Weather and Market Commentary- Wednesday, June 10
June 10, 2009 by sabrina829
Wednesday, June 10, 2009:
Eastern Kansas and Missouri have been the areas of the Corn Belt getting hardest hit by rainfall over the past 24 hours. Radar is suggesting several distinct areas where more than 2.5 inches of rain has fallen, with localized rains exceeding five inches. Numerous counties in southern Missouri and extreme southeastern Kansas remained under flash flood warnings early on this Wednesday morning. Rain is far from over with for the southern Corn Belt, as it will be Friday before that area sees a dry day again. Additional rains over the next 48 hours will be on the order of 0.50-2.00 inches, with the heaviest totals in areas near the Ohio River. A weak weather system will cross the Corn Belt for late Friday and into Saturday, then the rest of the weekend and into very early next week will find most of the rain in southern and southwestern parts of the Corn Belt, with that rain gradually lifting northeastward for the middle and latter parts of next week.
Needless to say, it remains an active weather pattern for the Corn Belt coming up, with everyone at least getting normal rainfall over the next ten days to two weeks and plenty of places gauging above normal rainfall during that period. Temperatures will be staying quite chilly for especially northwestern parts of the Corn Belt through Saturday, but welcome about next week’s weather will be warmer temperatures. Readings next week will likely average above normal for a change, adding some very welcome growing degree day units to this year’s young corn and soybean crops. I strongly doubt that this is the start of any sort of major heat wave, and still feel the summer of 2009 overall will not be one noted for intense heat for the Nation’s midsection.
Freese-Notis Weather/Weather Trades, Inc. Des Moines, Iowa Copyright 2009 – All Rights Reserved.
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Weather and Market Commentary- Wednesday, June 10
June 10, 2009 by sabrina829
Wednesday, June 10, 2009:
Eastern Kansas and Missouri have been the areas of the Corn Belt getting hardest hit by rainfall over the past 24 hours. Radar is suggesting several distinct areas where more than 2.5 inches of rain has fallen, with localized rains exceeding five inches. Numerous counties in southern Missouri and extreme southeastern Kansas remained under flash flood warnings early on this Wednesday morning. Rain is far from over with for the southern Corn Belt, as it will be Friday before that area sees a dry day again. Additional rains over the next 48 hours will be on the order of 0.50-2.00 inches, with the heaviest totals in areas near the Ohio River. A weak weather system will cross the Corn Belt for late Friday and into Saturday, then the rest of the weekend and into very early next week will find most of the rain in southern and southwestern parts of the Corn Belt, with that rain gradually lifting northeastward for the middle and latter parts of next week.
Needless to say, it remains an active weather pattern for the Corn Belt coming up, with everyone at least getting normal rainfall over the next ten days to two weeks and plenty of places gauging above normal rainfall during that period. Temperatures will be staying quite chilly for especially northwestern parts of the Corn Belt through Saturday, but welcome about next week’s weather will be warmer temperatures. Readings next week will likely average above normal for a change, adding some very welcome growing degree day units to this year’s young corn and soybean crops. I strongly doubt that this is the start of any sort of major heat wave, and still feel the summer of 2009 overall will not be one noted for intense heat for the Nation’s midsection.
Freese-Notis Weather/Weather Trades, Inc. Des Moines, Iowa Copyright 2009 – All Rights Reserved.
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