Not the hottest month ever

MILLLBROOK — It seemed like Millbrook felt like Washington, D.C., or Baltimore during the month of July, but the Cary Institute’s climate monitoring station measured it at about normal.

July is the hottest month every year, but the average temperature of 71 degrees for this July was only 1.6 degrees warmer than the historic average. According to Vicky Kelly, manager of environmental monitoring, the hottest day since the Institute began keeping records in 1988 was on July 22, 2002, when the mercury reached 102.56 degrees. Even though it seemed like it never rained, 2.68 inches fell, compared to the driest July ever of .69 inches in 1993. Average precipitation in July is 5.35 inches.

The Cary Institute’s Environmental Monitoring Program, which keeps track of the weather in the town of Washington, measures environmental parameters that are important to studying natural ecosystems. The program’s scientists monitor air, precipitation and stream chemistry as well as meteorological, solar radiation and physical stream parameters. To learn more about the weather, go to ecostudies.org/emp to explore what happened yesterday. The institute does not forecast weather, it only analyzes it.

On Friday, Aug. 20, climatologist Heidi Cullen will discuss her new book, “The Weather of the Future,†which predicts what different parts of the world will look like in 2050 if current levels of carbon emissions are maintained. The event is another free educational lecture sponsored by the Cary Institute and Merritt Bookstore.

July weather statistics

Lowest temperature: 39 degrees on Thursday, July 1, and Friday, July  2.

Highest temperature: 100 degrees on Tuesday, July 6.

Average temperature: 71 degrees.

Monthly precipitation: 2.68 inches.

Average relative humidity: 72 percent.

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