Tag: Jersey Shore

  • Feels like it’s windier in New Jersey lately? Well…

    Feels like it’s windier in New Jersey lately? Well…

    At the start of this month, I went to Sea Isle City to give a talk to the Garden Club. The group of ladies was nice, and one of them asked me a question that was a lot like this one.

    “Has it been windier weather at the Jersey Shore lately?”

    Sea Isle City isn’t the only town to ask this. From Cape May to Ventnor and points north, this has been a popular question during my public, and private, weather talks. The uptick in questions started in 2021 and 2022 and persisted. However, this may be a question of perception and not reality.

    How has the wind changed at Jersey Shore?

    Believe it or not, the winds have been calmer at Jersey Shore in recent decades.

    At Atlantic City International Airport in Egg Harbor Township, the average wind speed in 2024 was 8.11 mph, according to the Iowa Environmental Mesonet. While that was above the 7.8 mph average in 2023, wind speeds have been in decline for a while.

    Consider that during the past 30 years, the trendline for winds decreased from about 8.7 mph to 8.2 mph. That’s not much, but it proves the point that the wind speed has not increased in recent years.

    To prove this is true another way, I even sorted by the number of days in a year with sustained winds of at least 15 mph. That’s a breezy day.

    Again, there’s been a slight decline in the number of days. As of Nov. 17, ACY Airport experienced 24 such days. That is more than the past two years, but the longer-term trend shows a decline.

    It is interesting to see the big drop in the wind speeds that occurred in the 1970s. The long-term average dropped from 10.5 mph from 1947 to 1976, to 9.0 mph from 1977 to 2006.

    More than likely, the wind equipment used at the airport changed at some point in the 1970s. That led to weakening wind speeds.

    Going beyond ACY Airport, the Iowa Environmental Mesonet data in other places prove that the windier days are just perception. The average wind speed at Lower Township’s Cape May County Airport has remained consistent at around 8.2 mph since records began in 1992.

    Meanwhile, at Monmouth County Executive Airport in Wall, the trendline is also pointing toward calmer years. 2025 is the first year that was as windy as at the average since 2018, getting to 8.4 mph through Nov. 17. Windier-than-average years were the norm from 1999 to 2007.

    Have very windy days happened more often in N.J.?

    It depends.

    Since records began being kept in 2006, the trendline for the number of wind alerts issued by the National Weather Service has fallen over time in New Jersey.

    High wind warnings, which are issued by the weather service when winds can damage life or property, occur 4.5 times a year, according to the mesonet. However, that’s a slight drop from the first 10 years of records, which was 4.7 times.

    Meanwhile, wind advisories that are issued for nuisance wind issues saw a slight increase. The average since 2006 has been 20.7 times per year. The first 10 years of record keeping was 19.9, though.

    With the average wind speed dropping over time, and the most severe winds happening slightly less often, don’t look too much into the bump up in wind advisories.

    Why is it feeling windier in N.J.?

    I don’t have any scientific evidence for this, but here’s my theory on why it’s felt windier in recent years.

    We’re outside more.

    From 2020 to 2021, in the depth of the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us that were healthy rekindled our relationship with the great outdoors. More walks and runs outside. More time in the garden or at cookouts. More time at the beach.

    All of that may keep us in tune with the wind more than before. As outdoor workers will tell you, wind does impact the ability to get things done. So, perhaps that’s why.

    Otherwise, the data says we must keep searching for answers because it hasn’t been windier.

    Twenty-four/seven streaming weather channel now LIVE

    Whether on your TV, your computer or your phone, get everything Jersey Shore weather, and drone, for free!

    The Cup A Joe Weather and Drone Jersey Shore streaming weather channel is now live. From our daily weather forecasts to Tidal Flooding Talk, words from our sponsors and more, you’ll get the hyper-local information you deserve, without the hype.

    You can submit your most scenic weather photos for the stream, also. Go to www.bit.ly/WxPhoto to put yours in. We’ll approve it and you’ll see it run, live, on your device. Just search for @joemartwx on YouTube or go to www.cupajoe.live to view it.

    Joe Martucci, a Certified Broadcast Meteorologist and Digital Meteorologist, is the President and Director of Meteorology for Cup A Joe Weather and Drone. You can connect with him at cupajoe.sparkable.opalstacked.com/.

  • It’s MILD but… | Saturday, 11/15/2025 NJ Weather Forecast

    It’s MILD but… | Saturday, 11/15/2025 NJ Weather Forecast

    SATURDAY’S FORECAST | It’s mild weekend weather! Highs will touch 60F both days. However, given the rest of the forecast, you’ll want to be outside Saturday, rather than Sunday. Something your generic weather app won’t tell you? Thanksgiving week temperature trends. Follow my work: www.cupajoe.live Jolt your brand, advertise with me: joe@cupajoe.live

  • Historic 1st Snows at Jersey Shore: Facts and Figures

    Historic 1st Snows at Jersey Shore: Facts and Figures

    The first snow of the season at the Jersey Shore is usually something to smile about. It’s light and fun. Maybe just a few flakes in the air or a quick snow shower that melts fast. It makes you think of cozy things: a warm fire, snow on the sand at the beach, or a surprise day off from school or work.

    At two weather stations near the Jersey Shore – Atlantic City International Airport and Lower Township – the first snow average is 1.6 inches deep. That’s not much. Most people think it’s more fun than trouble.

    However, sometimes the first snow is a big surprise.

    Four times at Atlantic City International, and three times in Lower Township, the very first snowy day of the season dropped more than 6 inches. That’s a lot for the first one.

    I love snow any time, but a huge first snow can catch everyone off guard. It’s like playing a big game without warming up, or running a race in brand-new shoes. Nobody is ready yet. Meteorologists might miss a forecasting tidbit. Road crews might not put out enough salt and plows. Drivers forget to go slow and careful like they do later in winter. That makes slippery roads extra dangerous.

    On average the first real snow at the Jersey Shore waits until the second half of December. However, there are a few times in weather history when snow has been noteworthy and early.

    December 5, 2002

    In 2002 the first snow of the season at the Jersey Shore was a nor’easter that dropped more than 6 inches of snow.

    Every county in New Jersey had snow, according to NOAA. An area of low pressure developed on a frontal boundary along the Gulf Coast states. Eventually, that low pressure moved through the Southeastern United States, went off the North Carolina coast and quickly raced northeast, according to Raymond C. Martin Jr. It was a nor’easter.

    Snowfall totals were sizeable:

    • 7.6 inches in Estell Manor, Atlantic County
    • 7.0 inches in Hammonton, Atlantic County
    • 6.0 inches in Woodbine, Cape May County
    • 5.5 inches in Green Creek, Cape May County
    • 5.0 inches at Atlantic City International Airport

    Perhaps more impressive was that these totals were greater than the snow seen the entire previous winter in much of South Jersey. This was in the middle of a long stretch of colder-than-average temperatures. The snow that fell took six days to fully melt across the area as high temperatures stayed below 35 degrees nearly every day from Dec. 4 to Dec. 10.

    November 30, 1967

    Before 2002, you had to go back 35 years to experience a first winter storm as significant for the Jersey Shore.

    At ACY Airport 7.8 inches of snow fell, the second largest leading snowfall of the season on record (a late start in 2022 was higher). Lower Township experienced 3.0 inches of snow.

    This snow engulfed much of the Mid-Atlantic. A Baltimore Sun headline proclaimed: “Near Record November Snowfall Catches City Without Its Plows.”

    November 6, 1953

    This is one of the largest first snows on record, and one of the earliest, too. Snow spread from western North Carolina to New England.

    This wasn’t a 100% snowstorm; 3.2 inches of snow at ACY Airport mixed with a total of 3.98 inches of precipitation. In essence, about 10% of the precipitation that fell was snow. Still, it counts.

    Places farther south saw less snow mixed in. By the time you went to Lower Township, the storm was all rain. The Cape May Bubble was still alive and well then, too.

    The New York Times wrote that New York’s highways were covered in an icy sheen and many motorists going upstate had to sleep overnight in their cars.

    The storm was tropical at first. It was a tropical depression that moved across Florida. It then transitioned from a warm-core, tropical storm, into a cold-core, nor’easter. Ready for the storm was a huge mass of cold air in the Northeastern United States. That turned what was warm rain into some snow.

    December 8, 1928

    The third biggest first snow of the season in Lower Township’s long stretch of weather records (back to 1897), was a pure snowmaker, even at the immediate coast.

    Lower Township saw 9.6 inches of snow on 0.80 inches of precipitation, according to NOAA. That’s a snow ratio of 12:1, meaning this wasn’t a sloppy, wet mess of snow, either.

    ACY Airport wasn’t around yet. However, Atlantic City kept snow records then and they were blanketed in 3.9 inches of snow. High temperatures stayed in the 30s for the next two days after that, keeping the snow on the ground, too.

    Archive weather maps from NOAA show that this was a coastal storm. Low pressure the morning of Dec. 8 was roughly 40 degrees north latitude, and 75 degrees west longitude. Today, that’s known as the “benchmark,” or the position coastal storms should cross to bring at least some snow to the coast. Winds were from the north or northeast at the Jersey Shore, pumping in the icy air.

    The surface weather analysis for the Dec. 8, 1928 snow. The National Weather Service was a part of the United States Department of Agriculture then.

    Thanksgiving Day, 1912

    Talk about cold turkey. Nov. 28, 1912, brought a statewide blanket of snowfall, delivering a rare “White Thanksgiving.” In fact, it has an argument to claim a spot as the snowiest Thanksgiving on record statewide.

    In Lower Township, 4.5 inches fell. In Atlantic City, Northfield and Tuckerton, 4.0 inches fell.

    Barely an inch of snow fell in Taylor Ham land in the northern part of the state (yes, there’s a Central Jersey).

    I imagine there were a lot of melted (dirt) roads that turned into ice at night. The days following it were well above freezing during the day, dropping a good bit below freezing at night.

    Like the early 1928 snow, this storm was a coastal storm. Known as a Miller A type storm, it began off the Georgia coast. It quickly moved north-northeast, passing almost right at that 40-degree north latitude, 75 degree west longitude benchmark.

    The surface weather analysis for the Thanksgiving 1912 snow. The National Weather Service was a part of the United States Department of Agriculture then.

    What are your snow thoughts?

    Love it? Hate it? You want one snow and then that’s it? Drop me a note on social media or email.

    Joe Martucci, a certified broadcast meteorologist and digital meteorologist, is also the president and director of meteorology for Cup A Joe Weather and Drone. You can connect with him at cupajoe.sparkable.opalstacked.com/.

  • Friday, 11/14/2025 Jersey Shore Weather Forecast

    Friday, 11/14/2025 Jersey Shore Weather Forecast

    FRIDAY’S FORECAST | Winds ease at the Jersey Shore after 3 days. Finally! Warmth and gusts surge this weekend, though. A few hours of rain come, too.

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  • 3 Nights of Northern Lights WON’T happen | Thursday, 11/14 Weather Forecast

    3 Nights of Northern Lights WON’T happen | Thursday, 11/14 Weather Forecast

    THURSDAY’S FORECAST | A few of us saw the Northern Lights last night. Can we make an official streak and see them for a 3rd night tonight? I’m thinking no. Let’s talk about it in your 7-day forecast.

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  • Can the Northern Lights dazzle AGAIN Wednesday night in NJ?

    Can the Northern Lights dazzle AGAIN Wednesday night in NJ?

    A G4 Geomagnetic Storm hit Earth Tuesday night, dazzling the night sky with vibrant hues. A G4 Storm is forecast to do the same, but the timing may make it hard to see it NJ Wednesday night.

    Join Community Options’ Cupid’s Chase 5K this Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14 at 10AM in Seaside Heights! Stride forward to support homes & careers for people with disabilities. Register now: https://runsignup.com/Race/NJ/SeasideHeights/CupidsChase5KSeasideHeights

  • 🤩MORE Northern Lights?! | Wednesday, 11/12/2025 NJ Weather Forecast

    🤩MORE Northern Lights?! | Wednesday, 11/12/2025 NJ Weather Forecast

    The Northern Lights are back at the Jersey Shore for the second year in a row! Will we do it again? That’s something your generic weather app won’t tell you, but we will. We have that and your 7-day forecast, here!

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  • COLD and WINDY | 2025 Veterans’ Day Weather Forecast

    COLD and WINDY | 2025 Veterans’ Day Weather Forecast

    TUESDAY’S FORECAST | If you’re watching this and a Veteran, we appreciate your service. I wish we had better weather than this, though. It’s cold AND windy. Wind chills are below 32F most of the day. Let’s talk about how long the chill lasts.

    Brought to you by the Ventnor City Twilight Holiday Parade, Presented by AutoLenders on Saturday, Dec. 6!

  • A wild ride of temperatures: 2025-2026 Jersey Shore Winter Outlook

    A wild ride of temperatures: 2025-2026 Jersey Shore Winter Outlook

    The 2025-2026 winter outlook has similarities to last winter’s weather. However, there’s enough support in the forecast to give snow lovers hope this season. My Jersey Shore friends, it’s that time of the year again – time for the winter forecast.

    With the sun setting by 5 p.m., holiday decorations for sale at nearly every store and sweatshirt weather during the day, snow season is around the corner.

    Before we get into predictions, here’s a few important notes to remember:

    1. I don’t do my own winter forecasting. It takes a lot of time and research that begins in August and ends around Halloween. This forecast is a mix of some research I’ve done and information from trusted sources like Steve DiMartino of NY NJ PA Weather, a fellow certified digital meteorologist.

    2. Miles make a difference. In one storm, Ocean City could be all rain, while Egg Harbor Township has 3 inches of snow and Asbury Park has a foot. This forecast is for the general shore area, not one particular house.

    3. Average snowfall is meaningless at the shore area. Atlantic City International Airport averages 17.3 inches of snow, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. However, since records began in 1944, four winter seasons had less than an inch of snow, and six were buried in more than 40 inches of snow.

    4. The ocean, which keeps our fall warmer than the New Jersey Turnpike corridor during the fall, also keeps us milder during the winter. An onshore wind with a nor’easter will keep the lawns brown, not white. You have to go to northwestern New Jersey, the Poconos and places north to be guaranteed snow.

    Via @CotentWeatherGuy on X.

    Still, the winter forecast is exciting. It’s the most popular outlook of the year and I love talking about it with you.

    How did last year’s winter forecast do?

    Lower Township, at the southern end of Cape May County, had the most snow in the entire Jersey Shore area – 20.5 inches fell there. In fact, the only places in the state that were higher were northwest of Interstate 287, in the typically colder northwest New Jersey.

    Otherwise, most of Atlantic, Cumberland and Cape May counties saw between 12 and 18 inches of snow. Farther north, the rest of the shore only had 7 to 12 inches.

    Snowfall totals from the 2024-2025 winter (via The Office of the New Jersey State Climatologist)

    Last year’s forecast column stated: “It’s safe to say that we can expect fewer storms with a possibility of snow.” I gave the shore a 65% chance of snow being 3 inches below the 14.8-inch seasonal snow average at the immediate coast, and the 17.4-inch average for the mainland. Consider it a pretty good forecast.

    The not-so-great forecast was the coastal flooding outlook. I wrote that “near-to-slightly-above-average coastal flooding” was likely. Thank goodness this was wrong. Coastal flooding and beach erosion were nearly nonexistent.

    The column also stated that temperatures would be “warmer than usual overall.” Turns out, our 37.9-degree average from December to March was just above the 30-year climate average of 37.6 at Atlantic City International Airport. At the beaches, the average at Sen. Frank S. Farley State Marina in Atlantic City was 38.9 degrees – below the average of 39.7.

    Quick Jersey Shore winter forecast

    Expect a couple of lighter snow events (less than 4 inches), with a better-than-average chance for bigger storms (4 to 8 inches). However, massive snow of more than a foot is less likely than usual.

    Temperatures should be about average when everything is said and done. However, this should be due to big swings in temperatures averaging out to near average throughout the year. Four days of near-60-degree weather, followed by four days of 30-degree weather, is a strong possibility. Our first sustained cold shot looks to be at some point between Thanksgiving and Christmas.

    Expect more coastal storms than usual. At the risk of sounding wishywashy, some will be mostly rain, and some will be mostly snow.

    Beach erosion and tidal flooding will be more of a quantity than a quality (big issues) thing. However, with the beaches already damaged in spots, it’s a concern.

    Jersey Shore winter forecast in more detail

    The outcomes for this winter will be largely driven by three factors.

    1. Weak La Niña, or colder-than-average water temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean.

    2. Much warmer-than-average water temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, off the United States West Coast.

    3. Less-than-usual Arctic Ocean sea ice in North America.

    You can’t start a winter forecast without looking at the state of the El Niño Southern Oscillation. This explains whether water temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean are warmer or colder than average. We’re in La Niña, so it’s cooler than average.

    NOAA expects La Nina to continue through at least January (DJF).

    However, a weak La Niña is only expected to last until February, according to NOAA. We may then go into a neutral state for the rest of the winter. Either way, the point is La Niña favors a slightly cooler and drier winter.

    The next two factors both support stormier-than-usual winter patterns. The relatively warm water off the West Coast supports a storm track right through the Mid-Atlantic. Storms during the winter love a clash of cold and mild, and these line up perfectly for our region to be the battleground.

    Meanwhile, sea ice is well below average on the North American continent. Unless something crazy happens, it will stay this way. That opens the jet stream – the river of air about 30,000 feet high – which is also the storm track, causing it to look like a rollercoaster, snaking south to north over the Eastern United States.

    When the Jersey Shore is on the northern side of the track, storms are mostly snow. When the Jersey Shore is on the southern side of the track, they are mostly rain. Expect to see the classic 55 degrees and rain in Cape May, with 30 degrees and snow in Trenton a few times.

    The seven main storm tracks expected this upcoming winter (via NYNJPAWeather)

    It’s tempting to go above average for snow at the Jersey Shore given all of this, with one or two big snows. However, the coastal storms that do develop off this jet stream will tend to start in Virginia or North Carolina. Even if it is mostly snow for us, they will have a short “runway” as they move northeast to develop heavy precipitation. These are called Miller B storm systems.

    The high number of expected storms increases the likelihood of a few significant snowfalls, ranging from 4 to 8 inches. However, without a storm forming off the coast of Georgia or Florida – known as Miller A storms – it’s unlikely we’ll see major snow accumulations.

    I expect more than the usual number of tidal flooding and beach erosion days. Most of these should be minor to perhaps moderate issues, but with the weakened state of our beaches in some locations, this will bring worse-than-usual impacts. The good news is the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection believes the sand that was eroded will return by natural processes next spring. It won’t repair the dune cliffs seen along Jersey Shore; it will only fill in the erosion on the more gently sloping sand.

    Being a citizen scientist, for cheap

    The Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network (CoCoRaHS) is the nation’s largest group of volunteers in the weather community. Each day, over 200 people in New Jersey and thousands across the United States report on how much precipitation they receive.

    For $50 upfront (to purchase the rain gauge), your observations will be used by many in the weather community. I look at this constantly during storms and would love to see what you have at your home. In fact, New Jersey’s official state record for most yearly precipitation is from a CoCoRaHS gauge.

    We hope to see your reports this winter!

    Joe Martucci, a Certified Broadcast Meteorologist and Digital Meteorologist, is the President and Director of Meteorology for Cup A Joe Weather and Drone. You can connect with him at cupajoe.sparkable.opalstacked.com/.

  • A warm weekend but when is it dry? | Saturday, 11/8/2025 NJ Weather Forecast

    A warm weekend but when is it dry? | Saturday, 11/8/2025 NJ Weather Forecast

    SATURDAY’S FORECAST: It’s a warm weekend ahead with highs in the 60s both days. I don’t blame ya if you put up your holiday decorations now. A polar plunge lurks after this weekend, though. Tune in!

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