| The highlight of Vermont's warm, wet June was a pair of tornadoes that hit the state on June 18. This is a photo of tree damage in Woodstock from one of the tornadoes, |
In Burlington it was both the 15th warmest and 15th wettest June out of the past 135 years or so. The actual mean temperature in Burlington for June was 69.1 degrees.
That came in at only 1.6 degrees above normal, which you'd think wouldn't qualify the month at being 15th warmest. But, as I remind you practically every month, this is the "new normal." It's based on the average of 1990 to 2020 when climate change had already made things around here warmer than the 20th century average.
I imagine in several decades, the month we just had would be considered chilly
The pattern in Burlington was repeated across the state, except the extreme southwest, where average temperatures for June, 2026 were close to average.
However, most other weather stations that I checked were roughly between one and two degrees warmer than average.
Much of the state was wet, too. Burlington's 5.56 inches was 1.4 inches above average. As we get into the summer months, precipitation around the state gets much more variable. And so it was in June. Montpelier June total was 4.26 inches, just a few hundredths of an inch above normal.
It was both a pleasant month, as we got our fair share of sunny, comfortable days. But it was also stormy. The highlight were the two tornadoes that hit Vermont on June 18. One was in a remote part of Lincoln, but the other was in a fairly busy spot along Route 4 in Woodstock. Given that the Woodstock tornado had wind speeds up to 100 mph, it's a very pleasant surprise that motorists along Route 4 or in nearby buildings weren't hurt.
Other events included a supercell that caused damage in northwest and central Rutland County on June 26.
Also, on June 11, some flash flooding with road damage was reported in Hardwick and Wolcott.
For July, we already know it's starting out wicked hot, so it seems chances are it will be a hot July. NOAA is leaning just slightly toward giving us a warmer than normal July here in Vermont. If that's right, maybe soe cool weather late in the month will offset the current terrible heat. It's worth dreaming.
NOAA also is slightly leaning toward a wetter than average July. We shall see!

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