757  
CXUS53 KGRR 011952  
CLMMKG  
 
CLIMATE REPORT...ADDED SUMMARY PARAGRAPHS  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE GRAND RAPIDS, MI  
250 PM EST SUN NOV 1 2009  
   
...............................  
 
   
..THE MUSKEGON MI CLIMATE SUMMARY FOR THE MONTH OF OCTOBER 2009  
 
CLIMATE NORMAL PERIOD 1971 TO 2000  
CLIMATE RECORD PERIOD 1895 TO 2009  
 
WEATHER OBSERVED NORMAL DEPART LAST YEAR'S  
VALUE DATE(S) VALUE FROM VALUE DATE(S)  
NORMAL    
............................................................  
 
TEMPERATURE (F)  
RECORD  
HIGH 86 10/15/1899  
LOW 19 10/29/1905  
HIGHEST 67 10/30 76 -9 80 10/12  
LOWEST 27 10/18 27 0 28 10/30  
10/29  
10/22  
AVG. MAXIMUM 54.7 58.7 -4.0 58.7  
AVG. MINIMUM 42.5 40.6 1.9 40.0  
MEAN 48.6 49.7 -1.1 49.3  
DAYS MAX >= 90 0 0.0 0.0 0  
DAYS MAX <= 32 0 0.0 0.0 0  
DAYS MIN <= 32 3 5.5 -2.5 4  
DAYS MIN <= 0 0 0.0 0.0 0  
 
PRECIPITATION (INCHES)  
RECORD  
MAXIMUM 7.33 1991  
MINIMUM 0.20 1924  
TOTALS 6.00 2.80 3.20 3.40  
DAILY AVG. 0.19 0.09 0.10 0.11  
DAYS >= .01 17 11.3 5.7 13  
DAYS >= .10 11 6.3 4.7 9  
DAYS >= .50 3 1.8 1.2 3  
DAYS >= 1.00 2 0.4 1.6 0  
GREATEST  
24 HR. TOTAL 1.73 10/30 TO 10/30  
 
SNOWFALL (INCHES)  
RECORDS  
TOTAL 6.0 1910  
24 HR TOTAL 4.7 10/27/1967 TO 10/27/1967  
SNOW DEPTH 3 10/27/1967  
TOTALS 0.0 0.6 -0.6 T  
LIQUID EQUIV 0.00 0.10 -0.10 MM  
SINCE 7/1 0.0 0.6 -0.6 T  
LIQUID 7/1 0.00 0.10 -0.10 MM  
SNOWDEPTH AVG. 0 0 0 0  
DAYS >= TRACE 0 0.4 -0.4 2  
DAYS >= 1.0 0 0.1 -0.1 0  
GREATEST  
SNOW DEPTH 0 MM 0 MM  
24 HR TOTAL 0.0 MM  
 
DEGREE_DAYS  
HEATING TOTAL 501 476 25 481  
SINCE 7/1 675 686 -11 576  
COOLING TOTAL 0 3 -3 2  
SINCE 1/1 379 487 -108 406  
 
FREEZE DATES  
RECORD  
EARLIEST 09/22/1976  
LATEST 06/22/1992  
EARLIEST 10/01 10/14  
LATEST 05/04    
.............................................................  
 
WIND (MPH)  
AVERAGE WIND SPEED 9.3  
RESULTANT WIND SPEED/DIRECTION 2/214  
HIGHEST WIND SPEED/DIRECTION 39/280 DATE 10/06  
HIGHEST GUST SPEED/DIRECTION 54/280 DATE 10/06  
 
SKY COVER  
POSSIBLE SUNSHINE (PERCENT) MM  
 
NUMBER OF DAYS FAIR 3  
NUMBER OF DAYS PC 12  
NUMBER OF DAYS CLOUDY 16  
 
AVERAGE RH (PERCENT) 76  
 
WEATHER CONDITIONS. NUMBER OF DAYS WITH  
THUNDERSTORM 1 MIXED PRECIP 0  
HEAVY RAIN 2 RAIN 8  
LIGHT RAIN 22 FREEZING RAIN 0  
LT FREEZING RAIN 0 HAIL 0  
HEAVY SNOW 0 SNOW 0  
LIGHT SNOW 0 SLEET 0  
FOG 20 FOG W/VIS <= 1/4 MILE 2  
HAZE 3  
 
- INDICATES NEGATIVE NUMBERS.  
R INDICATES RECORD WAS SET OR TIED.  
MM INDICATES DATA IS MISSING.  
T INDICATES TRACE AMOUNT.  
 
 
 
OCTOBER 2009 WAS SIGNIFICANTLY COLDER THAN NORMAL...WETTER THAN  
NORMAL AND MUCH CLOUDIER THAN NORMAL. IT IS THE THIRD MONTH THIS  
YEAR TO BE IN THE TOP ONE THIRD COLDEST MONTHS...WITH JANUARY AND  
JULY. MOST OF THE AREA INLAND OF ROUTE 31 AND NORTH OF INTERSTATE 94  
HAD A HARD FREEZE ON THE MORNING OF THE 1ST. THOSE WHO DID NOT HAVE  
A HARD FREEZE ON THE 1ST HAD IT ON THE 10TH. IT IS THE FOURTH MONTH  
THIS YEAR TO BE IN THE TOP ONE THIRD WETTEST...WITH APRIL...JUNE AND  
AUGUST BEING THE OTHER WET MONTHS. THIS IS THE FIRST OCTOBER ON  
RECORD WITH GRAND RAPIDS NOT MAKING 70 DEGREES AT ANY TIME IN THE  
MONTH.  
 
TEMPERATURES WHERE BELOW NORMAL FOR THE FIRST EIGHTEEN DAYS OF  
OCTOBER...THEN A WARM FRONT CAME THROUGH DURING THE MORNING OF THE  
19TH AND FROM THAT POINT THROUGH THE 30TH...TEMPERATURES WERE ABOVE  
NORMAL EXCEPT FOR ONE BELOW NORMAL DAY ON THE 24TH.  
 
A DEEP STORM SYSTEM OVER EASTERN KANSAS EARLY IN THE MORNING OF THE  
1ST MOVED NORTH TO MINNESOTA BY THE MORNING OF THE 2ND...THEN  
STALLED OVER THE WESTERN GREAT LAKES INTO THE 4TH BEFORE MOVING OUT  
OF THE AREA ON THE 5TH. THIS BROUGHT ONE TO TWO INCHES OF RAIN OVER  
THE SOUTHWESTERN SECTIONS OF THE STATE AND FROM A HALF TO ONE INCH  
OVER THE REMAINDER OF SOUTHWEST LOWER MICHIGAN.  
 
THE NEXT DEEP STORM DEVELOPED OVER EASTERN COLORADO ON THE 5TH THEN  
MOVED EAST NORTHEAST AND OCCLUDED AS THE CENTER OF THE STORM MOVED  
OVER NORTHERN LAKE MICHIGAN BY THE EVENING OF THE 6TH. THAT BROUGHT  
BETWEEN A HALF INCH AND AN INCH OF RAIN TO THE AREA. THE HEAVIEST  
RAINFALL WITH THIS EVENT WAS NORTH OF ROUTE 10 AND WEST OF HIGHWAY  
131.  
 
A STRONG COLD FRONT MOVED THROUGH THE AREA ON THE 9TH. THAT BROUGHT  
AROUND A QUARTER INCH OF RAIN OVER NORTHERN SECTIONS OF THE COUNTY  
WARNING AREA... TO AROUND A HALF INCH IN THE INTERSTATE 96 REGION TO  
AROUND THREE QUARTERS OF AN INCH NEAR INTERSTATE 94.  
 
MUCH COLDER AIR MOVED INTO THE AREA BEHIND THAT FRONT AND REMAINED  
IN PLACE THROUGH THE 18TH. FROM THE 10TH THROUGH THE 18TH A LARGE  
CANADIAN HIGH BROUGHT MOSTLY COLDER THAN NORMAL TEMPERATURES TO THE  
AREA. TEMPERATURES AVERAGED FROM 10 TO 12 DEGREES BELOW NORMAL  
ACROSS THE AREA DURING THAT TIME. THE COLDEST DEPARTURES FROM NORMAL  
WERE OVER THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SOUTHWEST LOWER MICHIGAN. A FEW  
WEAK COLD FRONTS MOVED THROUGH THE AREA DURING THAT TIME BUT VERY  
LITTLE IN THE WAY OF RAINFALL OCCURRED.  
 
THE WARM FRONT MOVED THOUGHT THE AREA ON THE 19TH DURING THE  
MORNING BUT IT DID NOT BRING ANY SIGNIFICANT PRECIPITATION WITH IT.  
A COLD FRONT MOVED INTO THE REGION ON THE 20TH...THEN STALLED OVER  
THE SOUTHERN PART OF LOWER MICHIGAN. THAT ALLOWED A DEVELOPING STORM  
SYSTEM FROM SOUTHWEST KANSAS TO TRACK ALONG THE FRONT THROUGH  
SOUTHERN IOWA AND NORTHERN MISSOURI ON THE 22ND...WHERE IT DEEPENED  
CONSIDERABLY. THE SURFACE CENTER OF THE STORM THEN TRACKED NORTH  
NORTHEAST FROM CHICAGO TO NEAR TRAVERSE CITY ON THE 23TH. THIS STORM  
BROUGHT A CONSIDERABLE AMOUNT OF WIND AND RAIN TO THE AREA.  
LOCATIONS ALONG THE LAKE MICHIGAN SHORE REPORTED WIND GUSTS TO  
BETWEEN 45 AND 50 MPH DURING THE AFTERNOON ON THE 23RD. RAINFALL OF  
BETWEEN ONE AND THREE INCHES OCCURRED BETWEEN THE EVENING OF THE  
22ND AND MORNING OF THE 24TH. THERE WERE NUMEROUS REPORTS OF  
LOCALIZED FLOODING NEAR AND WEST OF ROUTE 131 FROM THIS EVENT. THE  
HEAVIEST RAINFALL OCCURRED IN THIS AREA.  
 
A WEAK COLD FRONT IN COMBINATION WITH A SOUTHERN STREAM MOISTURE  
FEED BROUGHT FROM ONE HALF TO ONE INCH OF RAIN ALONG THE LAKE  
MICHIGAN SHORE FROM THE 25TH INTO THE 26TH.  
 
FINALLY...A VERY STRONG FALL STORM THAT TRACKED FROM THE SOUTHERN  
PLAINS TO THE CANADIAN BORDER WAS OUR LAST STORM OF THE MONTH  
AND IT FEATURED STRONG WINDS AND HEAVY RAINFALL. MANY LOCATIONS  
ACROSS WESTERN LOWER MICHIGAN AND SOUTHWESTERN LOWER MICHIGAN  
RECEIVED BETWEEN 1 TO 3 INCHES OF RAIN...WITH A FEW HIGHER AMOUNTS.  
WINDS GUSTED BETWEEN 40 AND 50 MPH IN NUMEROUS LOCATIONS.  
 
 
 
WDM HOVING  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab MI Page
The Nexlab IN Page
Main Text Page