/TOP AND HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/TOPEKA. TECHNICIANS IN WASHINGTON D.C. WHERE THE WEB SERVER IS LOCATED ARE CURRENTLY WORKING THE TECHNICAL ISSUES. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN TOPEKA APOLOGIZES FOR THIS INCONVENIENCE. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION WILL BE PASSED ALONG AS IT BECOMES AVAILABLE. $$ ANGLE  772 NOUS43 KTOP 180307 PNSTOP KSZ008>012-020>024-026-034>040-054>056-058-059-180615- REPUBLIC-WASHINGTON-MARSHALL-NEMAHA-BROWN-CLOUD-CLAY-RILEY- POTTAWATOMIE-JACKSON-JEFFERSON-OTTAWA-DICKINSON-GEARY-MORRIS- WABAUNSEE-SHAWNEE-DOUGLAS-LYON-OSAGE-FRANKLIN-COFFEY-ANDERSON- INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...MARYSVILLE...HIAWATHA...CONCORDIA... CLAY CENTER...MANHATTAN...ABILENE...JUNCTION CITY...TOPEKA... LAWRENCE...EMPORIA...OTTAWA 1007 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TOPEKA KS 1007 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...WARNING POLYGONS AND RADAR DATA ON NWS WEB PAGES... WARNING POLYGONS AND RADAR DATA HAVE BEEN RESTORED ON NWS WEBSITES INCLUDING HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/TOP AND HTTP://WWW.WEATHER.GOV/TOPEKA. TECHNICIANS IN WASHINGTON D.C. WHERE THE WEB SERVER IS LOCATED WILL CONTINUE TO MONITOR FOR ANY ADDITIONAL TECHNICAL ISSUES. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN TOPEKA APOLOGIZES FOR THIS INCONVENIENCE. $$ ANGLE  666 NOUS45 KLKN 180315 PNSLKN NVZ013-030>032-034>037-181515- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ELKO NV 815 PM PDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...A COLD FRIDAY MORNING... MINIMUM TEMPERATURES AS OF FRIDAY AFTERNOON: LOCATION ELEVATION TEMPERATURE (F) HUMBOLDT COUNTY BUCKSKIN LOWER (SNOTEL)............6700 FT........35 F. DENIO (COOP).......................4190 FT........36 F. DISASTER PEAK (SNOTEL).............6500 FT........45 F. DOUBLE H (RAWS)....................6380 FT........45 F. DRY CANYON (RAWS)..................4900 FT........37 F. GRANITE PEAK (SNOTEL)..............7800 FT........37 F. LAMANCE CREEK (SNOTEL).............6000 FT........44 F. MCDERMITT (COOP)...................4430 FT........29 F. MOREY CREEK (RAWS).................5500 FT........42 F. ROSE CREEK (RAWS)..................4389 FT........30 F. TEXAS SPRINGS (RAWS)...............5760 FT........46 F. WINNEMUCCA AIRPORT (ASOS)..........4301 FT........29 F. NORTHERN ELKO COUNTY ANTELOPE LAKE (RAWS)...............5460 FT........36 F. BEAR CREEK (SNOTEL)................7800 FT........26 F. BIG BEND (SNOTEL)..................6700 FT........34 F. BISHOP FLAT (NDOT).................6004 FT........20 F. CHARLESTON (COOP)..................5968 FT........21 F. DRAW CREEK (SNOTEL)................7200 FT........33 F. FAWN CREEK (SNOTEL)................7000 FT........36 F. HD SUMMIT (NDOT)...................6282 FT........32 F. JACK CREEK UPPER (SNOTEL)..........7250 FT........37 F. JACKPOT (HANDAR)...................5295 FT........31 F. JACKS PEAK (SNOTEL)................8420 FT........36 F. JARBIDGE (RAWS)....................8502 FT........30 F. LAUREL DRAW (SNOTEL)...............6700 FT........32 F. LONG HOLLOW (RAWS).................5820 FT........34 F. MOUNTAIN CITY RS (HADS)............5620 FT........26 F. O'NEIL (NDOT)......................5667 FT........28 F. OWYHEE (HADS)......................5396 FT........37 F. POLE CREEK RS (SNOTEL).............8330 FT........31 F. ROCK SPRING CREEK (RAWS)...........5400 FT........28 F. SEVENTYSIX CREEK (SNOTEL)..........7100 FT........33 F. STAG MOUNTAIN (RAWS)...............6790 FT........33 F. TAYLOR CANYON (SNOTEL).............6200 FT........24 F. SOUTHWEST AND SOUTH CENTRAL ELKO COUNTY CARLIN TUNNEL WEST (NDOT)..........5037 FT........32 F. CRANE SPRINGS (RAWS)...............6400 FT........36 F. ELKO AIRPORT (ASOS)................5074 FT........33 F. ELKO NWS OFFICE (COOP).............5235 FT........31 F. ELKO SUMMIT (NDOT).................5787 FT........38 F. ELKO WEST (NDOT)...................5111 FT........32 F. HALLECK JUNCTION (NDOT)............5354 FT........30 F. LAMOILLE 2 N (COOP)................5750 FT........28 F. OASIS (COOP).......................5835 FT........28 F. PALAMINO (NDOT)....................6348 FT........39 F. PEQUOP SUMMIT (NDOT)...............6998 FT........28 F. RYNDON (COOP)......................5205 FT........25 F. SOUTH FORK SRA (COOP)..............5270 FT........31 F. SPRUCE MOUNTAIN (RAWS).............6100 FT........35 F. WELLS (HANDAR).....................5688 FT........32 F. EXTREME EASTERN ELKO COUNTY PILOT PEAK JUNCTION (NDOT).........4671 FT........40 F. SPRING GULCH (RAWS)................5470 FT........41 F. WENDOVER AIRPORT (AWOS)............4236 FT........45 F. RUBY MOUNTAINS/EAST HUMBOLDT RANGE CORRAL CANYON (SNOTEL).............8500 FT........38 F. DORSEY BASIN (SNOTEL)..............8100 FT........34 F. GREEN MOUNTAIN (SNOTEL)............8000 FT........34 F. HOLE-IN-MOUNTAIN (SNOTEL)..........7900 FT........35 F. LAMOILLE #3 (SNOTEL)...............7700 FT........35 F. RUBY LAKE (RAWS)...................5970 FT........29 F. RUBY LAKE NWR (COOP)...............6019 FT........33 F. RUBY VALLEY (RAWS).................6900 FT........41 F. NORTHERN LANDER AND EUREKA COUNTIES BATTLE MOUNTAIN 4 SE (COOP)........4505 FT........38 F. BEACON LIGHT (RAWS)................4800 FT........42 F. EMIGRANT PASS (NDOT)...............6135 FT........43 F. LEWIS PEAK (SNOTEL)................7400 FT........37 F. SOUTHERN LANDER AND EUREKA COUNTIES AUSTIN (RAWS)......................6310 FT........39 F. AUSTIN SUMMIT (NDOT)...............7493 FT........39 F. BEAN FLAT MONITOR (NDOT)...........6307 FT........31 F. BIG CREEK SUM (SNOTEL).............8700 FT........38 F. COILS CREEK (RAWS).................6800 FT........31 F. COMBS CANYON (RAWS)................6590 FT........32 F. DESATOYA MOUNTAIN (RAWS)...........6200 FT........32 F. DIAMOND PEAK (SNOTEL)..............8000 FT........39 F. EUREKA (AGRIMET)...................5897 FT........27 F. EUREKA (COOP)......................6430 FT........32 F. EUREKA AIRPORT (ASOS)..............5936 FT........30 F. HICKISON SUMMIT (NDOT).............6556 FT........37 F. PINTO SUMMIT (NDOT)................7381 FT........33 F. RED BUTTE (RAWS)...................5050 FT........32 F. NORTHERN NYE COUNTY BLUE EAGLE RANCH (COOP)............4780 FT........53 F. CURRANT CREEK (RAWS)...............5750 FT........47 F. CURRANT SUMMIT (NDOT)..............6995 FT........45 F. NYALA (CEMP).......................4825 FT........55 F. PANCAKE (RAWS).....................5200 FT........52 F. QUIMA PEAK (RAWS)..................7984 FT........40 F. SEVEN MILE (RAWS)..................7725 FT........30 F. STONE CABIN (CEMP).................5800 FT........46 F. TONOPAH (CEMP).....................6110 FT........49 F. TONOPAH AIRPORT (ASOS).............5395 FT........49 F. TWIN SPRINGS (CEMP)................5056 FT........50 F. WARM SPRINGS SUMMIT (CEMP).........7550 FT........45 F. WHITE PINE COUNTY ALLIGATOR RIDGE (RAWS).............6675 FT........39 F. BAKER (CRN)........................5300 FT........41 F. BAKER (NDOT).......................5613 FT........49 F. BAKER FLAT (RAWS)..................6840 FT........41 F. BERRY CREEK (SNOTEL)...............9100 FT........33 F. CATTLE CAMP (RAWS).................7025 FT........38 F. CEDAR PASS (RAWS)..................7314 FT........33 F. CONNERS SUMMIT (NDOT)..............7228 FT........45 F. ELY (RAWS).........................6222 FT........33 F. ELY AIRPORT (ASOS).................6262 FT........31 F. GREAT BASIN NATIONAL PARK (COOP)...6850 FT........40 F. LITTLE ANTELOPE (NDOT).............7490 FT........36 F. LUND (COOP)........................5546 FT........40 F. MATHER (RAWS)......................9268 FT........33 F. MCGILL (COOP)......................6270 FT........37 F. MOORMAN RANCH (COOP)...............6539 FT........33 F. MURRAY SUMMIT (NDOT)...............7290 FT........37 F. PANCAKE SUMMIT (NDOT)..............6526 FT........39 F. ROBINSON SUMMIT (NDOT).............7641 FT........37 F. RUTH (COOP)........................6858 FT........30 F. SACRAMENTO SUMMIT (NDOT)...........6843 FT........44 F. SCHELL CREEK ELK VIEW (NDOT).......6687 FT........35 F. WARD MOUNTAIN (SNOTEL).............9200 FT........40 F. $$ RCM  854 NOUS43 KLSX 180406 PNSLSX ILZ098>102-MOZ052-060>065-181200- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ST LOUIS MO 1106 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO KDO-89 ST LOUIS MISSOURI REMAINS OFF AIR... NOAA WEATHER RADIO KDO-89 ST LOUIS MISSOURI WILL REMAIN OFF THE AIR AT LEAST THROUGH THE REST OF THE NIGHT INTO EARLY SATURDAY MORNING. TELEPHONE COMPANY TECHNICIANS WILL NOT BE ABLE TO REPAIR THE LINES TO THE SITE UNTIL SOMETIME ON SATURDAY DUE TO OTHER LINE PROBLEMS IN THE AREA. THUNDERSTORMS ARE STILL POSSIBLE TONIGHT AND SATURDAY...AND SOME STORMS MAY BE SEVERE. PLEASE STAY TUNED TO LOCAL MEDIA OUTLETS OR MONITOR THE ST LOUIS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WEBSITE AT WEATHER.GOV/STLOUIS FOR UPDATES. $$ CARNEY  337 NOUS43 KBIS 180433 PNSBIS NDZ035-181430- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 1135 PM CDT FRI JUN 17 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 1115 PM CDT FRIDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 18.63 FEET. $$ TWH  686 NOUS43 KTOP 180613 PNSTOP KSZ040-054>056-058-059-181215- DOUGLAS-LYON-OSAGE-FRANKLIN-COFFEY-ANDERSON- INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...LAWRENCE...EMPORIA...OTTAWA 113 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TOPEKA KS 111 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER IN HALLS SUMMIT DOWN... NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION KGG98 IN HALLS SUMMIT IS DOWN...POSSIBLY DUE TO POWER AND PHONE LINE OUTAGES IN THE AREA. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IS CURRENTLY TROUBLESHOOTING THE PROBLEM. $$  123 NOUS43 KBIS 180719 PNSBIS NDZ035-181430- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 210 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 115 AM CDT SATURDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 18.68 FEET. $$ JP MARTIN  327 NOUS43 KLSX 180747 PNSLSX ILZ058>060-064-065-069-070-074-079-095>102-MOZ018-019-026-027- 034>036-041-042-047>052-059>065-072>075-084-085-099-181400- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ST LOUIS MO 247 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...SAFETY RULES FOR SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS... A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE. IN THE INTEREST OF PUBLIC SAFETY...THE FOLLOWING SAFETY RULES ARE PROVIDED. PUBLIC AND COMMERCIAL BROADCAST STATIONS SERVING THE AFFECTED AREA ARE ASKED TO BROADCAST THESE SAFETY MESSAGES FREQUENTLY WHILE THE WATCH IS IN EFFECT. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN AND CLOSE TO THE WATCH AREA. IF YOU ARE IN THE WATCH AREA...KEEP UP TO DATE OF THE LATEST WEATHER INFORMATION. THESE STORMS CAN DEVELOP RAPIDLY SO THERE MAY BE OCCASIONS WHEN ADVANCE WARNING IS NOT POSSIBLE. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WARNING MEANS A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM HAS BEEN OBSERVED OR INDICATED ON RADAR. IF YOU ARE IN THE PATH OR NEAR THE STORM...TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTIONS TO PROTECT LIFE AND PROPERTY. FOLLOW THESE SAFETY RULES: (1) IN OPEN COUNTRY...YOU SHOULD SEEK SHELTER AND AVOID TREES WHICH CAN BE TARGETS FOR LIGHTNING. IF THERE IS NO SHELTER... GO TO A DITCH OR CULVERT BUT BEWARE OF RISING WATER WHICH CAN CAUSE FLOODING. (2) WHEN INDOORS...STAY AWAY FROM OUTSIDE WALLS AND WINDOWS AND GO TO AN INTERIOR ROOM ON THE LOWEST LEVEL. AVOID USING ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES WHILE THE STORM IS NEARBY. (3) IN MOBILE HOMES...YOU SHOULD LEAVE AND SEEK NEARBY SAFE SHELTER. (4) IF SWIMMING OR ON A BOAT...YOU SHOULD GET TO SHORE AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE AND FIND SHELTER. A THUNDERSTORM IS CONSIDERED SEVERE WHEN IT CONTAINS ONE INCH OR LARGER DIAMETER SIZE HAIL AND/OR WIND GUSTS OF 58 MILES AN HOUR OR GREATER. A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM CAN ALSO PRODUCE DEADLY LIGHTNING AND VERY HEAVY RAIN WHICH CAN LEAD TO FLASH FLOODING. REMEMBER...WITH ANY SEVERE THUNDERSTORM THERE IS ALWAYS THE POSSIBILITY OF TORNADOES. $$ TRUETT  899 NOUS45 KBOU 180859 PNSBOU COZ030>051-182300- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER CO 259 AM MDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...TODAY IN METRO DENVER WEATHER HISTORY... 17-18 IN 1964...HIGH WINDS AT SPEEDS OF 50 TO 60 MPH WITH GUSTS AS HIGH AS 75 MPH CAUSED DAMAGE TO HOMES...POWER LINES...AND TREES IN BOULDER. NON-CONVECTIVE WEST WINDS GUSTING TO 46 MPH CAUSED SOME BLOWING DUST AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ON THE 17TH. 18 IN 1875...A WINDSTORM PRODUCED SUSTAINED WINDS TO 45 MPH DURING THE MORNING HOURS. NUMEROUS FOREST FIRES ALONG THE BASE OF THE MOUNTAINS WERE VISIBLE FROM THE CITY. IN 1886...NORTHWEST WINDS SUSTAINED TO 40 MPH WERE THE STRONGEST OF THE MONTH THAT YEAR. IN 1987...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED LIGHTNING...LARGE HAIL... A TORNADO...HEAVY RAIN...AND STRONG WINDS ACROSS METRO DENVER. RAINFALL TOTALED 2.50 INCHES IN AN HOUR IN WHEAT RIDGE... CAUSING MINOR FLOODING. I-25 WAS FLOODED IN NORTH-CENTRAL DENVER...SNARLING TRAFFIC. HAIL 7/8 INCH IN DIAMETER FELL IN LOUISVILLE WITH 1 1/2 INCH HAIL NEAR GOLDEN AND 1 TO 1 3/4 INCH HAIL IN AND NEAR CASTLE ROCK. A TORNADO TOUCHED DOWN BRIEFLY IN CASTLE ROCK. NO DAMAGE WAS REPORTED. LIGHTNING STARTED A SMALL FIRE THAT BURNED HALF A CABIN NEAR EVERGREEN. IN 1994...A FUNNEL CLOUD WAS SIGHTED OVER AURORA; HAIL TO 1 3/4 INCH DIAMETER FELL NEAR BRIGHTON; AND HAIL OVER AN INCH IN DIAMETER FELL OVER AURORA...SOUTHEAST DENVER... LOUISVILLE...AND BOULDER. LIGHTNING STRUCK A HOME IN HENDERSON 9 MILES NORTH OF DENVER AND KNOCKED A HOLE IN THE ROOF...WHICH CAUSED THE CEILING TO COLLAPSE. HAIL TO 1 1/4 INCH DIAMETER WAS MEASURED AT STAPLETON INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. IN 2002...THE HAYMAN WILDFIRE IN THE FOOTHILLS TO THE SOUTHWEST OF DENVER INTENSIFIED...AND THE WINDS ALOFT CARRIED THE SMOKE PLUME DIRECTLY OVER METRO DENVER...AGAIN CREATING A DENSE HAZE OF SMOKE WHICH BLOCKED THE SUN. SURFACE VISIBILITIES WERE AGAIN REDUCED TO AS LOW AS 1 1/4 MILES AT DENVER INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT. IN 2004...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PRODUCED HAIL TO 3/4 INCH IN DIAMETER NEAR MORRISON...IN LITTLETON...NEAR CONIFER...NEAR CASTLE ROCK...AND IN AURORA NEAR CHERRY CREEK. $$  643 NOUS43 KBIS 180933 PNSBIS NDZ035-181430- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 430 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 415 AM CDT SATURDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 18.68 FEET. $$ JP MARTIN  600 NOUS43 KEAX 181007 PNSEAX MOZ005>007-014>016-022>024-181500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE KANSAS CITY/PLEASANT HILL 507 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE KANSAS CITY/PLEASANT HILL HAS EXPERIENCED A COMMUNICATIONS FAILURE. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN SPRINGFIELD MISSOURI HAS ASSUMED BACKUP RESPONSIBILITY FOR WARNING AND FORECAST OPERATIONS. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN TOPEKA KANSAS HAS ASSUMED BACKUP RESPONSIBILITY FOR AVIATION SERVICES. $$ 99  565 NOUS43 KIND 181015 PNSIND INZ047-181230- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE INDIANAPOLIS IN 615 AM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...ON THIS DATE IN CENTRAL INDIANA WEATHER HISTORY... 1978 TERRE HAUTE...WIND GUSTS AROUND 80 MPH BLOW OUT WINDOWS IN DOWNTOWN TERRE HAUTE. $$  951 NOUS44 KAMA 181050 PNSAMA OKZ001>003-TXZ001>020-191100- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AMARILLO TX 550 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DAMAGE SURVEY CONFIRMS FOUR TORNADOES AND STRAIGHT LINE WIND DAMAGE ON JUNE 11TH 2011... DARROUZETT EF0 TORNADO ---------------------- THE TORNADO FIRST TOUCHED DOWN NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF HIGHWAY 15 AND COUNTY ROAD 8 WEST OF DARROUZETT AROUND 649 PM CDT. THE TORNADO WAS ON THE GROUND FOR 0.5 MILE WITH A MAXIMUM WIDTH OF 50 YARDS. A BARN WAS DAMAGED AND AN OUTBUILDING WAS DESTROYED. THE MAXIMUM WIND SPEEDS WERE AROUND 80 MPH. THE TORNADO DISSIPATED JUST SOUTH OF HIGHWAY 15 BETWEEN COUNTY ROADS 8 AND 9 AROUND 651 PM CDT. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. TYRONE EF1 TORNADO ------------------ THE TORNADO FIRST TOUCHED DOWN NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF MILE 54 ROAD AND B ROAD NORTHEAST OF TYRONE AROUND 711 PM CDT. THE TORNADO WAS ON THE GROUND FOR 2.1 MILES WITH A MAXIMUM WIDTH OF 50 YARDS. A ROOF WAS REMOVED AND WINDOWS WERE BROKEN ON A MANUFACTURED HOME IN WESLEY ACRES. A FEW OUTBUILDINGS WERE ALSO DESTROYED. THE MAXIMUM WIND SPEEDS WERE 90 MPH. THE TORNADO DISSIPATED JUST SOUTHEAST OF THE INTERSECTION MILE 56 AND B ROAD AROUND 725 PM CDT. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. FOLLETT EF0 TORNADO ------------------- THE TORNADO BRIEFLY TOUCHED DOWN NEAR THE INTERSECTION OF COUNTY ROAD 19 AND COUNTY ROAD D NORTHWEST OF FOLLETT AROUND 750 PM CDT. THE TORNADO WAS ON THE GROUND FOR 300 YARDS WITH A MAXIMUM WIDTH OF 50 YARDS AND DISSIPATED AROUND 752 PM CDT. ONE OUTBUILDING WAS DESTROYED. THE MAXIMUM WIND SPEEDS WERE AROUND 80 MPH. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. BOYD EF0 TORNADO ---------------- THE TORNADO BRIEFLY TOUCHED DOWN NEAR HIGHWAY 83 AND NORTH 1228 ROAD AT 750 PM CDT AND DISSIPATED AT 752 CDT. NO DAMAGE WAS FOUND FROM THIS TORNADO. THE MAXIMUM ESTIMATED WIND SPEEDS WERE AROUND 65 MPH. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. BEAVER COUNTY STRAIGHT LINE WIND DAMAGE --------------------------------------- STRAIGHT LINE WINDS OVERTURNED THREE IRRIGATION PIVOTS AND SNAPPED A POWER POLE AT 823 PM CDT. A 1.5 MILE SWATH OF DAMAGE BETWEEN HIGHWAY 64 AND HOLLOW EAST 0080 ROAD NEAR HIGHWAY 270 WAS OBSERVED. MAXIMUM WIND SPEEDS WERE ESTIMATED TO BE 95 MPH. NO INJURIES OR FATALITIES WERE REPORTED. $$  790 NOUS43 KTOP 181054 PNSTOP KSZ040-054>056-058-059-181615- DOUGLAS-LYON-OSAGE-FRANKLIN-COFFEY-ANDERSON- INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...LAWRENCE...EMPORIA...OTTAWA 113 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TOPEKA KS 111 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER IN HALLS SUMMIT DOWN... NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION KGG98 IN HALLS SUMMIT IS DOWN...POSSIBLY DUE TO POWER AND PHONE LINE OUTAGES IN THE AREA. THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IS CURRENTLY TROUBLESHOOTING THE PROBLEM. $$  889 NOUS43 KICT 181101 PNSICT KSZ032-033-047>053-067>072-082-083-091>096-098>100-181500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WICHITA KS 601 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...ON THIS DATE IN WEATHER HISTORY... IN 1962...AT THE HEIGHT OF A THUNDERSTORM IN EUREKA...THE TEMPERATURE DROPPED TO 38 DEGREES. THIS WAS THE COLDEST JUNE TEMPERATURE EVER RECORDED IN EUREKA. $$ AUTO  579 NOUS43 KGLD 181200 PNSGLD PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GOODLAND KS 600 AM MDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...ON THIS DATE IN WEATHER HISTORY... IN 1936, IT WAS A RECORD BREAKING HOT DAY ACROSS PORTIONS OF NORTHWEST KANSAS. GOODLAND REACHED ITS HIGHEST TEMPERATURE EVER IN THE MONTH OF JUNE AT 109 DEGREES, TRIBUNE TIED ITS MONTHLY RECORD AT 107 DEGREES, AND COLBY SET A RECORD FOR THE DATE BUT NOT THE MONTH BY ALSO REACHING 107 DEGREES. IN 1970, WIND AND RAIN, AND HAIL UP TO SEVEN INCHES DEEP, CAUSED MORE THAN FIVE MILLION DOLLARS DAMAGE AT OBERLIN KANSAS. $$  156 NOUS43 KBIS 181214 PNSBIS NDZ035-181530- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 710 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 645 AM CDT SATURDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 18.72 FEET. $$ JP MARTIN  791 NOUS43 KBIS 181238 PNSBIS NDZ003-004-009-011-012-017-019-020-021-034-035-045-051-182300- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 730 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...SUMMARY OF FLOOD PRODUCTS AS OF EARLY SATURDAY MORNING... FLOOD WARNINGS ARE IN EFFECT FOR THESE AREAS... RENVILLE AND BOTTINEAU COUNTIES. IN THE SOURIS RIVER BASIN... THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR FOXHOLM...TOWNER...BANTRY...AND WESTHOPE...WHERE MAJOR TO RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING OR FORECAST. THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR SHERWOOD...AT MINOT 4 NW...MINOT BROADWAY BRIDGE...LOGAN...AND AT SAWYER...WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. WILLOW CREEK NEAR WILLOW CITY...AND THE SOURIS RIVER AT VELVA...WHERE MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. IN THE MISSOURI RIVER BASIN... THE MISSOURI RIVER NEAR WILLISTON...WHERE RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. A FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR THE MISSOURI RIVER FROM GARRISON DAM TO THE SOUTH DAKOTA BORDER. IN THE JAMES RIVER BASIN... THE JAMES RIVER NEAR LUDDEN DAM...WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. FOR DETAILED INFORMATION IN YOUR AREA...VISIT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/BIS. FOR INFORMATION ON RIVER STAGES AND FORECASTS CLICK ON THE RIVERS AND LAKES TAB NEAR THE TOP OF THE MAIN PAGE. $$ JP MARTIN  237 NOUS43 KBIS 181240 PNSBIS NDZ003-004-009-011-012-017-019-020-021-034-035-045-051-182300- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 735 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...SUMMARY OF FLOOD PRODUCTS AS OF EARLY SATURDAY MORNING... FLOOD WARNINGS ARE IN EFFECT FOR THESE AREAS... RENVILLE AND BOTTINEAU COUNTIES. IN THE SOURIS RIVER BASIN... THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR FOXHOLM...TOWNER...BANTRY...AND WESTHOPE...WHERE MAJOR TO RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING OR FORECAST. THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR SHERWOOD...AT MINOT 4 NW...MINOT BROADWAY BRIDGE...LOGAN...AND AT SAWYER...WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. WILLOW CREEK NEAR WILLOW CITY...AND THE SOURIS RIVER AT VELVA...WHERE MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. IN THE MISSOURI RIVER BASIN... THE MISSOURI RIVER NEAR WILLISTON...WHERE RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. A FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR THE MISSOURI RIVER FROM GARRISON DAM TO THE SOUTH DAKOTA BORDER. IN THE JAMES RIVER BASIN... THE JAMES RIVER NEAR LUDDEN DAM...WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. FOR DETAILS IN YOUR AREA...VISIT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/BIS. FOR INFORMATION ON RIVERS CLICK ON THE RIVERS AND LAKES TAB NEAR THE TOP OF THE MAIN PAGE. $$ JP MARTIN  217 NOUS43 KEAX 181312 PNSEAX MOZ005>007-014>016-022>024-181500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE KANSAS CITY/PLEASANT HILL 815 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE KANSAS CITY/PLEASANT HILL HAS RESUMED FORECAST AND WARNING RESPONSIBILITIES...AS COMMUNICATION SERVICES HAVE BEEN RESTORED SUFFICIENTLY. PHONE SERVICE IS LIMITED...BUT SLOWLY BEING RESTORED. $$ SF  950 NOUS41 KCAR 181341 PNSCAR MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-190141- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME 941 AM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN DURING THE PAST 24 HOURS FOR THE STORM THAT HAS BEEN AFFECTING OUR REGION. APPRECIATION IS EXTENDED TO HIGHWAY DEPARTMENTS...COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS...CWOP OBSERVERS...SKYWARN SPOTTERS AND MEDIA FOR THESE REPORTS. THIS SUMMARY IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON OUR HOME PAGE AT WEATHER.GOV/CARIBOU ********************STORM TOTAL RAINFALL******************** LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... LILLE 2.75 700 AM 6/18 MADAWASKA 2.40 551 AM 6/18 EAGLE LAKE 1.97 931 AM 6/18 DICKEY 1.55 930 AM 6/18 KNOWLES CORNER 1.50 936 AM 6/18 FORT KENT 1 SW 1.45 600 AM 6/18 HOULTON AIRPORT 1.43 936 AM 6/18 FRENCHVILLE AIRORT 1.40 935 AM 6/18 SOLDIER POND 1 WSW 1.15 659 AM 6/18 ALLAGASH 1 ENE 0.95 922 AM 6/18 LIMESTONE 0.64 934 AM 6/18 CARIBOU 1 N 0.64 800 AM 6/18 VAN BUREN 1 NNW 0.50 817 AM 6/18 OXBOW 0.50 940 AM 6/18 PORTAGE 2 N 0.48 913 AM 6/18 FOX BROOK 0.43 928 AM 6/18 CLAYTON LAKE 0.41 926 AM 6/18 ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 3 NW 0.95 825 AM 6/18 ...PISCATAQUIS COUNTY... KOKADJO 0.32 941 AM 6/18 SMITH BROOK 0.30 940 AM 6/18 EAST SANGERVILLE 1 S 0.21 700 AM 6/18 ...SOMERSET COUNTY... SAINT ZACHARIE 0.59 939 AM 6/18 TURNER BROOK 0.54 939 AM 6/18 ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... TOPSFIELD 0.21 800 AM 6/18 **********************24 HOUR RAINFALL********************** LOCATION 24 HOUR TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... ST. FRANCIS 11 SW 1.45 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LITTLETON 1 SW 1.08 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...HANCOCK COUNTY... ELLSWORTH 5 NNE 0.08 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS HANCOCK 3 SE 0.07 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 6 SE 0.06 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 8 NNW 0.05 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS SURRY 2 ESE 0.05 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 NW 0.04 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 7 NW 0.02 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... LUBEC 1 SE 0.12 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS PEMBROKE 5 SSE 0.12 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS COOPER 1 SE 0.11 500 AM 6/18 COCORAHS WHITING 2 WSW 0.10 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS $$ PJR  675 NOUS43 KSGF 181431 PNSSGF KSZ073-097-101-MOZ055>058-066>071-077>083-088>098-101>106-191430- VOLUNTEER WEATHER OBSERVATION REPORT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SPRINGFIELD MO 930 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 MAX MIN COUNTY LOCATION TEMP TEMP PRECIP SIGNIFICANT WEATHER BARRY ROARING RIVER SP 91 68 0.00 BENTON EDWARDS 6W 86 68 0.75 DOUGLAS AVA 92 73 T JASPER SARCOXIE 1W 91 75 0.00 LACLEDE 1 SE MORGAN 89 68 T MORGAN LAURIE 4W 1.31 MORGAN GRAVOIS MILLS 88 67 0.50 NEWTON NEOSHO 5W 93 77 0.00 PHELPS ROLLA 1SE 0.65 STONE CRANE 4N 90 71 0.00 TANEY RIDGEDALE 4W 91 70 0.00 $$  227 NOUS43 KDVN 181439 PNSDVN IAZ098-099-ILZ034-MOZ009-010-191445- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE QUAD CITIES IA IL 939 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WXL99 IN MEDILL IS OFF THE AIR... NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WXL99 IN MEDILL IS EXPERIENCING TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES. TECHNICIANS ARE WORKING ON THE PROBLEM. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE. $$ OLSEN  285 NOUS43 KOAX 181443 PNSOAX OMAHA METRO PRECIPITATION REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OMAHA/VALLEY 0942 AM SAT JUN 18 2011 MEASUREMENTS TAKEN BETWEEN 6 AM AND 8 AM BY STORM SPOTTERS AND NWS PERSONNEL .B OMA 0618 C DH07/PP/SF/SD :LOCATION 24HR PRECIP 24HR SNOWFALL SNOW DEPTH [NORTH WEST] BENNINGTON 3WSW 0.71 / 0.0 / 0 BLAIR AIRPORT 0.52 / 0.0 / 0 BOYSTOWN 1NW 0.27 / 0.0 / 0 FREMONT AIRPORT 1.62 / 0.0 / 0 FREMONT 1.00 / 0.0 / 0 NWS OFFICE VALLEY 0.50 / 0.0 / 0 [OMAHA NORTH EAST] EPPLEY AIRFIELD 0.16 / 0.0 / 0 FORT CALHOUN 4W 1.17 / 0.0 / 0 [SOUTH EAST] OFFUTT AFB 0.04 / 0.0 / 0 COUNCIL BLUFFS AIRPORT T / 0.0 / 0 PAPILLION 0.33 / 0.0 / 0 PLATTSMOUTH AIRPORT 0.48 / 0.0 / 0 [SOUTH WEST] GRETNA 3NE 0.55 / 0.0 / 0 MILLARD AIRPORT 0.28 / 0.0 / 0 .END $$  728 NOUS43 KBIS 181524 PNSBIS NDZ035-181830- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 1010 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 1015 AM CDT SATURDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 18.73 FEET. $$  047 NOUS43 KLSX 181525 PNSLSX ILZ098>102-MOZ052-060>065-181800- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE ST LOUIS MO 1025 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO KDO-89 ST LOUIS MISSOURI IS BACK ON THE AIR... NOAA WEATHER RADION STATION KDO-89 IS BACK ON THE AIR. WE APOLOGIZE FOR THIS OUTAGE AND WOULD LIKE TO THANK YOU FOR YOUR COOPERATION AND PATIENCE. $$ BYRD  341 NOUS45 KBOU 181539 PNSBOU PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DENVER CO 939 AM MDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...DENVER METRO AREA SNOWFALL REPORTS... NOTE: ALL REPORTS ARE IN INCHES NOTE: T = TRACE (LESS THAN 0.1 INCH) NOTE: 24 HOUR SNOWFALL AMOUNTS NOTE: ADDED WHEAT RIDGE 1/21/2011 SNOWFALL SNOWFALL SNOWFALL 24 HOUR TOTAL MONTHLY TOTAL SEASONAL TOTAL (JUNE) (7/1/10-6/30/11) DENVER INTL AIRPORT 0.0 0.0 22.8 THROUGH 6AM DENVER-STAPLETON 0.0 0.0 24.6 TROUGH 6AM DENVER CITY PARK 0.0 0.0 28.3 THROUGH MIDNIGHT EVERGREEN 0.0 0.0 44.7 THROUGH 8AM NORTH LONGMONT 0.0 0.0 25.9 THROUGH 8AM RALSTON RESERVOIR 0.0 0.0 34.1 THROUGH 8AM WHEAT RIDGE 0.0 0.0 39.0 THROUGH 7AM $$ JK  595 NOUS43 KDVN 181600 PNSDVN IAZ098-099-ILZ034-MOZ009-010-181800- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE QUAD CITIES IA IL 1100 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WXL99 IN MEDILL IS BROADCASTING NORMALLY... NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WXL99 IN MEDILL HAS BEEN RETURNED TO SERVICE. WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATIENCE. $$ OLSEN  619 NOUS43 KFSD 181601 PNSFSD IAZ001>003-012>014-020>022-031-032-MNZ071-072-080-081-089- 090-097-098-NEZ013-014-SDZ038>040-050-052>071-181900- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD 1101 AM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...SIOUX FALLS CLIMATE DATA UP TO 11 AM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 64 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 57 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0 ...HURON CLIMATE DATA UP TO 11 AM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 71 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 52 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0 ...SIOUX CITY CLIMATE DATA UP TO 11 AM CDT... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 69 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 62 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.01 INCHES MISSOURI RIVER STAGE............. 33.51 FEET $$  874 NOUS42 KCHS 181843 PNSCHS GAZ087-088-099>101-114>119-137>141-SCZ040-042>045-047>052-181945- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHARLESTON SC 243 PM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO ALL HAZARDS STATIONS OPERATING FROM THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE OFFICE IN CHARLESTON SC WILL BE OFF THE AIR FOR MAINTENANCE... NOAA WEATHER RADIO ALL HAZARDS TRANSMITTERS KHB-29 OPERATING ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.550 MHZ...WXM-93 OPERATING ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.475 MHZ...WXJ-23 OPERATING ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.450 MHZ...KEC085 OPERATING ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.400 MHZ AND WWH-25 OPERATING ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.425 MHZ WILL BE OFF THE AIR FOR MAINTENANCE UNTIL ROUGHLY 4 PM. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THE OUTAGE MAY CAUSE. $$  588 NOUS45 KPUB 181844 PNSPUB COZ081>089-093>099-190645- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PUEBLO CO 1244 PM MDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF SOME THUNDERSTORM SAFETY RULES THAT CAN BE PASSED ALONG TO RESIDENTS OF...AND VISITORS TO...SOUTHERN COLORADO. IF YOU PLAN TO BE OUTDOORS...CHECK THE LATEST WEATHER INFORMATION. IF THUNDERSTORMS ARE IN THE FORECAST...YOU MAY WANT TO CURTAIL OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES. IF YOU ARE OUTDOORS AND HEAR THUNDER...YOU SHOULD IMMEDIATELY GET INDOORS INTO A SUBSTANTIAL BUILDING...OR GET INTO ANY HARD TOPPED VEHICLE. LIGHTNING CAN STRIKE SEVERAL MILES AWAY FROM THE STORM... WHERE IT IS NOT RAINING AND WHERE YOU MAY BE. IN COLORADO...LIGHTNING CAN OCCUR WITH THUNDERSTORMS THAT PRODUCE LITTLE...IF ANY...RAIN. DO NOT WAIT TOO LONG TO TAKE ACTION. DEADLY LIGHTNING CAN OCCUR WITH ALL THUNDERSTORMS. WAIT 30 MINUTES UNTIL THE LAST RUMBLE OF THUNDER BEFORE RESUMING OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES. IF YOU ARE CAUGHT OUTDOORS DURING A LIGHTNING STORM...AND THERE IS NO SAFE SHELTER NEARBY...THERE IS NOT MUCH YOU CAN DO TO REDUCE YOUR RISK OF BEING STRUCK BY LIGHTNING. THE BEST THING TO DO IS FIND A LOW SPOT AND STAY AWAY FROM TREES. IF YOU ARE IN THE MOUNTAINS AND ARE ABOVE TIMBERLINE...GO TO A LOWER AREA. IF YOU ARE BELOW TIMBERLINE...TRY TO FIND AN OPEN AREA AWAY FROM TREES. IF YOU ARE IN AN AREA OF DENSE TREES...DO YOUR BEST TO STAY AWAY FROM THE TALLEST TREES. IF YOU ARE IN A GROUP...STAY APART. IF SOMEONE IS STRUCK... OTHERS WILL BE ABLE TO HELP THE VICTIM. REMEMBER...WHEN THUNDER ROARS...GO INDOORS. $$  949 NOUS44 KEWX 181919 PNSEWX TXZ171>173-183>194-202>209-217>225-228-190900- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE AUSTIN/SAN ANTONIO TX 220 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...HOT AND VERY DRY JUNE 2011 DAYS CONTINUE... SUMMERLIKE CONDITIONS SINCE LATE MAY WILL CONTINUE THROUGH MONDAY...ALONG WITH VERY DRY CONDITIONS...THAT HAS PERSISTED SINCE OCTOBER 2010. THE SUMMER OF 2011 OFFICIALLY BEGINS TUESDAY...JUNE 21ST AT 1216 PM CDT...WITH THE SUMMER SOLSTICE... AND ENDS WITH THE FALL EQUINOX ON FRIDAY...SEPTEMBER 23...2011 AT 405 AM CDT. THE SPRING OF 2011 HAD MANY WARM AND DRY DAYS. MARCH TO MAY 2011 WAS THE WARMEST AND 10TH DRIEST MARCH TO MAY AT AUSTIN MABRY... AND THE 2ND WARMEST AND 2ND DRIEST MARCH TO MAY AT SAN ANTONIO. MARCH TO MAY 2011 WAS THE WARMEST AND 3RD DRIEST MARCH TO MAY AT DEL RIO. FROM JUNE 1 TO 17...2011 ISOLATED RAINS CAME TO SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS ON JUNE 4TH...5TH...6TH...AND 7TH. AS OF JUNE 17...DEL RIO HAS GONE 36 DAYS WITHOUT MEASURABLE RAIN...AUSTIN MABRY 28 DAYS WITHOUT MEASURABLE RAIN...AND SAN ANTONIO 36 DAYS WITHOUT MEASURABLE RAIN. AUSTIN BERGSTROM HAS GONE 12 DAYS WITHOUT MEASURABLE RAIN...SINCE RECEIVING 0.05 INCHES OF RAIN ON SUNDAY...JUNE 5TH. THE TABLE BELOW SHOWS THE LAST DAY OF MEASURABLE RAIN FOR AUSTIN MABRY...DEL RIO...AND SAN ANTONIO...ALONG WITH THE RECORD NUMBER OF DAYS WITHOUT MEASURABLE RAIN FROM THE PAST. LOCATION LAST DAY OF RECORD NUMBER OF DAYS MEASURABLE RAIN WITHOUT MEASURABLE RAIN AUSTIN MABRY MAY 20 0.60 65 JUN 27 TO AUG 30...1993 SAN ANTONIO INTL AIRPORT MAY 12 0.84 63 JUN 27 TO AUG 28...1993 DEL RIO INTL AIRPORT MAY 12 0.51 87 SEP 25 TO DEC 20...1917 87 NOV 18...1950 TO FEB 12...1951 JUNE 2011 HAS BROUGHT MANY SUNNY...HOT AND VERY DRY DAYS. THE NUMBER OF 100 DEGREE DAYS SINCE EARLY JUNE HAS INCREASED MARKEDLY...AS SOILS AND THE GROUND REMAIN VERY DRY...ALONG WITH THE INTENSE JUNE SUN. THE LIST BELOW SHOWS THE DAILY RECORD HIGHS FROM JUNE 1ST TO JUNE 17TH THIS YEAR. AUSTIN BERGSTROM... JUNE 3...2011.....HIGH OF 98 TIED OLD RECORD OF 98 JUNE 3...2008 JUNE 4...2011.....HIGH OF 99 TIED OLD RECORD OF 99 JUNE 4...1998 JUNE 5...2011.....HIGH OF 98 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 97 JUNE 5...1948 JUNE 6...2011.....HIGH OF 103 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 96 JUNE 6...2006 JUNE 7...2011.....HIGH OF 98 TIED OLD RECORD OF 98 JUNE 7...2008 JUNE 11...2011....HIGH OF 99 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 98 JUNE 11...2008 JUNE 16...2011....HIGH OF 102 TIED OLD RECORD OF 102 JUNE 16...1998 JUNE 17...2011....HIGH OF 104 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 100 JUNE 17...2008 AUSTIN MABRY... JUNE 5...2011.....HIGH OF 101 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 98 JUNE 5...1960 JUNE 6...2011.....HIGH OF 103 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 98 JUNE 6...2009 JUNE 7...2011.....HIGH OF 100 TIED THE OLD RECORD OF 100 JUNE 7...2008 JUNE 13...2011....HIGH OF 103 TIED THE OLD RECORD OF 103 JUNE 13...2006 JUNE 15...2011....HIGH OF 104 TIED THE OLD RECORD OF 104 JUNE 15...1998 JUNE 16...2011....HIGH OF 103 TIED THE OLD RECORD OF 103 JUNE 16...1925 JUNE 17...2011....LOW OF 80 BROKE THE OLD RECORD HIGH MINIMUM OF 78 THAT WAS SET ON JUNE 17...2009 JUNE 17...2011....HIGH OF 106 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 101 JUNE 17...2008 SAN ANTONIO... JUNE 6...2011.....HIGH OF 101 BROKE OLD RECORD OF 100 JUNE 6...1948 JUNE 17...2011....HIGH OF 104 BROKE THE OLD RECORD OF 102 JUNE 17...1934 DEL RIO... JUNE 17...2011....HIGH OF 106 BROKE THE OLD RECORD OF 105 JUNE 17...1951 ONE HUNDRED DEGREE DAYS CAME EARLY THIS YEAR...IN APRIL AND MAY. THE FIRST 100 DEGREE DAY AT DEL RIO CAME APRIL 8...AT AUSTIN MABRY AND AUSTIN BERGSTROM MAY 25...26 AND 27...AND AT SAN ANTONIO ON MAY 25 AND 27. THE AVERAGE DATE OF THE FIRST 100 DEGREE DAY IS MAY 27 AT DEL RIO...JUNE 30 AT SAN ANTONIO AND JULY 10 AT AUSTIN. THE TABLE BELOW SHOWS THE NUMBER OF 100 DEGREE DAYS IN 2011 AS OF JUNE 17TH AT AUSTIN...DEL RIO...HONDO...NEW BRAUNFELS...SAN ANTONIO AND UVALDE. LOCATION 100 DEGREE DAYS HOTTEST DAY AS OF JUNE 17 AS OF JUN 17 DEL RIO 24 106 MAY 28 AND JUN 17 UVALDE 13 108 JUN 17 NEW BRAUNFELS 9 104 JUN 17 AUSTIN MABRY 13 106 JUN 17 AUSTIN BERGSTROM INTL AIRPORT 9 104 JUN 17 SAN ANTONIO INTL AIRPORT 7 104 JUN 17 SAN ANTONIO STINSON 17 107 JUN 17 HONDO 16 106 JUN 17 DEL RIO AND AUSTIN MABRY HAVE EXCEEDED THE AVERAGE NUMBER OF 100 DEGREE DAYS IN A YEAR...WHERE THE AVERAGE PER YEAR AT DEL RIO IS 20 DAYS...AND AT AUSTIN MABRY 12 DAYS. AT SAN ANTONIO INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT...THE AVERAGE NUMBER OF 100 DEGREE DAYS IN A YEAR THROUGH 2010 WAS 8 DAYS. THE TABLE BELOW SHOWS THE MOST CONSECUTIVE 100 DEGREE DAYS AND MOST 100 DEGREE DAYS OF RECORD IN A YEAR AT AUSTIN...DEL RIO...AND SAN ANTONIO. LOCATION MOST CONSECUTIVE MOST 100 DEGREE 100 DEGREE DAYS DAYS IN A YEAR AUSTIN MABRY 21 JUL 12 TO AUG 1...2001 69 IN 1925 AUSTIN BERGSTROM 27 JUL 9 TO AUG 4...1998 55 IN 2009 DEL RIO 50 JUN 17 TO AUG 5...1980 72 IN 2001 SAN ANTONIO 21 JUL 24 TO AUG 13...1962 59 IN 2009 CONDITIONS SINCE OCTOBER 2010 HAVE BEEN ONE OF THE DRIER OCTOBER TO MAY AND JANUARY TO MAY PERIODS AT AUSTIN...DEL RIO AND SAN ANTONIO. THE LISTS BELOW SHOW THE DRIEST JANUARY TO MAY AND OCTOBER TO MAY PERIODS AT AUSTIN...DEL RIO AND SAN ANTONIO. AT THE AUSTIN CITY CLIMATE SITE...AUSTIN MABRY...JANUARY TO MAY 2011 WAS THE 10TH DRIEST JANUARY TO MAY SINCE 1856. AUSTIN AREA (THREADEX STATION) EXTREMES LOWEST TOTAL PRECIPITATION INCHES DAYS: 1/1 - 5/31 LENGTH OF PERIOD: 151 DAYS YEARS: 1856-2011 RANK VALUE ENDING DATE 1 3.96 5/31/1971 2 5.00 5/31/1996 3 5.40 5/31/1867 4 5.41 5/31/1925 5 5.60 5/31/2002 6 6.08 5/31/1954 7 6.48 5/31/1984 8 6.58 5/31/1960 9 7.33 5/31/1956 10 7.41 5/31/2011 AT AUSTIN BERGSTROM JANUARY TO MAY 2011 WAS THE 7TH DRIEST JANUARY TO MAY SINCE 1943. AUSTIN BERGSTROM (THREADEX STATION) EXTREMES LOWEST TOTAL PRECIPITATION INCHES DAYS: 1/1 - 5/31 LENGTH OF PERIOD: 151 DAYS YEARS: 1943-2011 RANK VALUE ENDING DATE 1 4.61 5/31/1971 2 4.84 5/31/1954 3 5.61 5/31/1962 4 5.74 5/31/2002 5 6.24 5/31/1943 6 6.48 5/31/1963 7 6.61 5/31/2011 AT DEL RIO JANUARY TO MAY 2011 WAS THE 3RD DRIEST JANUARY TO MAY SINCE 1906. DEL RIO AREA (THREADEX STATION) EXTREMES LOWEST TOTAL PRECIPITATION INCHES DAYS: 1/1 - 5/31 LENGTH OF PERIOD: 151 DAYS YEARS: 1906-2011 RANK VALUE ENDING DATE 1 0.70 5/31/1956 2 1.31 5/31/2008 3 1.35 5/31/2011 4 1.50 5/31/1998 5 1.59 5/31/1933 AT SAN ANTONIO JANUARY TO MAY 2011 WAS THE 8TH DRIEST JANUARY TO MAY SINCE 1871. SAN ANTONIO AREA (THREADEX STATION) EXTREMES LOWEST TOTAL PRECIPITATION INCHES DAYS: 1/1 - 5/31 LENGTH OF PERIOD: 151 DAYS YEARS: 1871-2011 RANK VALUE ENDING DATE 1 2.99 5/31/1961 2 3.14 5/31/1996 3 3.72 5/31/1925 4 3.80 5/31/1971 5 3.81 5/31/1988 6 3.93 5/31/2008 7 3.97 5/31/1954 8 4.03 5/31/2011 OCTOBER 2010 THROUGH MAY 2011 WAS THE DRIEST OCTOBER TO MAY AT DEL RIO SINCE 1906...WITH 1.39 INCHES OF RAIN. OCTOBER 2010 TO MAY 2011 WAS THE 2ND DRIEST OCTOBER TO MAY AT AUSTIN MABRY SINCE 1856 WITH 8.96 INCHES OF RAIN...AND AT SAN ANTONIO SINCE 1871... WITH 5.09 INCHES OF RAIN. THE DRIEST OCTOBER TO MAY PERIODS AT DEL RIO SINCE 1906 ARE LISTED BELOW. 1. OCTOBER 2010 TO MAY 2011 1.39 2. OCTOBER 1955 TO MAY 1956 2.25 3. OCTOBER 1970 TO MAY 1971 3.22 THE DRIEST OCTOBER TO MAY PERIODS AT AUSTIN MABRY SINCE 1856 ARE LISTED BELOW. 1. OCTOBER 1924 TO MAY 1925 7.00 2. OCTOBER 2010 TO MAY 2011 8.96 3. OCTOBER 1970 TO MAY 1971 9.29 THE DRIEST OCTOBER TO MAY PERIODS AT SAN ANTONIO SINCE 1871 ARE LISTED BELOW. 1. OCTOBER 1995 TO MAY 1996 4.83 2. OCTOBER 2010 TO MAY 2011 5.09 3. OCTOBER 1970 TO MAY 1971 5.27 JUNE 1ST TO JUNE 17...2011 CONTINUED THE SAME TREND OF VERY DRY CONDITIONS ACROSS SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS. THE SUNNY DAYS...WITH THE INTENSE JUNE SUN...AND MODERATE SOUTH TO SOUTHEAST WINDS HAS ADDED TO THE DRY CONDITIONS. THE SUMMER OF 2011 OFFICIALLY BEGINS ON TUESDAY...JUNE 21 AT 1216 PM CDT...WITH THE SUMMER SOLSTICE...AND ENDS WITH THE FALL EQUINOX ON FRIDAY...SEPTEMBER 23 THIS YEAR AT 405 AM CDT. $$  492 NOUS42 KCHS 181928 PNSCHS GAZ087-088-099>101-114>119-137>141-SCZ040-042>045-047>052-182030- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CHARLESTON SC 328 PM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 MAINTENANCE IS COMPLETE ON WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTERS IN CROSS... CHARLESTON...METTER...BEAUFORT...AND SAVANNAH. $$  543 NOUS43 KARX 181954 PNSARX PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE LA CROSSE WI 250 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...24 HOUR RAINFALL TOTALS ACROSS THE AREA ENDING AT 7 AM... LOCATION RAINFALL TIME LAT/LON IOWA ...ALLAMAKEE COUNTY... LANSING 4SE 0.02 0700 AM 43.32N 91.16W DORCHESTER HIGHWAY 76 0.01 0700 AM 43.42N 91.51W MINNESOTA ...MOWER COUNTY... LANSING 0.01 0700 AM 43.75N 92.95W AUSTIN 0.01 0700 AM 43.67N 92.95W AUSTIN TURTLE CREEK 0.01 0700 AM 43.67N 92.95W AUSTIN DOBBINS CREEK 0.01 0700 AM 43.67N 92.95W ...OLMSTED COUNTY... ROCHESTER - CASCADE CREEK 0.96 0700 AM 44.03N 92.48W ELGIN 0.02 0700 AM 44.10N 92.27W ...WABASHA COUNTY... KELLOGG 0.01 0700 AM 44.32N 92.00W LAKE CITY COOP 0.01 0700 AM 44.43N 92.28W ...WINONA COUNTY... MINNESOTA CITY 0.03 0700 AM 44.16N 91.81W WISCONSIN ...BUFFALO COUNTY... ALMA DAM 4 0.03 0700 AM 44.33N 91.92W ...CLARK COUNTY... OWEN 0.27 0700 AM 44.98N 90.55W NEILLSVILLE 3SW 0.26 0700 AM 44.53N 90.64W NEILLSVILLE 0.04 0700 AM 44.56N 90.61W ...CRAWFORD COUNTY... STEUBEN 0.02 0700 AM 43.18N 90.87W ...GRANT COUNTY... BOSCOBEL ASOS 0.01 0700 AM 43.16N 90.68W ...JACKSON COUNTY... BLACK RIVER FALLS 0.02 0700 AM 44.38N 90.84W BLACK RIVER FALLS RAWS 0.01 0700 AM 44.30N 90.84W ...JUNEAU COUNTY... NECEDAH 1W 0.09 0700 AM 44.02N 90.08W ...LA CROSSE COUNTY... LA CROSSE WEATHER 0.01 0700 AM 43.82N 91.19W LA CROSSE ASOS T 0700 AM 43.88N 91.26W ...TAYLOR COUNTY... LUBLIN DIAMOND LAKE 0.85 0700 AM 45.11N 90.69W MEDFORD 0.45 0700 AM 45.13N 90.34W MEDFORD 4NW 0.38 0700 AM 45.21N 90.36W GAD 6E 0.34 0700 AM 45.14N 90.20W JUMP RIVER 0.17 0700 AM 45.36N 90.80W ...VERNON COUNTY... COON VALLEY 6S 0.20 0700 AM 43.61N 91.01W DESOTO 1SE 0.03 0700 AM 43.41N 91.19W VIROQUA 0.03 0700 AM 43.55N 90.90W GENOA 0.02 0700 AM 43.57N 91.23W WESTBY 3ENE 0.01 0700 AM 43.68N 90.81W OBSERVATIONS ARE COLLECTED FROM A VARIETY OF SOURCES WITH VARYING EQUIPMENT AND EXPOSURE. NOT ALL DATA LISTED IS CONSIDERED OFFICIAL. FOR THIS...AND A WEALTH OF OTHER RIVER AND WEATHER INFORMATION... VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT WEATHER.GOV/LACROSSE $$  473 NOUS44 KHUN 182049 PNSHUN ALZ010-190900- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE HUNTSVILLE AL 349 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...NOAA WEATHER RADIO TRANSMITTER IN FORT PAYNE OFFLINE... NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION WWF-44...TRANSMITTING OUT OF FORT PAYNE ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.500 MHZ...IS OFF THE AIR DUE DUE TO WIDESPREAD POWER OUTAGES ACROSS THE TOWN. ONCE THE POWER IS RESTORED...WE EXPECT THE TRANSMITTER TO BE OPERATIONAL AGAIN. DURING THE OUTAGE...PERSONS ACROSS THE LISTENING AREA CAN GET THEIR WEATHER INFORMATION FROM OTHER STATIONS. THEY INCLUDE: WNG-554 OUT OF WINCHESTER...TRANSMITTING ON 162.525 MHZ. WNG-642 OUT OF ARAB...TRANSMITTING ON 162.525 MHZ. OF COURSE...THE LATEST WEATHER INFORMATION IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT OUR WEBSITE...AT HTTP://WEATHER.GOV/HUNTSVILLE /ALL LOWER CASE/. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS OUTAGE MAY CAUSE. $$  250 NOUS43 KIND 182054 PNSIND INZ037>041-046>049-054>057-065-190200- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE INDIANAPOLIS IN 453 PM EDT SAT JUNE 18 2011 ...NWR STATION W X M 74 WILL BE INTERMITTENTLY OFF AIR... NOAA ALL HAZARDS WEATHER RADIO STATION W X M 74 BROADCASTING FROM PUTNAMVILLE... INDIANA WILL BE INTERMITTENTLY ON AND OFF AIR DUE TO POWER ISSUES THIS EVENING. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS MAY CAUSE. DURING ANY OUTAGES YOU MAY EXPERIENCE...VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/IND...TRY LISTENING TO ONE OF OTHER RADIO FREQUENCIES...OR TUNE INTO YOUR LOCAL RADIO OR TELEVISION STATION FOR WEATHER INFORMATION. $$ AB  295 NOUS43 KBIS 182132 PNSBIS NDZ001>005-009>013-017>023-025-034>037-042-045>048-050-051-190945- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 432 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 /332 PM MDT SAT JUN 18 2011/ ...SUMMARY OF FLOOD PRODUCTS AS OF SATURDAY AFTERNOON... FLOOD WARNINGS ARE IN EFFECT FOR THESE AREAS... IN THE SOURIS RIVER BASIN... THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR TOWNER AND BANTRY WHERE RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR FOXHOLM AND WESTHOPE...WHERE MAJOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND FORECAST TO CONTINUE. THE SOURIS RIVER NEAR SHERWOOD...AT MINOT 4 NW...MINOT BROADWAY BRIDGE...LOGAN...AND AT SAWYER...WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. WILLOW CREEK NEAR WILLOW CITY...AND THE SOURIS RIVER AT VELVA...WHERE MINOR FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. IN THE MISSOURI RIVER BASIN... THE MISSOURI RIVER NEAR WILLISTON...WHERE RECORD FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. A FLOOD WARNING CONTINUES FOR THE MISSOURI RIVER FROM GARRISON DAM TO THE SOUTH DAKOTA BORDER. IN THE JAMES RIVER BASIN... THE JAMES RIVER NEAR LUDDEN DAM...WHERE MODERATE FLOODING IS OCCURRING AND IS FORECAST TO CONTINUE. FOR DETAILED INFORMATION IN YOUR AREA...VISIT WWW.WEATHER.GOV/BIS. FOR INFORMATION ON RIVER STAGES AND FORECASTS CLICK ON THE RIVERS AND LAKES TAB NEAR THE TOP OF THE MAIN PAGE. $$ AYD  449 NOUS43 KBIS 182144 PNSBIS NDZ035-190030- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE BISMARCK ND 430 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...STAGE OF THE MISSOURI RIVER AT BISMARCK... AT 430 AM CDT SATURDAY...THE MISSOURI RIVER STAGE WAS 18.73 FEET. $$  683 NOUS42 KTAE 182156 PNSTAE FLZ014-015-026-114-115-182300- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TALLAHASSEE FL 555 PM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 /455 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011/ ...THE EAST POINT NOAA WEATHER RADIO IS BACK ON THE AIR... THE EAST POINT NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION OPERATING ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.50 MHZ IS NOW BACK ON THE AIR. THIS NOAA WEATHER RADIO STATION SERVICES THE GREATER APALACHICOLA AREA. WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATIENCE. $$ BLOCK  692 NOUS41 KCAR 182205 PNSCAR MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-191005- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME 605 PM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN DURING THE PAST 24 HOURS FOR THE STORM THAT HAS BEEN AFFECTING OUR REGION. APPRECIATION IS EXTENDED TO HIGHWAY DEPARTMENTS...COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS...CWOP OBSERVERS...SKYWARN SPOTTERS AND MEDIA FOR THESE REPORTS. THIS SUMMARY IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON OUR HOME PAGE AT WEATHER.GOV/CARIBOU ********************STORM TOTAL RAINFALL******************** LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... MADAWASKA 1 WSW 2.40 545 PM 6/18 CONNOR 1.80 559 PM 6/18 PORTAGE 1.16 459 PM 6/18 ASHLAND 2 SSE 0.62 530 PM 6/18 $$ PF  936 NOUS41 KCAR 182214 PNSCAR MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-191014- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME 614 PM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN DURING THE PAST 24 HOURS FOR THE STORM THAT HAS BEEN AFFECTING OUR REGION. APPRECIATION IS EXTENDED TO HIGHWAY DEPARTMENTS...COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS...CWOP OBSERVERS...SKYWARN SPOTTERS AND MEDIA FOR THESE REPORTS. THIS SUMMARY IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON OUR HOME PAGE AT WEATHER.GOV/CARIBOU ********************STORM TOTAL RAINFALL******************** LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... LILLE 2.75 700 AM 6/18 MADAWASKA 2.40 551 AM 6/18 MADAWASKA 1 WSW 2.40 545 PM 6/18 EAGLE LAKE 1.97 931 AM 6/18 CONNOR 1.80 559 PM 6/18 DICKEY 1.55 930 AM 6/18 KNOWLES CORNER 1.50 936 AM 6/18 FORT KENT 1 SW 1.45 600 AM 6/18 HOULTON AIRPORT 1.43 936 AM 6/18 FRENCHVILLE AIRORT 1.40 935 AM 6/18 LILLE 5 SSE 1.30 1053 AM 6/18 PORTAGE 1.16 459 PM 6/18 SOLDIER POND 1 WSW 1.15 659 AM 6/18 ALLAGASH 1 ENE 0.95 922 AM 6/18 CARIBOU 1 N 0.64 800 AM 6/18 LIMESTONE 0.64 934 AM 6/18 ASHLAND 2 SSE 0.62 530 PM 6/18 VAN BUREN 1 NNW 0.50 817 AM 6/18 OXBOW 0.50 940 AM 6/18 PORTAGE 2 N 0.48 913 AM 6/18 FOX BROOK 0.43 928 AM 6/18 CLAYTON LAKE 0.41 926 AM 6/18 ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 3 NW 0.95 825 AM 6/18 ...PISCATAQUIS COUNTY... KOKADJO 0.32 941 AM 6/18 SMITH BROOK 0.30 940 AM 6/18 EAST SANGERVILLE 1 S 0.21 700 AM 6/18 ...SOMERSET COUNTY... SAINT ZACHARIE 0.59 939 AM 6/18 TURNER BROOK 0.54 939 AM 6/18 ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... TOPSFIELD 0.21 800 AM 6/18 **********************24 HOUR RAINFALL********************** LOCATION 24 HOUR TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... ST. FRANCIS 11 SW 1.45 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS FORT KENT 2 S 1.45 900 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LITTLETON 1 SW 1.08 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...HANCOCK COUNTY... DEDHAM 6 ESE 0.10 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS MARIAVILLE 1 ESE 0.09 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 5 NNE 0.08 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS HANCOCK 3 SE 0.07 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 6 SE 0.06 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS SURRY 2 ESE 0.05 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 8 NNW 0.05 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 NW 0.04 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 SE 0.02 100 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 7 NW 0.02 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 3 WNW 0.73 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LINCOLN 4 NE 0.22 500 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ARGYLE 1 S 0.15 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... PEMBROKE 5 SSE 0.12 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LUBEC 1 SE 0.12 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS COOPER 1 SE 0.11 500 AM 6/18 COCORAHS WHITING 2 WSW 0.10 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS $$ PF  511 NOUS41 KCAR 182217 PNSCAR MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-191017- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME 617 PM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN DURING THE PAST 24 HOURS FOR THE STORM THAT HAS BEEN AFFECTING OUR REGION. APPRECIATION IS EXTENDED TO HIGHWAY DEPARTMENTS...COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS...CWOP OBSERVERS...SKYWARN SPOTTERS AND MEDIA FOR THESE REPORTS. THIS SUMMARY IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON OUR HOME PAGE AT WEATHER.GOV/CARIBOU ********************STORM TOTAL RAINFALL******************** LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... LILLE 2.75 700 AM 6/18 MADAWASKA 1 WSW 2.40 545 PM 6/18 EAGLE LAKE 1.97 931 AM 6/18 CONNOR 1.80 559 PM 6/18 DICKEY 1.55 930 AM 6/18 KNOWLES CORNER 1.50 936 AM 6/18 FORT KENT 1 SW 1.45 600 AM 6/18 HOULTON AIRPORT 1.43 936 AM 6/18 FRENCHVILLE AIRORT 1.40 935 AM 6/18 LILLE 5 SSE 1.30 1053 AM 6/18 PORTAGE 1.16 459 PM 6/18 SOLDIER POND 1 WSW 1.15 659 AM 6/18 ALLAGASH 1 ENE 0.95 922 AM 6/18 CARIBOU 1 N 0.64 800 AM 6/18 LIMESTONE 0.64 934 AM 6/18 ASHLAND 2 SSE 0.62 530 PM 6/18 VAN BUREN 1 NNW 0.50 817 AM 6/18 OXBOW 0.50 940 AM 6/18 PORTAGE 2 N 0.48 913 AM 6/18 FOX BROOK 0.43 928 AM 6/18 CLAYTON LAKE 0.41 926 AM 6/18 ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 3 NW 0.95 825 AM 6/18 ...PISCATAQUIS COUNTY... KOKADJO 0.32 941 AM 6/18 SMITH BROOK 0.30 940 AM 6/18 EAST SANGERVILLE 1 S 0.21 700 AM 6/18 ...SOMERSET COUNTY... SAINT ZACHARIE 0.59 939 AM 6/18 TURNER BROOK 0.54 939 AM 6/18 ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... TOPSFIELD 0.21 800 AM 6/18 **********************24 HOUR RAINFALL********************** LOCATION 24 HOUR TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... ST. FRANCIS 11 SW 1.45 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS FORT KENT 2 S 1.45 900 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LITTLETON 1 SW 1.08 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...HANCOCK COUNTY... DEDHAM 6 ESE 0.10 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS MARIAVILLE 1 ESE 0.09 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 5 NNE 0.08 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS HANCOCK 3 SE 0.07 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 6 SE 0.06 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS SURRY 2 ESE 0.05 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 8 NNW 0.05 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 NW 0.04 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 SE 0.02 100 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 7 NW 0.02 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 3 WNW 0.73 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LINCOLN 4 NE 0.22 500 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ARGYLE 1 S 0.15 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... PEMBROKE 5 SSE 0.12 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LUBEC 1 SE 0.12 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS COOPER 1 SE 0.11 500 AM 6/18 COCORAHS WHITING 2 WSW 0.10 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS $$ PF  760 NOUS43 KFSD 182233 PNSFSD IAZ001>003-012>014-020>022-031-032-MNZ071-072-080-081-089- 090-097-098-NEZ013-014-SDZ038>040-050-052>071-190000- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE SIOUX FALLS SD 533 PM CST SAT JUN 18 2011 ...SIOUX FALLS CLIMATE DATA UP TO 530 PM CST... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 75 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 57 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.00 ...HURON CLIMATE DATA UP TO 530 PM CST... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 79 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 52 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.00 ...SIOUX CITY CLIMATE DATA UP TO 530 PM CST... HIGH TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 80 LOW TEMPERATURE SO FAR TODAY.... 62 PRECIPITATION SINCE MIDNIGHT..... 0.01 MISSOURI RIVER STAGE............. 33.52 $$  740 NOUS44 KOHX 182247 PNSOHX TNZ022-024-056>058-093-190500- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NASHVILLE TN 547 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...LOBELVILLE NOAA WEATHER RADIO OFF THE AIR... THE NOAA WEATHER RADIO SITE AT LOBELVILLE...STATION KWN-52...HAS GONE DOWN THIS SATURDAY AFTERNOON DUE TO STORM RELATED POWER OUTAGES IN PERRY COUNTY. THE BROADCAST SHOULD RETURN AS SOON AS POWER IS RESTORED TO THE TRANSMITTER SITE. NO ESTIMATED TIME FOR RESTORATION OF SERVICE IS AVAILABLE. KWN-52 BROADCASTS ON A FREQUENCY OF 162.525 MEGAHERTZ...COVERING THE COUNTIES OF BENTON...DECATUR...HENDERSON...HICKMAN... HUMPHREYS...LEWIS...PERRY AND WAYNE. $$ 13  304 NOUS45 KPUB 182250 PNSPUB COZ070-085-086-182349 PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PUEBLO CO 449 PM MDT SAT JUN 18 2011 PUEBLO HIGH TODAY................. 90 LOW THIS MORNING........... 53 PCPN PAST 24 HRS........... 0 PEAK WIND 21 MPH FROM THE SOUTHEAST AT 102 PM. COLORADO SPRGS HIGH TODAY................. 81 LOW THIS MORNING........... 53 PCPN PAST 24 HRS........... T 60 MPH FROM THE SOUTHWEST AT 345 PM. ALAMOSA HIGH TODAY................. 81 LOW THIS MORNING........... 45 PCPN PAST 24 HRS........... 0 37 MPH FROM THE SOUTHWEST AT 1158 AM. $$  261 NOUS43 KTOP 182302 PNSTOP PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE TOPEKA KS 602 PM CDT SAT JUN 18 2011 ...STORM SAFETY INFORMATION.... A SEVERE WEATHER WATCH HAS BEEN ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN TOPEKA FOR A PORTION OF KANSAS. IN THE INTEREST OF PUBLIC SAFETY...THE FOLLOWING SAFETY INFORMATION IS PROVIDED. A WATCH MEANS CONDITIONS ARE FAVORABLE FOR SEVERE WEATHER DEVELOPMENT WITHIN IN THE WATCH AREA. THERE IS NO CAUSE FOR IMMEDIATE CONCERN...AND YOU MAY GO ABOUT YOUR NORMAL BUSINESS. STAY INFORMED OF THE WEATHER SITUATION. KNOW YOUR COUNTY...NEARBY CITIES...AND LOCAL LANDMARKS WHETHER AT HOME OR IF YOU ARE ON THE ROAD. LISTEN TO WEATHER RADIO OR LOCAL MEDIA FOR UPDATED WEATHER INFORMATION. A WARNING MEANS A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM OR TORNADO HAS BEEN OBSERVED OR IS INDICATED BY DOPPLER WEATHER RADAR. IF A WARNING IS ISSUED FOR YOUR LOCATION...IMMEDIEATELY PUT YOUR EMERGENCY SAFETY PLAN INTO ACTION. ...SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS MAY PRODUCE... STRONG DAMAGING WINDS...DAMAGING DOWNBURST WINDS ASSOCIATED WITH A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WILL BE GREATER THAN 60MPH. GO INDOORS OR INTO A BASEMENT OR STORM SHELTER AND STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS. LARGE HAIL...DESTRUCTIVE HAIL ASSOCIATED WITH A SEVERE THUNDERSTORM WILL BE GREATER THAN ONE INCH IN DIAMETER. GO INDOORS OR INTO A BASEMENT AND STAY AWAY FROM WINDOWS. HEAVY RAIN...HEAVY RAIN MAY PRODUCE FLASH FLOODING QUICKLY. AVOID LOW LYING AND POOR DRAINAGE AREAS. BE CAUTIOUS WHEN DRIVING AT NIGHT AS ROADS COULD BE WASHED OUT. TURN AROUND...DONT DROWN. DEADLY LIGHTNING...LIGHTNING IS AN UNDERRATED KILLER. WHEN LIGHTNING THREATENS...GET INDOORS AND AWAY FROM WINDOWS...STAY AWAY TREES OR TOWERS... AND AVOID LAKES AND BOATS TORNADOES...TORNADOES ARE NATURES MOST VIOLENT STORMS. THE BEST SHELTERS ARE A BASEMENT OR UNDERGROUND STORM SHELTER...ON THE LOWEST FLOOR IN THE MIDDLE OF THE BUILDING...OR IN AN INTERIOR HALLWAY OR DESIGNATED SHELTER AREA. AVOID WINDOWS...MOBILE HOMES...AND LARGE OPEN SPACES LIKE A GYMNASIUM OR AUDITORIUM. IF ON THE ROAD...DRIVE TO FIND SAFE SHELTER. AS A LAST RESORT EITHER ABANDON VEHICLES AND GET INTO A DITCH OR STAY BELTED IN YOUR VEHICLE CROUCHED BELOW THE WINDOW LINE. AGAIN...STAY INFORMED OF THE WEATHER SITUATION. KNOW YOUR COUNTY...NEARBY CITIES...AND LOCAL LANDMARKS WHETHER AT HOME OR ON THE ROAD. LISTEN TO WEATHER RADIO OR LOCAL MEDIA FOR UPDATED WEATHER INFORMATION. $$  468 NOUS41 KCAR 182359 PNSCAR MEZ001>006-010-011-015>017-029>032-191159- PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT SPOTTER REPORTS NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME 759 PM EDT SAT JUN 18 2011 THE FOLLOWING ARE UNOFFICIAL OBSERVATIONS TAKEN DURING THE PAST 24 HOURS FOR THE STORM THAT HAS BEEN AFFECTING OUR REGION. APPRECIATION IS EXTENDED TO HIGHWAY DEPARTMENTS...COOPERATIVE OBSERVERS...CWOP OBSERVERS...SKYWARN SPOTTERS AND MEDIA FOR THESE REPORTS. THIS SUMMARY IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON OUR HOME PAGE AT WEATHER.GOV/CARIBOU ********************STORM TOTAL RAINFALL******************** LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... LILLE 3.28 758 PM 6/18 MADAWASKA 1 WSW 2.40 545 PM 6/18 EAGLE LAKE 1.97 931 AM 6/18 CONNOR 1.80 559 PM 6/18 DICKEY 1.55 930 AM 6/18 KNOWLES CORNER 1.50 936 AM 6/18 FORT KENT 1 SW 1.45 600 AM 6/18 HOULTON AIRPORT 1.43 936 AM 6/18 FRENCHVILLE AIRORT 1.40 935 AM 6/18 LILLE 5 SSE 1.30 1053 AM 6/18 PORTAGE 1.16 459 PM 6/18 SOLDIER POND 1 WSW 1.15 659 AM 6/18 ALLAGASH 1 ENE 0.95 922 AM 6/18 LIMESTONE 0.64 934 AM 6/18 CARIBOU 1 N 0.64 800 AM 6/18 ASHLAND 2 SSE 0.62 530 PM 6/18 VAN BUREN 1 NNW 0.50 817 AM 6/18 OXBOW 0.50 940 AM 6/18 PORTAGE 2 N 0.48 913 AM 6/18 FOX BROOK 0.43 928 AM 6/18 CLAYTON LAKE 0.41 926 AM 6/18 ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 3 NW 0.95 825 AM 6/18 ...PISCATAQUIS COUNTY... KOKADJO 0.32 941 AM 6/18 SMITH BROOK 0.30 940 AM 6/18 EAST SANGERVILLE 1 S 0.21 700 AM 6/18 ...SOMERSET COUNTY... SAINT ZACHARIE 0.59 939 AM 6/18 TURNER BROOK 0.54 939 AM 6/18 ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... TOPSFIELD 0.21 800 AM 6/18 **********************24 HOUR RAINFALL********************** LOCATION 24 HOUR TIME/DATE COMMENTS RAINFALL OF /INCHES/ MEASUREMENT MAINE ...AROOSTOOK COUNTY... ST. FRANCIS 11 SW 1.45 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS FORT KENT 2 S 1.45 900 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LITTLETON 1 SW 1.08 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...HANCOCK COUNTY... DEDHAM 6 ESE 0.10 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS MARIAVILLE 1 ESE 0.09 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 5 NNE 0.08 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS HANCOCK 3 SE 0.07 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 6 SE 0.06 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS SURRY 2 ESE 0.05 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 8 NNW 0.05 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 NW 0.04 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS BROOKLIN 3 SE 0.02 100 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ELLSWORTH 7 NW 0.02 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...PENOBSCOT COUNTY... PATTEN 3 WNW 0.73 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LINCOLN 4 NE 0.22 500 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ARGYLE 1 S 0.15 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS ...WASHINGTON COUNTY... PEMBROKE 5 SSE 0.12 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS LUBEC 1 SE 0.12 800 AM 6/18 COCORAHS COOPER 1 SE 0.11 500 AM 6/18 COCORAHS WHITING 2 WSW 0.10 700 AM 6/18 COCORAHS $$ PF