Weather and Market Commentary- September 28, 2009
September 28, 2009 by sabrina829
Monday, September 28, 2009:
It is going to be cold in parts of the Midwest during the next three mornings, there is going to be “frost on the pumpkin” in a lot of places, but it still looks like most places will see the 2009 growing season continue as temperatures in most spots will stay above the 32 degree mark. For tomorrow morning, look for the coldest readings to be in the eastern Dakotas, Minnesota, northwestern Wisconsin, far northern and far western Iowa, and northeastern Nebraska. On Wednesday morning, the cold spots will be over Minnesota, the eastern two-thirds of Iowa, northeastern Missouri, the northern half of Illinois, and all of Wisconsin. On Thursday morning, it will be Wisconsin, Michigan, northeastern Indiana, and much of Ohio that have the coldest temperatures. In the above-mentioned areas, we are going to see low temperatures largely in the 33 to 39 degree range. There are places in the region that, due to topography or notoriously cool thermometers, get a lot colder than most spots in situations like this, and thus it is likely that we will see a few places reach 32 degrees or a little lower. Again though, the vast majority of spots will see temperatures stay above 32.
Beyond this there are no definitive days during the first week of October that are indicated to be exceptionally cold in the Nation’s midsection, so we could see the growing season extended fairly deeply into October this year. Rain will be possible today in areas near the Great Lakes, but otherwise conditions look dry in the Plains, Corn Belt, and Delta through Wednesday so we should really start to see the combines roll during that period (particularly with regards to the soybean harvest). Conditions do not look good beyond that though. Rain will be working into western parts of the Corn Belt on Wednesday night, and that system may not completely exit the eastern parts of the Corn Belt until sometime next weekend. Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and the Dakotas could see rather big rains out of that. Delta growing areas will see lighter rains, but rain will indeed be falling there again by Friday morning. One can see good indications that wet weather will continue next week, with rain possibly starting again as early as October 5 and it might last through October 8.
Freese-Notis Weather/Weather Trades, Inc. Des Moines, Iowa Copyright 2009 – All Rights Reserved

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Weather and Market Commentary- September 28, 2009
September 28, 2009 by sabrina829
Monday, September 28, 2009:
It is going to be cold in parts of the Midwest during the next three mornings, there is going to be “frost on the pumpkin” in a lot of places, but it still looks like most places will see the 2009 growing season continue as temperatures in most spots will stay above the 32 degree mark. For tomorrow morning, look for the coldest readings to be in the eastern Dakotas, Minnesota, northwestern Wisconsin, far northern and far western Iowa, and northeastern Nebraska. On Wednesday morning, the cold spots will be over Minnesota, the eastern two-thirds of Iowa, northeastern Missouri, the northern half of Illinois, and all of Wisconsin. On Thursday morning, it will be Wisconsin, Michigan, northeastern Indiana, and much of Ohio that have the coldest temperatures. In the above-mentioned areas, we are going to see low temperatures largely in the 33 to 39 degree range. There are places in the region that, due to topography or notoriously cool thermometers, get a lot colder than most spots in situations like this, and thus it is likely that we will see a few places reach 32 degrees or a little lower. Again though, the vast majority of spots will see temperatures stay above 32.
Beyond this there are no definitive days during the first week of October that are indicated to be exceptionally cold in the Nation’s midsection, so we could see the growing season extended fairly deeply into October this year. Rain will be possible today in areas near the Great Lakes, but otherwise conditions look dry in the Plains, Corn Belt, and Delta through Wednesday so we should really start to see the combines roll during that period (particularly with regards to the soybean harvest). Conditions do not look good beyond that though. Rain will be working into western parts of the Corn Belt on Wednesday night, and that system may not completely exit the eastern parts of the Corn Belt until sometime next weekend. Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and the Dakotas could see rather big rains out of that. Delta growing areas will see lighter rains, but rain will indeed be falling there again by Friday morning. One can see good indications that wet weather will continue next week, with rain possibly starting again as early as October 5 and it might last through October 8.
Freese-Notis Weather/Weather Trades, Inc. Des Moines, Iowa Copyright 2009 – All Rights Reserved
To Return to Fastline.com- Click Here
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