Humidity anyone?
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WEATHER TIDBITS
The burning question for July must be discussed now that the muggiest
July since -- well, let me refer to the records real quick, let’s
see, 1996 and before that, July 1990 -- is coming to a close.
It’s 4 p.m. on Monday and here are the conditions: skies are
showing convection. Streams of altocumulus are invading the sky with
vertical uplift graduation to cumulonimbus in large numbers now
popping up like exploding popcorn on the Doppler radar. Once this
dense wave of moist unstable air does the orographic run up the
leeward slopes of first the Santa Rosa Mountains then up the chain to
the towering 10,804-foot summit of Mt. San Jacinto, onward into the
Banning Pass. Next stop, the San Bernardinos and if it’s a strong
enough “Sonoran” it’ll make it to the San Gabriels.
So back to the issue at hand -- the humidity. Of course, Tidbitter
has the numbers. Time to compare: the average max-min humidity in
July is 86-50%. This July it’s been 95-72%. Maximum humidity usually
occurs in the pre-dawn hours and minimum is usually around 1 or 2
p.m. in July. The key factor here is the deviation from normal -- 72%
at 2 p.m. instead of the usual 50%.
Then you’ve got the heat index theory becoming a big player.
With the westerlies cut off, the air is more humid and more
unstable sending dew points way up and setting the stage for
thunderstorm production.
Heat index is kind of like wind chill except it goes the other
way.
OK, take the past four summers where the average temp at 2 p.m.
was 76 degrees with humidity at about 50-52% at the same time, it’s a
very comfortable combo, do the math and it feels like 77 degrees and
your clothes aren’t sticking to you 15 minutes after you shower.
Well, this July the average temp at 2 p.m. has been almost 83
degrees with 72% humidity so it feels roughly like 93 degrees and the
dew point has been 69-70 degrees whereas the 76 and 52 combo had a
dew point of only 55 degrees and there’s a coolish west wind which
usually blows till sundown. But with this year, the south and
southeast breezes usually only blow in the morning and usually just
plain die by afternoon making it warm, moist, still and sultry.
Our maximum/minimum air temps for this July surpass the normal by
six degrees.
The instigator or main orchestrator of this most humid July is a
high pressure cell that has taken up residence over and near the Four
Corners region for pretty much the whole month.
Let’s put it this way, that high hasn’t visited Four Corners
region since ’98. This year it’s been totally running the show -- and
it looks like it’s already paid it’s rent for August too! Plus this
high is anchored solid, cause it’s teamed up with strong high cell
over Montana and Idaho. These twin highs are both working every state
from the Continental Divide westward to the whole Pacific Coast up to
Vancouver. The Four Corners high with it’s clockwise air movement
gathers warm, moist unstable tropical air and flings it west and
northwest.
As a result our surface and aloft winds are from the south,
southeast and east, cutting off the prevailing westerly flow, which
has dominated things the past four consecutive summers. The
westerlies are part of the Pacific Maritime Region, thus the air is
drier and more stable. That’s why the past four summers have been
below normal both air and water temps, it would get down to the low
50s out in the canyon on several occasions even in August. This year,
it’s a whole different ballgame. The south and southeast winds are
blowing in from a totally different climatic region. Tropical
maritime which is usually confined to states east of the Continental
Divide, hence our day and night temps increase markedly and so does
the accompanying humidity and more noticeably our local air temps and
ocean temps.
On the home front, this late bulletin the enemy struck last
Saturday and Sunday, and Monday awoke to a shocking 61-degree water
temp, plus the flattest day in three months.
But it was a nice run while it lasted. The stinkin’ westerlies
showed up and spoiled the party.
I didn’t invite ‘em -- hey, southerlies, we need some bulky
bouncers, some gang called the stinkin’ westerlies just crashed our
party. Remove them immediately.
Stay tuned!
* DENNIS McTIGHE is a Laguna Beach resident. He earned a
bachelor’s degree in earth sciences from UCSD and was a U.S. Air
Force weather forecaster at Hickman Air Force Base, Hawaii.
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