Poteau Daily News

June teases several seasons

- By Gary McManus State Climatolog­ist Oklahoma Mesonet OK Climatolog­ical Survey

June managed to pack pieces of three seasons into a single month.

The first 10 days were quite springlike, with abundant rainfall and high temperatur­es in the 70s and 80s. That there was very little in the way of severe weather was a bonus for this period, as was the drought reduction across much of the state.

Drought coverage dropped from 43 percent of Oklahoma at the end of May to 31 percent at the end of June according to the United States Drought Monitor, and the worst two categories of drought — extreme and exceptiona­l — fell from 17 percent to five percent over that same period.

A strong burst of sweltering summer weather dominated for the next couple of weeks that saw relentless sunshine and high temperatur­es more befitting midJuly than mid-June. High temperatur­es reached as high as 110 degrees during the month’s middle stanza, and heat index values were as high as 120 degrees. While the month ended with more summer heat, a strong cold front during that last week dropped temperatur­es back down into the 70s and 80s for a few days — a nice sneak preview of the fall weather to come in a few months’ time.

The statewide average rainfall total finished at 3.76 inches according to data from the Oklahoma Mesonet, falling 0.5 inches below normal and ranking as the 63rd driest June since records began in 1895. Rainfall totals ranged from 9.36 inches at Weatherfor­d — an unusual feat for a western Oklahoma site to have a month’s highest rainfall — to 1.16 inches at Lahoma, which is about seven miles west of Enid.

There were 22 of the Mesonet’s 120 sites collected at least five inches of rainfall for the month, although another 14 recorded less than two inches. The heaviest totals ran in two strips across the state from west to east: the first from west central through southeast Oklahoma, and the second from central through east central Oklahoma. Surpluses ranged from one to five inches in these areas. Deficits of two to three inches occurred in north central, northweste­rn and south central Oklahoma. The January-through-June period had a statewide average of 17.62 inches, 1.2 inches below normal and ranked as the 68th driest first six months of the year on record.

The statewide average temperatur­e was 78.8 degrees, 1.5 degrees above normal and ranked as the 30th warmest June on record. Heat dominated the month for the most part, although significan­tly cool weather enveloped the state during June’s first 10 days and also part of its final week. High temperatur­es in the Panhandle failed to escape the 60s during the month’s first two days, but also on the June 26 and 27. Low temperatur­es dropped to a chilly 48 degrees at the Eva Mesonet site in Texas County in the panhandle on June 28, the lowest reading of the month.

The Mesonet recorded triple-digit temperatur­es on 15 days during June. Altus soared to 110 degrees on June 12 for the month’s highest reading. That was also the highest temperatur­e recorded by the Mesonet in the state since Aug. 28, 2020, and the highest June reading since 2013 when Freedom in Woods County southwest of Alva hit 111 degrees June 27, 2013.

Based on statewide averages, June 12 was the hottest day in the state since July 14, 2020, and the hottest June day since June 27, 2012. Heat index values soared during the hottest part of the month. The Mesonet site at Webbers Falls had the month’s highest heat index of 120 degrees June 12. The highest heat index ever recorded on the Mesonet — dating back to 1997 — was 125 degrees from Calvin, halfway between Ada and of McAlester on Aug. 9, 1999.

The Mesonet observed heat index values of at least 110 degrees 103 times during the month. The January-June statewide average temperatur­e was 56.2 degrees, 0.1 degrees below normal and ranked as the 42nd warmest such period on record.

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