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The Summer of 2014: Cool and Wet

A lot of rain accompanied this summer's cooler than normal temperatures.
Wiki Commons
A lot of rain accompanied this summer's cooler than normal temperatures.

There’s a reason why this might have felt like one of the coolest summers in memory.

“In Illinois, July was the second coldest July ever,” said Dr. Tom Williams, who teaches meteorology at Western Illinois University.

A lot of rain accompanied this summer's cooler than normal temperatures.
Credit Wiki Commons
A lot of rain accompanied this summer's cooler than normal temperatures.

“You always expect 90-degree days in July and August, the dog days. The dogs aren’t barking this year.”

He said the amount of rain this summer benefited farmers and helped cleanse the atmosphere, which kept down dust and pollen counts.The radio story

Although it finally turned hot and muggy over the weekend, Williams said the National Weather Service found the average temperature in Burlington, Iowa this summer was 70.4 degrees, which is well below normal.

“We’ve been in a pretty persistent weather pattern, which has had persistent northwest flow from the upper atmosphere. And what that does is bring down a lot of Canadian air masses and steers the storm track down across the Midwest,” he said.

Williams said a cool summer does not necessarily mean the fall and winter will be colder than normal, although the 90 day outlook projects cool conditions will continue from August through October.

He said the outlook also calls for near-normal precipitation, though he cautioned there is not much statistical accuracy in long-range precipitation outlooks.

Williams said climatologists and scientists were looking at a developing El Nino this year but it faded away, leaving them uncertain about what to expect this winter.

Copyright 2014 Tri States Public Radio

Rich is the News Director at Tri States Public Radio. Rich grew up in the northwest suburbs of Chicago but now calls Macomb home. Rich has a B.A in Communication Studies with an Emphasis on Radio, TV, and Film from Northern Illinois University. Rich came to love radio in high school where he developed his “news nerdiness” as he calls it. Rich’s high school had a radio station called WFVH, which he worked at for a couple years. In college, Rich worked at campus station WKDI for three years, spinning tunes and serving at various times as General Manager, Music Director and Operations Manager. Before being hired as Tri States Public Radio’s news director in 1998, Rich worked professionally in news at WRMN-AM/WJKL-FM in Elgin and WJBC-AM in Bloomington. In Rich’s leisure time he loves music, books, cross-country skiing, rooting for the Cubs and Blackhawks, and baking sugar frosted chocolate bombs. His future plans include “getting some tacos.”