When Are We Getting Snow Again This Year 2017 in Greenville Sc

2017 was one of the warmest years in history across the eastern Carolinas with temperatures averaging two degrees in a higher place normal.  There was no extreme summer rut; instead far-above normal temperatures in Jan, February and April, supplemented by near to to a higher place-normal temperatures the remainder of the year, was enough to push 2017'south average annual temperature to the second warmest on record in Wilmington, and the eighth warmest in Florence.

Aside from a single late-flavour storm in March that dropped an inch of snowfall in spots, no significant winter weather occurred in 2017.  There were no straight strikes from tropical systems, simply the area was affected in September past strong winds and littoral flooding every bit Hurricane Irma'due south circulation over Florida and Georgia butted upwards against high pressure off the East Declension.

Snowfall accumulation map from the January 7, 2017 winter storm

Combined snow and sleet accumulations from the winter storm of Jan 7, 2017.  Merely small accumulations occurred beyond our portion of the Carolinas.

JANUARY: The new twelvemonth began mild, but a potent cold front end January 6th brought an arctic airmass into the Carolinas.  Depression force per unit area adult along the front offshore and produced rain which mixed with ice and snow as the precipitation concluded on January 7th.  Officially just a trace of snow was recorded in Wilmington, with traces of snowfall, sleet, and freezing pelting reported beyond Lumberton, Elizabethtown, Florence, and Darlington.  As much as 2 inches of snow was reported from almost Greenville in Pitt County, NC, with snowfall totals reaching over eight inches in southern Virginia and northwestern North Carolina.

The coldest temperatures of the entire year occurred on the mornings of January eighth and 9th when well-nigh locations fell into the upper teens.  Some of the coldest readings included 16 degrees in both Lumberton and Wilmington, xviii in Florence, and xix at North Myrtle Beach.  This cold, arctic air besides was meaning for its extremely high barometric pressure; the body of water level pressure reached 1044.five millibars (30.84 in. Hg) in Wilmington, the highest pressure level reading in nearly 10 years.

Most of the remainder of January featured well-above normal temperatures which pushed January'due south temperatures 5 to 7 degrees higher up normal.  Florence, SC recorded 11 days in Jan with temperatures 70 degrees or warmer.

February:  Unusually warm temperatures continued through February.  By the cease of the month, observed temperatures were 6 to 9 degrees above normal, making this the warmest Feb since 1990 in Wilmington, and since 1976 in Florence.  February was consistently dry with just ii rainfall events all month: the 8th-9th and the 15th.  Thunderstorms on Feb 15th became severe and produced an EF1 tornado near Adrian, South Carolina.  A second EF1 tornado touched down just west of Longwood, NC in the Scippio Swamp cutting a 3-mile long path through the trees and damaging several structures.  No injuries were reported with either tornado.

Adrian, SC EF1 tornado damage from February 15, 2017

Severe harm to a home near Adrian, SC from the EF1 tornado of February 15, 2017.  Damage from this tornado totaled most $i meg.

Droppings and damaged copse from the Adrian, SC tornado of February fifteen, 2017.  A storm survey revealed a impairment path near 5 miles long.

US Phenology Network spring leaf anomaly showing plants waking up 20 days earlyDue to unusually warm temperatures observed throughout January and Feb, trees and plants began to come out of their winter dormancy well ahead of schedule.  Information from the U.S. National Phenology Network (displayed at left) showed plants were leafing out up to 20 days earlier than normal across parts of the southern Usa.  This early on start turned out to be very bad news for farmers in the Carolinas and Georgia less than 1 month later...

This was the seventh warmest February in history in Wilmington, and the second warmest in history in Florence, SC and Lumberton, NC.  Temperatures in Florence reached 80 degrees iii times this month, and in Lumberton reached 80 4 times!

MARCH:  The first day of March featured highs in the upper 70s and lower 80s -- a continuation of the unseasonable warmth experienced throughout February.  However a common cold front end early on March second brought below normal temperatures and several nights with freezing temperatures March 3rd through sixth.  Temperatures cooled further behind another cold front on March 11th.  Rain developed backside this front on the 12th, and precipitation changed over to snow across most of North Carolina with 1.five inches measured in Lumberton, NC; one.2 inches in Latta, SC, one.0 inch in Whiteville, NC; and 0.4" in Carolina Beach, NC.  Officially at the Wilmington aerodrome ane.1 inches of snow fell, the first fourth dimension measurable snow had fallen in the Port City in March since 1983.

A wintering Ruby-throated Hummingbird in Wilmington probably wishes he was anywhere else!

A Carmine-throated Hummingbird was even so able to feed on this snowfall-covered feeder in Wilmington on March 12, 2017.  Some hummingbirds routinely spend the winter along the Carolina coast, only rarely deal with snow.

Daffodils covered in snow in a Wilmington neighborhood.  March 12, 2017

Winter was juxtaposed with spring in this photograph from Wilmington of daffodils covered in snow on March 12, 2017.

Snowfall accumulation map from March 12, 2017

Snowfall totals across North and South Carolina from March 12, 2017.  Data is from NWS cooperative observers, airports, and CoCoRaHS volunteer observers.

Several days later on the snow event, an even-colder arctic forepart moved through.  Nighttime low temperatures savage deep into the 20s from March 15th through 17th, ultimately reaching 27 degrees in North Myrtle Embankment, SC; 25 in Wilmington, NC; 23 in Lumberton, NC; and twenty in Florence and Hartsville, SC.  A freeze in mid-March isn't all that unusual in itself, however given the warmth experienced throughout January and February this freeze had significant agricultural impacts to blueberries and peaches.  Damage was worst across South Carolina where some estimates placed losses to the state'due south peach ingather well-nigh 90 percent.  The last freeze of the 2016-2017 winter occurred on March 17th in Florence, SC.

A cold front and potent upper level disturbance moved through the area during the evening of March 18th.  Showers and thunderstorms adult, including one well-divers supercell thunderstorm which produced a 54 mph wind gust in Lumberton, damage to a mobile home near Maxton, and 1" diameter hail in Elizabethtown, NC.  This supercell (shown in a radar and satellite animation at left) persisted for several hours as information technology moved across Southeastern North Carolina.

The final freeze of the season occurred on March 20th in N Myrtle Beach, SC; and Wilmington and Lumberton, NC.  The cyberspace result of all these cold fronts was that temperatures in March actually averaged cooler than temperatures in Feb.  This is actually quite rare and hadn't happened in Wilmington since 1962 and in Florence since 1960.

April:  Except for a single absurd spell April seventh-10th, temperatures rebounded back to much higher up normal levels in April, resuming the weather condition pattern experienced during January and February.  Temperatures ran 4.0 to 5.5 degrees above normal during the month.  This was the warmest April e'er recorded in Wilmington, the 2d warmest on tape in Lumberton, and the third warmest in Florence, SC's climate record.  There were only a handful of widespread precipitation events in April; the offset occurred on April 5th when several waves of thunderstorms ahead of a cold forepart brought astringent atmospheric condition to the surface area.  Large hail occurred across littoral Brunswick Canton, NC including 1" bore hail in Sea Isle Beach, 1.5" hail near Holden Beach, 1.75" hail in Saint James, and 2" hail most Sunset Harbor.  Lightning as well struck and damaged a home in Calabash, NC. Backside the cold front on Apr 6th wind gusts were reported equally high as 50 mph in Kure Beach, NC; 51 mph in Surfside Beach, SC; and 53 mph at Lumberton, NC.

The middle of April was particularly warm with inland temperatures reaching lxxx degrees about every day from the 11th through the 22nd.  A front stalled beyond the expanse on April 23rd and 24th leading to widespread heavy rainfall and wink flooding.  Flood reports began arriving during the morning of April 24th from Andrews, SC.  Heavy pelting then led to flash flooding in Wilmington and Hampstead, NC during the afternoon hours.  Daily rainfall totals reached 3.67" at the Wilmington, NC drome, vi.90" in the Cross Creek neighborhood near Hampstead, NC, and an amazing 8.04" in Rocky Indicate, NC.

Damage to a mobile home and a shed.  Picture credit: Robeson County Emergency Management Agency

Damage to a mobile habitation and a shed in Parkton, NC from an EF1 tornado on May 23, 2017.  Photo credit: Robeson County Emergency Management

MAY:  Higher up-normal temperatures continued into May, bringing the first xc-degree readings of the twelvemonth in Lumberton on May 10th, Wilmington and Northward Myrtle Embankment on May 11th, and Florence on May 15th.  For the month temperatures averaged 1 to iii degrees above normal, making this the twelfth warmest May in history in Wilmington.

May is often one of our most active months for astringent weather, and this one was no exception.  Strong wind shear created by depression pressure to our northwest helped develop astringent thunderstorms on May 4th, including a pair of EF1 tornadoes that struck Oates and Hartsville, SC.  A long period of uneventful weather occurred during mid-May, just on May 23rd waves of depression pressure developed forth a front stalled near the eastern Carolinas.  This acquired widespread thunderstorms to develop and go severe near Parkton, NC where an EF1 tornado occurred with 75 mph wind speeds. More than severe thunderstorms on May 25th produced multiple reports of large hail and damaging winds.  Wind gusts were recorded at 53 mph in Southport and 59 mph at Kure Beach.  More astringent thunderstorms on May 28 knocked copse downward near Tabor Metropolis, NC and Garden Metropolis, SC, and on May 29th large hail savage in Lake City, SC.

JUNE:  There were ii periods of unusually cool temperatures this month.  The first of these cool periods occurred June 7th through the 10th and featured the coolest June temperatures in over 12 years; the high temperature on June eighth in Wilmington was only 68 degrees, 18 degrees below normal!  Afterwards more-typical June rut developed during the centre of the month, temperatures again plunged well below normal from June 28th into early July.  In Wilmington and Florence highs simply reached the 90s 4 and eight times, respectively, this calendar month, nearly one-half of the normal tally.  North Myrtle Beach only had a single twenty-four hours in the 90s this calendar month, the fewest in June since 2001.

Severe thunderstorms developed during the afternoon of June 3rd causing pregnant roof damage to two structures in Hemingway, SC.  Several waves of severe thunderstorms developed on June 15th, producing damaging current of air gusts and dropping hail up to i.25" in diameter in Georgetown, SC.

As a weak warm front traversed the surface area on June 30th, ho-hum-moving thunderstorms continuously redeveloped across Wilmington for several hours from belatedly morning through mid-afternoon.  Rainfall totals included iii.07" in Belville, NC; 4.56" in Castle Hayne, NC; and half-dozen.62" at the Wilmington airport, the 15th wettest mean solar day in Wilmington'due south history dating back to 1874.

So this happened today...

Posted past Andrew Kirsch on Wednesday, July 19, 2017

JULY: Typical summer oestrus occurred the commencement one-half of July with daily highs mainly in the 90s.  The hottest temperatures of the twelvemonth forth the coast occurred July 7th when Wilmington and North Myrtle Beach both reached 97 degrees. This oestrus helped spawn strong to severe thunderstorms on a number of dates.  On July 5th thunderstorm winds destroyed a shed and a barn west of Conway, SC, and several trees and a barn roof were damaged nearly Long Creek in Pender County, NC on July 8th.  Flash Flooding developed on July 9th and affected Tabor City, NC and Green Sea, SC.  At one point Greenish Body of water Rd. was covered with xviii inches of running water.

During the morning of July 19th, a waterspout developed inside a cluster of thunderstorms off the Pender County, NC coast.  This waterspout moved onshore in the town of Surf urban center at xi:23 AM, becoming a brusque-lived tornado.  Three homes suffered impairment to their roofs, a wooden argue was damaged, and outdoor patio article of furniture was scattered by the tornado'due south winds.  A number of people captured pictures and video of the tornado, including video past Andrew Kirsch shared to the right.

Path of the Surf City tornado of July 19, 2017

An unusually strong cold front brought cool temperatures in for the terminal few days of July.  Low temperatures in both Lumberton and Moore's Creek, NC reached 57 degrees on July 31st.  In North Myrtle Beach the morning low on July 31st was 59 degrees, the starting time fourth dimension since 1952 that temperatures in July had fallen below 60 degrees along South Carolina's Grand Strand.

This absurd weather capped off a rather cool calendar month overall.  In fact, 2017 was the commencement year since 2003 that no weather station beyond our portion of the eastern Carolinas reached 100 degrees at any point in the yr.

Baronial:  A front stalled across the area on August 8th leading to the development of tiresome-moving thunderstorms.  Rainfall amounts became excessive in spots with iii.21 inches reported at N Myrtle Beach, SC; iv.67 inches at Monkey Junction in Wilmington, NC; and 6.04 inches almost Belville, NC.  However the biggest weather and nature event of the month was the long-awaited "Great American Eclipse."  This total solar eclipse occurred on August 21st and completely blotted out the sun in a stripe across the Carolinas extending from Cherokee, NC across Greenville, Columbia, and Charleston, SC.  This was a 99 percent eclipse in Florence and Myrtle Beach, SC; and 96 to 97 percent in Wilmington and Lumberton, NC.  Air temperatures vicious during the eclipse as the lord's day's light and heat were blocked past the moon.  Temperature drops averaged 4 to 7 degrees, merely in some spots were as large as 11 degrees.

Weather satellite imagery showing the shadow of the August 21, 2017 eclipse passing across the United States

Full-deejay GOES-16 weather satellite imagery showing the shadow of the Baronial 21, 2017 eclipse passing beyond the United states of america.  This loop runs from 12:30 PM EDT until 4:15 PM EDT.  Courtesy of Colorado State University's Cooperative Constitute for Enquiry in the Temper (CIRA)

Air temperature data collected from the Lumberton, NC ASOS (KLBT) during the eclipse of 2017

Infinitesimal-past-infinitesimal air temperature information collected from the Lumberton, NC airport shows a seven degree dip during the Nifty American Eclipse of Baronial 21, 2017.  Temperature decreases up to nine degrees Fahrenheit were measured in Greenville, SC, and 11 degrees in Newberry, SC.

The hottest period of August actually occurred in the week around the eclipse.  Temperatures reached the lower to centre 90s each twenty-four hours from August 15th through the 23rd.  The 23rd was the hottest 24-hour interval inland and included temperatures of 96 degrees in Florence, SC; and 97 in Hartsville, SC and Elizabethtown, NC.  Severe thunderstorms subsequently that aforementioned solar day associated with a cold front blew down trees in Fairmont and Whiteville, NC, and in Mullins and Dillon, SC.

Severe t-storms loosely associated with the remnants of Tropical Storm Harvey overturned a mobile home in Hartsville, SC on August 31st, injuring two.  As the same thunderstorm prison cell moved beyond the metropolis of Darlington, an NWS employee estimated air current speeds reached threescore mph.

SEPTEMBER:  Hurricane Irma was a category five hurricane that affected much of the northern Caribbean area from the Leeward Islands to Puerto Rico and Cuba from September 4th through the 9th.  At ane signal Irma's maximum sustained winds reached 185 mph.  Irma fabricated two U.Due south. landfalls in Florida equally a major hurricane on September 10th, then weakened every bit it turned due north along the Florida due west coast and moved into southwestern Georgia.  Although Irma's center remained over 350 miles away from the eastern Carolinas, a large area of potent easterly winds adult between Irma and high pressure level off the East Coast.  Wind gusts on September 11th reached 61 mph in Georgetown, SC; 54 mph at the Myrtle Beach airport; 47 mph in Kure Beach, NC; 45 mph in Florence, SC; and 40 mph in Wilmington, NC. Atmospheric condition buoys measured ten to fifteen foot wave heights just offshore.

Coastal flooding produced by the stiff onshore air current was generally minor across southeastern North Carolina, but was more meaning forth the South Carolina coast where sand dunes were even so damaged from Hurricane Matthew the previous year. Officials in Pawley'south Island, SC reported sand-covered roadways, significant embankment erosion, and a few flooded homes after the storm.  Many streets were flooded at loftier tide in Garden Urban center Beach and in Georgetown, SC.  Irma'southward storm total rainfall was i.92" in Wilmington and 2.52" in Florence, but maximum rainfall totals of iv to five inches were reported in a number of locations from Pawley's Isle to Calabash and Southport, NC.  The Myrtle Beach Dominicus-News has a good summary of Irma's impacts forth the Grand Strand.

"It's an 60 minutes from high tide and water is pouring in from Garden Urban center Beach."  Posted on Twitter by WPDE reporter Madeline Montgomery

Stiff winds and large waves at Wrightsville Embankment, NC on September xi, 2017

High tides at Wrightsville Beach, NC associated with the outer edge of Hurricane Irma

There was very trivial embankment left on Wrightsville Beach, NC virtually high tide on September 11, 2017

Two more than powerful hurricanes, Jose and Maria, moved through the western Atlantic in September.  These storms remained far enough offshore for no direct weather impacts locally, but large ocean swells created excellent surfing conditions equally well equally dangerous rip currents.  The Frying Pan Shoals beacon reported 9.6 foot waves every fourteen seconds on September 17th-18th associated with Hurricane Jose.  Maria brought more large waves to the beaches September 26th-28th.  Sinking air around the periphery of Maria produced some of the terminal xc caste temperatures of the year including 94 degrees in Wilmington, 93 in Florence, and 96 in Whiteville.

OCTOBER:  In contrast to September, October was relatively dry out and uneventful.  Temperatures averaged 2 to 3 degrees above normal, including a period of rut during the 2nd week of October that produced widespread highs in the upper 80s.  Temperatures even touched 90 degrees on October 11th in Hartsville and Cades, SC.   A strong cold front on October 23rd brought thunderstorms which produced a brief tornado in a rural expanse east of Conway, SC, damaging trees and an outbuilding near the Waccamaw River.  Heavy rainfall as well occurred including 1.70 inches measured at N Myrtle Beach and ii.24 inches in Loris, SC.

November:  November was a very dry month with rainfall amounts simply one-quarter to one-half of normal.  Temperatures averaged slightly beneath normal as Canadian air covered the Carolinas for all merely the first week of the calendar month.  The first freezing temperatures of the season occurred during the heart of Nov equally several waves of cold air pushed in from the north.  A widespread freeze on Nov 20th ended the growing season for virtually all of eastern North and South Carolina.

2017 Concluding Spring Freeze 2017 First Autumn Freeze 2017 Growing Season Length Anomaly
Wilmington March twenty November twenty 235 days -7
Lumberton March 20 November xi 235 days +23
Florence March 17 Nov 20 247 days +15
Myrtle Beach March 20 Nov twenty 244 days +0

DECEMBER: This month began mild, just a front stalled off the coast on December fifth leading to four direct days of clouds, chilly temperatures, and rain.  Pelting was but heavy on 1 day (December 8th) when as much as 2.62 inches savage in Florence and two.66 inches in Lumberton.  For the western Carolinas this became a snowstorm with ten inches measured in Asheville, NC and 2 inches in Greenville, SC.  Ten days of dry weather during the middle of December concluded with a soaking pelting from December 20th through 22nd that measured nearly two inches in Yaupon Beach and Southport, NC.

Arctic air congenital across the eastern U.South. afterward Christmas.  A weak wave of low pressure off the coast produced a very light freezing rain event on Dec 29th along the coast of South Carolina up through the tip of Greatcoat Fearfulness.  Emergency Direction in Georgetown County, SC reported several vehicle accidents due to ice on the Wacamaw River bridge.  A little moisture drifted dorsum onshore during the evening of December 31st and produced a brief menstruation of sleet across coastal N Carolina, measuring a trace in spots effectually Wilmington.


2017 Urban center Climate Reports and Graphics

                      WILMINGTON NC                    Avg Hullo/Dep  Avg Lo/Dep  Avg T/Dep  Warmest   Coolest   Precip/Dep January  61.3/+4.9   41.4/+five.viii  51.3/+5.3  77/13th   16/9th    iv.22/+0.46 February  67.9/+eight.0   42.nine/+5.0  55.4/+6.5  79/25th   29/tenth   1.33/-ii.29 MAR  65.nine/-0.5   41.0/-two.8  53.five/-one.6  85/21st   25/17th   2.71/-1.50 April  78.0/+3.8   57.9/+vi.3  68.0/+5.i  88/21st   37/8th    7.05/+4.23 MAY  82.nine/+2.two   63.1/+3.1  73.0/+ii.vi  91/29th   48/eighth    5.19/+0.70 JUN  86.2/-0.7   68.9/+0.2  77.six/-0.ii  93/24th   54/ninth   x.11/+4.93 JUL  xc.2/+0.v   73.7/+1.i  82.0/+0.9  97/7th    60/31st   6.59/-0.89 AUG  87.0/-1.1   71.9/+0.6  79.5/-0.2  95/18th   sixty/1st   10.18/+2.77 SEP  85.ii/+1.5   67.2/+i.six  76.2/+ane.half dozen  94/28th   57/30th   3.82/-4.02 OCT  78.4/+2.7   58.2/+3.6  68.3/+3.1  89/twelfth   40/30th   6.51/+2.62 NOV  68.five/+0.five   44.4/-1.0  56.5/-0.2  82/sixth    32/20th   one.07/-2.22 December  58.ii/-1.i   39.1/+ane.3  48.6/+0.0  75/19th   25/28th   three.86/+0.24 --------------------------------------------------------------------- ANN  75.8/+ane.seven   55.viii/+ii.0  65.8/+ane.viii  97        16       62.64/+5.03  Number of days with Temperatures...  xc degrees of higher: 41 (1 more than than normal)  32 degrees or lower:  31 (4 fewer than normal)  Heating degree days: 1955 (457 fewer than normal) Cooling degree days: 2355 (311 more than normal)  Number of days with precipitation...  0.01" or greater: 121 (14 fewer than normal)  0.x" or greater: 76  (2 fewer than normal)  0.50" or greater: 37  (two more than than normal)  ane.00" or greater: 20  (three more than normal)  Thunderstorms occurred on 74 days. Snow or sleet fell on three days. Measurable snow or sleet: 1.1 inches.  Boilerplate current of air speed: vii.5 MPH Maximum 2-minute current of air speed: 37 mph on April 6th Maximum 5-second wind gust: 50 mph on April 6th          Wilmington 2017 climate plot        

                        FLORENCE SC                                Avg Hullo/Dep  Avg Lo/Dep  Avg T/Dep  Warmest   Coolest   Precip/Dep JAN  62.7/+7.4   41.6/+vii.0  52.ii/+seven.three  79/18th   18/ninth    3.26/+0.03 February  69.6/+10.0  43.0/+5.5  56.3/+7.8  80/28th   29/5th    1.61/-1.31 MAR  68.vii/+1.ane   42.1/-i.five  55.4/-0.2  87/21st   20/16th   1.sixty/-1.73 APR  79.4/+3.6   56.0/+5.3  67.7/+4.4  xc/29th   35/8th    4.55/+ane.93 MAY  83.3/+0.6   61.0/+1.vi  72.ane/+ane.0  92/16th   46/8th    3.69/+0.43 JUN  87.1/-1.3   67.9/-0.1  77.5/-0.7  95/15th   56/ninth    iv.24/-0.38 JUL  90.ix/-0.i   71.viii/+0.4  81.4/+0.2  96/15th   61/31st   9.08/+3.82 AUG  88.v/-0.9   71.2/+0.vii  79.8/-0.i  96/23rd   60/1st    three.55/-i.69 SEP  85.2/+1.0   64.eight/+0.5  75.0/+0.8  93/28th   55/8th    4.12/+0.45 Oct  77.half dozen/+2.ane   55.five/+2.4  66.6/+2.3  87/12th   36/30th   1.57/-1.51 November  67.2/+0.one   41.2/-2.5  53.9/-i.5  83/3rd    29/28th   0.70/-i.97 DEC  57.ane/-0.seven   38.ii/+1.7  47.7/+0.six  75/23rd   25/29th   4.66/+ane.65 --------------------------------------------------------------------- ANN  76.v/+i.nine   54.5/+1.vii  65.five/+ane.8  96        eighteen       42.63/-0.28  Number of days with Temperatures...  90 degrees of higher: 57 (1 more than normal)  32 degrees or lower:  31 (9 fewer than normal)  Heating degree days: 1964 (560 fewer than normal) Cooling degree days: 2248 (186 more than than normal)  Number of days with atmospheric precipitation...  0.01" or greater: 105 (1 fewer than normal)  0.10" or greater: 72  (2 more than normal)  0.l" or greater: 27  (two fewer than normal)  1.00" or greater: 9   (iii fewer than normal)  Thunderstorms occurred on 65 days. Snow savage on one day.  Average wind speed: vi.eight MPH Maximum 2-minute current of air speed: 45 mph on July 23rd Maximum 5-second wind gust: 57 mph on July 23rd          Florence, SC 2017 climate plot        

                      Northward MYRTLE Beach SC                    Avg Hi/Dep  Avg Lo/Dep  Avg T/Dep  Warmest   Coolest   Precip/Dep Jan  61.2/+6.ane   43.2/+vii.0  52.ii/+6.five  78/18th   nineteen/9th    2.03/-ane.66 February  65.6/+8.2   44.4/+five.8  55.0/+7.0  75/24th   31/4th    i.l/-ane.92 MAR  64.4/+0.iii   43.7/-0.half-dozen  54.0/-0.two  76/29th   27/17th   ane.94/-i.98 April  74.viii/+3.5   58.4/+6.v  66.6/+5.0  81/30th   37/8th    3.44/+0.48 MAY  81.2/+2.6   63.half-dozen/+2.8  72.4/+2.7  90/15th   49/8th    4.30/+0.89 JUN  83.5/-one.0   69.5/+0.2  76.5/-0.4  ninety/24th   54/9th    3.70/-0.94 JUL  88.one/+0.v   73.half-dozen/+0.5  lxxx.8/+0.5  97/7th    59/31st   2.22/-3.68 AUG  85.4/-0.vii   72.ix/+1.2  79.1/+0.two  92/16th   61/1st   sixteen.48/+9.07 SEP  84.three/+0.ix   68.five/+1.6  76.4/+one.3  91/27th   59/8th    4.28/-2.00 OCT  77.one/+two.0   59.0/+iii.3  68.1/+two.7  84/16th   38/30th   4.27/+0.39 NOV  67.1/+0.5   45.0/-1.four  56.0/-0.v  81/3rd    32/20th   1.52/-1.52 December  57.4/-1.1   41.1/+ii.1  49.iii/+0.five  74/1st    27/30th   iii.44/-0.02 --------------------------------------------------------------------- ANN  74.ii/+one.8   56.9/+2.3  65.v/+2.0  97/7th    19/ninth   49.12/-2.89  Number of days with Temperatures...  90 degrees of higher: 14 (2 fewer than normal)  32 degrees or lower:  20 (x fewer than normal)  Heating degree days: 1892 (556 fewer than normal) Cooling degree days: 2197 (294 more normal)  Number of days with precipitation...  0.01" or greater: 117  0.x" or greater: 76  0.fifty" or greater: 31  ane.00" or greater: 16  Thunderstorms occurred on 66 days. Snow did non autumn.  Average current of air speed: vii.8 MPH Maximum ii-infinitesimal air current speed: 39 mph on August 7th Maximum 5-second air current gust: 56 mph on August 7th                  

                                    LUMBERTON NC                    Avg How-do-you-do/Dep  Avg Lo/Dep  Avg T/Dep  Warmest   Coolest   Precip/Dep January  60.4/+half dozen.7   39.6/+half-dozen.4  50.0/+half-dozen.6  77/13th   16/9th    2.40/-0.57 FEB  69.0/+11.0  41.6/+6.0  55.3/+8.5  82/25th   27/10th   1.09/-1.81 MAR  67.2/+0.9   forty.5/-1.v  53.8/-0.3  85/21st   23/16th   iii.ninety/+one.18 APR  77.9/+3.4   56.iii/+7.3  67.1/+5.4  89/28th   35/8th    6.07/+3.25 MAY  83.5/+1.4   lx.nine/+three.3  72.2/+2.4  93/20th   44/eighth    iii.86/+0.81 JUN  87.four/-1.1   67.5/+0.1  77.5/-0.5  95/14th   54/9th    3.73/-0.61 JUL  xc.6/-0.four   71.1/-0.2  lxxx.8/-0.iii  96/23rd   57/31st   iii.74/-ane.74 AUG  88.iv/+0.1   seventy.i/+0.4  79.2/+0.ii  95/23rd   57/1st    vii.02/+one.52 SEP  85.0/+1.iii   62.ix/+0.6  73.9/+0.9  94/28th   53/eighth    4.94/+0.14 Oct  78.ii/+ii.7   53.one/+ane.eight  65.6/+2.2  87/12th   35/30th   ii.26/-0.31 NOV  67.4/+0.ii   38.seven/-2.7  53.0/-ane.3  83/3rd    25/28th   0.74/-2.13 Dec  56.1/-0.7   36.ane/+0.5  46.1/-0.one  75/fifth    22/13th   4.08/+1.19 --------------------------------------------------------------------- ANN  75.9/+2.0   53.2/+1.8  64.6/+two.0  96        16       43.83/+0.31  Number of days with Temperatures...  ninety degrees of higher: sixty (ix more than than normal)  32 degrees or lower:  45 (4 fewer than normal)  Heating degree days: 2203 (558 fewer than normal) Cooling degree days: 2105 (195 more than normal)  Number of days with precipitation...  0.01" or greater: 108   0.10" or greater: 81    0.fifty" or greater: 26    1.00" or greater: 10    Snow fell on one day.  Average wind speed: half-dozen.1 MPH Maximum two-minute air current speed: 43 mph on March 18th Maximum v-second wind gust: 55 mph on Baronial 23rd        


2017 Radar-estimated Rainfall Graphics

2017 Radar-estimated precipitation totals

2017 Radar-estimated precipitation totals were by and large 40 to 65 inches across the area.  Radar beam blockage has artificially lowered these estimates near the South Carolina declension.

2017 Radar-estimated precipitation departures from normal.

2017 Radar-estimated precipitation departures from normal were as large equally +8 to +12 inches across isolated spots of eastern North and South Carolina.  Other areas ran slightly below normal.  Radar axle blockage has artificially lowered these estimates near the South Carolina coast.

Page Writer: Tim Armstrong
Page Created: Jan 2, 2018
Last Updated: January 2, 2018

ashtoncith1939.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.weather.gov/ilm/2017ClimateSummary

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