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March 31, 2005

Chicago’s 2nd fastest-warming month arrives

Of all months, few have a wider meteorological repertoire than April. It’s a characteristic evident in the predicted weather swings of the next two weeks. The cool temps of coming days yield to milder readings and bursts of thundery weather by next Tuesday and Wednesday. Chicago’s “normal” (most recent 30-year average) daily high temps rise over the coming 30 days from 53° on April 1 to 64° on April 30—an 11° increase! Only March boasts a more significant monthly surge in daytime highs.
Chicago has experienced everything from snowstorms to tornadoes and occasional 90° temperatures in April.
April 1-2, 1970 hosted a crippling 10.7” snowstorm. Only three years earlier, the infamous Oak Lawn tornado dipped from area skies on April 21. Other twisters occurred in Belvidere and Lake Zurich. That April 1967 tornado outbreak remains Chicago worst on record.
-Tom Skilling

New Storms Next Week

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Weather Update

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Earthquake, Tsunami & Weather

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HAIL POURS DOWN ON CHICAGO AREA WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING

Hail, and lots of it, accompanied the Chicago area's first outbreak of severe weather Wednesday afternoon and evening (March 30). More than six dozen reports of hailstones 0.75" in diameter or greater were logged by the National Weather Service (NWS)-Chicago Forecast Office.

Several of the t-storms moved along at speeds as high as 64 mph. Little wonder a 62 mph wind gust was reported at DuPage County Airport in West Chicago--and it's likely, given the speed at which these storms moved, that even higher gusts may have occurred in parts of the Chicago metro area but, because they occurred in unmonitored areas, speeds were unavailable. NWS Meteorologist Nathan Marsili at the Chicago office tells us the so many hail reports flooded the office in such a short period of time during Wednesday's severe weather assault that some duplicate observations weren't listed when they occurred in areas already logged as having received hail.

The NWS-Chicago office issued 23 timely severe weather warnings during the outbreak: 16 severe t-storm warnings, 4 marine warnings and 3 tornado warnings. The area was placed under a series of tornado and severe t-storm watches by NOAA's Storm Prediction Center.
--Tom Skilling

Pictures of Chicago's Hail Courtesy of Brad Sowers and Dan Hanson:
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Photos by Brad Sowers


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Photo by Dan Hanson

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