Summary of Winter 2023-2024

Meteorological Winter is officially over. Here is a brief summary of December 1, 2023-February 29, 2024 in Stormstown, PA:

Number of Days Max T <= 32 F: 10  

Number of Days Min T <= 32 F: 58 

Number of Days Min T <= 0 F: 0  

Max T: 62.6 F – January 26, 2024  

Min T: 4.8 F – January 22, 2024

Dec Dep from Normal: 7.1 F  

Jan Dep from Normal: 4.1 F  

Feb Dep from Normal: 7.0 F  

Heating Degree Days: 2681 

Cooling Degree Days: 0 

Dec Precip: 2.76″, 0.42″ below normal  

Jan Precip: 4.85″, 1.93″ above normal  

Feb Precip: 1.74″, 0.72″ below normal  

February 2024 Weather Summary

February was 7.0 deg F above normal for temperature. The high for the month was 61.4 deg. F, recorded on February 9. The low for the month was 15.3 deg F, recorded on February 15. There were 9 days when the maximum was at or below 32 F and 18 days when the minimum temperature was at or below 32 F. There were 838 heating degree days and 0 cooling degree days.

February was a below-normal month for precipitation with 1.74 inches of rainfall recorded, which was 0.72 inches below normal. The maximum rainfall in a single day was 0.68 inches recorded on February 28. There were 9 days of rain >.01 in, 4 >.10 in, and 0 > 1 in.

There were 6.3 inches of snow for the month, with a maximum daily total of 4.0 inches on February 17.

High wind speed of 39 mph on February 28.

February 2024 Data

History of Port Matilda, PA

Located in the Bald Eagle Valley off of I-99, between Tyrone and State College, is the small town of Port Matilda. Today, the town has a post office, fire department, EMS, and a few small businesses. Also located in the town is The Port Matilda Hotel and Tavern, which boasts some of the best wings in the area.

Port Matilda traces its roots to 1850, when Squire Clement Beckwith formed the town plot. The naming of the town, however, is not as clear. Beckwith undoubtedly used “Matilda” after his daughter, but “Port” is the source of some debate. The most common explanation, cited by the Centre County Historical Society, claims that Beckwith hoped to eventually connect the town to the Bald Eagle and Spring Creek Branch of the Pennsylvania Canal, which unfortunately never came to pass. 

Beckwith, who had lived in Bellefonte for nearly 20 years prior, purchased 1,800 acres and set about building all the amenities necessary for a pioneer village, including several mills, houses and a worship space. John Blair Linn’s History of Centre and Clinton Counties, Pennsylvania mentions that before land was carved up among early settlers, the township—like most of the county—was home to “Cornplanter Indians,” but pressures from westward expansion and various treaties had seen the last move from the area around the turn of the 19th century. Thus, the town of Port Matilda was born, and its significance would grow. 

In 1852, a plank road was run from recently plotted Tyrone to industrial hub Bellefonte. Fortunately for Port Matilda, the old wooden roadway passed directly through the heart of town. In the latter half of the 1800s, Linn notes, in addition to the frequent traveler on horseback or wagon, four stagecoaches were run daily through the village on their way to or from Bellefonte, with one stopping overnight in Port Matilda. With so much traffic, the town’s amenities increased, and the town’s most famous landmark, the Port Matilda Hotel, was erected as the only hostelry for several miles in either direction.

The Port Matilda Hotel has its roots in the birth of the town, and has witnessed the growth, “golden years,” and eventual decline that plagued so many industrial towns. The town’s first tavern was built and managed by John Fugate Sr. to take advantage of the growing travel through Port Matilda. In addition to the old plank road, the Bald Eagle Valley eventually had railway lines that would increase travel and industry. The original hotel would pass hands several times until 1871, when it was burned to the ground by an incendiary. Eventually rebuilt, the hotel flourished through the turn of the 20th century managed by G.W. Woodring,

For many years, Port Matilda was a “boom” town, both figuratively and literally, as the largest industry in town was the McFeely Brick Company. Employees blasted away ganister rock from the face of Bald Eagle Mountain over many years; the rock was used to make a specific type of silica brick. Most people living in Port Matilda had a connection to the brickyard, which required a great labor force to produce, package and ship their products via rail from the site. At that time, in the 1930s and 1940s, the industrial economy of the town provided for theaters, parks, community swimming pools, stores and schools.

Like many industrial towns in central Pennsylvania, once the main industry leaves, the town struggles. McFeely Brick Company was sold in 1959, and the new owners promptly closed the Port Matilda brickyard. The booming stopped, but Port Matilda survived. Today, Port Matilda remains as a crossroads town. While I-99 has made it far too easy to cruise on past, Port Matilda is definitely worth passing through, grabbing a basket of wings and reminiscing on what small-town America looked like for our past generations.

Source: StateCollege.com

Port Matilda: From Plank Road to the brick company

January 2024 Weather Summary

January was 4.1 deg F above normal for temperature. The high for the month was 62.6 deg. F, recorded on January 26. The low for the month was 4.8 deg F, recorded on January 22. There were 9 days when the maximum was at or below 32 F, 18 days when the minimum temperature was at or below 32 F, and 0 days when the minimum temperature was at or below 0 F. There were 1045 heating degree days and 0 cooling degree days.

January was an above-normal month for precipitation with 4.85 inches of liquid precipitation recorded, which was 1.93 inches above normal. The maximum liquid precipitation in a single day was 1.70 inches recorded on January 9. There were 13 days of rain >.01 in, 12 >.10 in and 1 > 1 in.

There were 8.3 inches of snow for the month, with a maximum daily total of 5.5 inches on January 7.

High wind speed of 47 mph on January 14.

January 2024 Data

December 2023 Weather Summary

December was 7.1 deg F above normal for temperature. The high for the month was 61.2 deg. F, recorded on December 2. The low for the month was 19.3 deg F, recorded on December 14. There were 17 days when the minimum temperature was at or below 32 F, 0 days when the maximum temperature was at or below 32 F, and 0 days when the minimum temperature was below 0. There were 798 heating degree days and 0 cooling degree days.

December was a below-normal month for precipitation with 2.76 inches of liquid precipitation recorded, which was 0.42 inches below normal. The maximum rainfall in a single day was 0.83 inches recorded on December 10. There were 10 days of rain >.01 in, 7 >.10 in and 0 > 1 in.

High wind speed of 35 mph on December 19.

Snowfall for December: Trace

December 2023 Data

2023 Stormstown Weather Summary

Overall, the year’s temperatures were above normal. The annual mean of 52.3 F was 2.1 F above normal. The annual precipitation of 37.36 inches was 4.17 inches below normal.

2023 Weather Data

January

January was the coldest month of 2023 but was warmer than normal with a monthly mean of 36.7 F, which was 9.5 F above normal, with a high of 58.0 F and a low for the month of 20.4 F. Precipitation was 0.43 inches above normal with 3.35 inches of liquid precipitation. There were 5.2 inches of snow this month, with a maximum daily total of 3.2 inches on January 26.

February

February was an above-normal month for temperature, with a mean of 37.0 F, which was 7.9 F above normal. The high was 70.9 F and the low was 5.2 F. Precipitation was 0.47 inches below normal at 1.99 inches. There were 1.0 inches of snow for the month, with a maximum daily total of 1.0 inches on February 28.

March

March temperatures were 1.6 F above normal with a mean of 38.6 F. The high was 60.9 F and the low was 18.5 F. Precipitation was 0.57 inches below normal with 2.81 inches of liquid precipitation. There was also 4.5 inches of snow.

April

Temperatures were 3.7 F above normal in April with a mean temperature of 53.0 F. The high was 86.1 F and the low was 27.0 F. Rainfall was 0.56 inches below normal at 2.95 inches. The high wind speed for the month and year was 44 mph.

May

Temperatures were 1.9 F below normal with a mean temperature of 57.9 F. The high was 85.0 F and the low of 29.9 F. Precipitation was 0.59 inches, 3.05 inches below normal. The last day of temperatures below freezing was May 18. Conditions were considerably dry at the end of May:

June

Temperatures for the month were 2.7 F below normal with a mean of 65.4 F. The high for the month, as well as the year, was 91.2 F and the low was 38.4 F. Precipitation was 0.20 inches below normal with 3.89 inches of rainfall. The wildfires in Canada caused significant smoke in our region during June 6-8 and June 28-30.

July

July was the warmest month and temperatures were normal with a mean of 72.2 F The high for the month was 89.9 F and the low was 54.6 F. Rainfall was 2.60 inches above normal with 6.39 inches of precipitation. July was the rainiest month of 2023.

August

August temperatures were 1.0 F below normal with a mean of 69.4. The high was 87.5 F and the low was 51.5 F. Precipitation was 1.42 inches above normal at 5.58 inches.

September

Temperatures were normal with a mean of 63.2 F. The high was 90.0 F and the low was 43.1 F. There were 2.43 inches of rainfall, which was 1.52 inches below normal.

At the end of September, the dry conditions had improved significantly:

October

October was mild with temperatures at 1.7 F above normal with a mean of 53.6 F. The high was 81.5 F and the low was 31.8 F, which was the first freeze on October 31. Rainfall was 2.33 inches, which was 1.13 inches below normal.

November

Temperatures in November were near normal at 0.5 below normal with a mean of 40.7 F. The high was 67.4 F and the low was 17.0 F. Precipitation was 2.29 inches, 0.70 inches below normal. The first snowfall of the season was on November 1.

December

December was 7.1 F above normal, with a mean temperature of 39.3 F. The high for the month was 61.2 F deg. F, recorded on December 2. The low for the month was 19.3 F, recorded on December 14.

December was a below-normal month for precipitation with 2.76 inches of liquid precipitation recorded, which was 0.42 inches below normal. There was a trace of snowfall.

2023 Stormstown Insolation

2023 Solar Radiation (Watts per meter squared)

Summary of Autumn 2023

Meteorological Autumn is officially over. Here is a brief summary of September 1-November 30 in Stormstown, PA:  

Number of days Max T >= 90 F: 1

Number of Days Max T <= 32 F: 2

Number of Days Min T <= 32 F: 18

The first freeze of the season occurred on October 31.

Max T: 90.0 F – September 5, 2023

Min T: 17.0 F – November 29, 2023

Sep Dep from Normal: 0.0 F

Oct Dep from Normal: 1.7 F

Nov Dep from Normal: -0.5 F

Heating Degree Days: 1267

Cooling Degree Days: 129

Sep Precip: 2.43″, 1.52″ below normal

Oct Precip: 2.33″, 1.13″ below normal

Nov Precip: 2.29″, 0.70″ below normal

The first snowfall of the season occurred on November 1.

November 2023 Weather Summary

The morning of November 1, 2023

November was 0.5 deg F below normal for temperature. The high for the month was 67.4 deg. F, recorded on November 7. The low for the month was 17 deg F, recorded on November 29. There were 17 days at or below 32 F and 2 days when the maximum temperature was at or below 32 F. There were 730 heating degree days and 0 cooling degree days.

November was a below-normal month for precipitation with 2.29 inches of rainfall recorded, which was 0.70 inches below normal. The maximum rainfall in a single day was 1.38 inches recorded on November 21. There were 6 days of rain >.01 in, 2 >.10 in, and 1 > 1 in.

The first snowfall of the season was November 1.

High wind speed of 31 mph on November 28.

November 2023 Data

EV Charging Etiquette

Along with the new electric vehicle (EV) technology there is also a developing etiquette at public charging stations. Most of the time, charging at a public station is an amicable experience. Owners will sometimes gather while charging, or waiting for an available charger, and talk about their cars or other topics. However, there are inconsiderate people that one may encounter from time-to-time.

Here are a few guidelines. Some are common sense, some I have learned from experience, and others I found from research:

– Always be courteous.

– Don’t ICE a charging space (block a charging space with an internal combustion engine vehicle), and don’t park your vehicle at a charging station unless you intend to use it.

– Read and follow what is on any posted sign.

– Don’t cut in line. Ask if there is a queue and follow the guidelines.

– Park at the correct connector. When you find a public charging station, make sure you park at the right type of plug-in point. For example, if your vehicle isn’t compatible with DC fast charging, then a Level 2 (240-volt) station is what you’ll need.

– Never unplug another person’s vehicle. Some connectors are locked while the vehicle is charging. If it isn’t yours, leave it alone.

– If you are leaving your vehicle, consider leaving a note to let others know when you will return. Otherwise, plan to return before the charging session is complete.

– When charging is complete, don’t leave your car connected for more than 10 minutes. Electrify America will start charging a penalty after 10 minutes. EvGo is limited to a 60 minute charging session.

– If the charging station is busy, consider ending your session at 80%. By design, the charging of most EVs slows dramatically once you’ve reached 80% of capacity. The limit protects the battery from the tremendous amount of damaging heat created as a fast-charged battery nears its capacity.

– Properly stow the connector when you’re done. Leave the charger the way you found it or better. Tangled cables and connectors on the ground may make it difficult for the next user.

– After charging is complete, move to a regular parking space if you still have other business at a location.

– If you don’t know what you’re doing, ask someone or call customer service.

– Help the charging station rookies.

– Don’t be this person.

Jerk blocking two chargers.