New Jersey
New Jersey’s Pasta Mystery Remains Unsolved
Authorities in a central New Jersey city say they do not know who dumped lots of of kilos of pasta close to a stream, however they’re now not worrying about it. Outdated Bridge Mayor Owen Henry mentioned Friday that the spaghetti, noodles, and macaroni was cleaned up final week by public works crews, per the AP. The odd sight rapidly drew nationwide consideration when pictures of the pasta have been posted on social media. The estimated 500 kilos of pasta was apparently uncooked when it was dumped, however subsequent heavy rains softened the meals and made the mounds appear to be they’d been cooked, officers have mentioned.
It is not believed the pasta had been on the website for lengthy earlier than it was found. Henry mentioned the pasta didn’t trigger any environmental injury or well being points, and he considers the matter closed. “It actually shouldn’t have ended up within the woods—placing in or close to the stream mattress was not the very best concept—however I actually hope our police should not placing extra time into this” he mentioned. “Assuming the pasta was nonetheless usable, I want it had ended up in our meals financial institution, which may have actually used it.” (Learn weirder stuff tales.)
New Jersey
This might be New Jersey's snowiest day of the entire winter
Let it snow! With each passing week, our weather turns progressively colder. New Jersey’s first snowflakes of the season are now in view. And the Winter Solstice is only a little more than a month away. It is time to start thinking seriously about wintry weather. More specifically: Snow.
While pondering the many uses of “bread and milk,” I had a scientific curiosity.
I wondered if there was one day of the year that tends to be snowier than every other date on the calendar for New Jersey. Sure, there is an average “peak” to wintry weather. (In fact, there are three distinct peaks — more on that in a moment.) But can we pinpoint a single day that represents the height of New Jersey’s snow season?
As a matter of fact, yes we can.
Methodology
To complete this analysis, I queried the Applied Climate Information System, a warehouse of weather and climate data.
I specifically looked at exactly 50 years of snowfall data, from 1971 to 2020. (An admittedly arbitrary choice for period of record, but I wanted a healthy spread of snow observations both geographically and temporally.) Approximately 675 weather stations reported snow data in New Jersey in that time frame.
For the purposes of this project, I marked a calendar day as “snowy” if any single weather station in the state reported at least one inch of snowfall on that date.
The Snowiest Day
There is actually a definitive answer here. With 24 out of 50 years (1971-2020) reporting snow — just shy of half — February 5th is the winner.
And what a funny coincidence: February 5th is also National Weatherperson’s Day. The most important holiday of the entire year!
Second place is February 13th with 23 occurrences. Third is January 21nd at 22. And tied for fourth are January 19th, January 25th, February 4th, and February 6th, all at 21 times in 50 years.
Digging into the Statistics
We can even take all the years of snow data and create a graph. This shows, for each day of snow season in New Jersey (October 4th to May 9th), the percentage of years from 1971-2020 that at least one inch of snow was reported somewhere in New Jersey.
Day-to-day variability is to be expected. That is resolved by the red trendline, representing a 14 point (2 week) moving average. There are some definitive patterns noticeable here.
First, I want to point out that the dataset is basically tri-modal. Meaning there are three definitive peaks in snowstorm activity. One little bump in snowy days around mid-December, leading up to the Winter Solstice. Another occurs in mid to late January, matching with the climatologically coldest temperatures of the year — the “dead of winter”. And another peak occurs in early to mid February, including the highest bar on February 5th.
In total, 178 days out of 366 have seen observed inch-plus snow in New Jersey. That is an impressive 49% of the year in which it has snowed here.
Looking at our snow season from start to finish (i.e. left to right on the graph), it is clear that snow can fall in November. But inch-plus snow is pretty rare in NJ until December.
There is a notable minimum value on December 24th. Christmas Eve. Only 4 of the last 50 years have shown an inch of magical Christmas Eve snow. But 11 Christmas Day snow observations have occurred. That strikes me as an odd outlier, and makes me wonder if there’s some observation bias or other funkiness with the reports here.
You will notice another data minimum on February 29th, due to Leap Day. 4 out of the 13 February 29ths in the survey period reported snow. That comes to about 30%, in line with other nearby dates in late February and early March.
Finally, it is notable how quickly accumulating snow chances disappear beyond the first day of Spring, around March 21st. Snow in April is about as rare as November, at each tail of the graph.
Final Thoughts
Obviously, each winter season is different for New Jersey. And this climatological analysis in no way serves as a short-range or long-range forecast. Just a neat little investigation, proving that common sense largely matches reality when it comes to the timing of peak snow chances in New Jersey.
So stock up on the road salt, wear your pajamas inside-out, and start brewing the hot chocolate. February 5th could be a wintry day!
Let it snow: 12 things to know about winter forecasting in NJ
Gallery Credit: Dan Zarrow
Dan Zarrow is Chief Meteorologist for Townsquare Media New Jersey. Check out Dan’s weather blog or follow him on Facebook for your latest weather forecast updates.
Glossary of NJ winter weather words and phrases
Gallery Credit: Dan Zarrow
New Jersey
20 structures threatened as crews battle wildfire in Hainesport, N.J.
This story originally appeared on 6abc.
Crews are working to contain a 40-acre wildfire in Hainesport, Burlington County.
The blaze broke out Monday night in the area of Bancroft Lane and Cove Court.
Chopper 6 was overhead as New Jersey Forest Fire crews worked to establish a containment line directly behind several homes in the area.
In a 9 p.m. update, officials said no structures were threatened, which was down from 20 earlier in the evening.
Bancroft Lane, Cove Court, and Wharton Place all remain closed.
The fire was about 20% contained Monday night.
No injuries have been reported.
New Jersey
Mom, son from Jamaica grateful for Ronald McDonald House Southern New Jersey
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