For some reason Belmar seems to be the New York media’s favorite backdrop to do their weird weather stories from and this current warm spell is no exception:
I’m glad the surfers and all the boardwalk walkers are enjoying it and I’m glad to see that the mayor is enjoying it. I’m sure enjoying it. And we’re saving a lot of money!
But not everybody is as sanguine about it. I heard a guy on the radio say that the fact that we broke a temperature record that was over a hundred years old was to him pretty strong evidence of global warming. Huh? If we broke a record that was set last year, and that record broke the record that was set the year before or the year before that, that might mean something. But breaking a record that was set over a hundred years ago tells me that a hundred years ago it was almost as warm as it is now. (Mankind’s 19th century “carbon footprint” was basically non existent.)
I thought it might be instructive to see how many record temperatures were set in the last decade or two. I tried to find a list of the record temperatures for New York for each day of the year and the years they were set. I wasn’t able to find it for New York but I did find the data for Albany N.Y. organized the way I wanted it. For our purposes it really doesn’t matter which city is used.
I see just as many record temperatures that are over a hundred years old, or close to a hundred years old, as I do records that were set in the last twenty years or so. I also find it interesting that the most recent year that had a month with the warmest average temperature in Albany was 1932. Nine of the twelve record high monthly averages occurred in the 19th century.
Personally I wish global warming was real because a: I plan to move to New Hampshire soon and would like for it to be a little warmer up there and b: the next ice age will be here before we know it and any warming can can do now would be to our advantage.
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Two places where you’ll always find Matt, the local bars and wherever the press is located.
https://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2015/12/24/christmas-eve-1955-was-much-warmer/
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