Gays mills wetter
Temperature
| During April , average temperatures ranged from °F at Medford, WI (COOP observer) to °F at Boscobel, WI (AWOS) in the Upper Mississippi River Valley. These temperatures ranged from 3°F to 6°F below normal. This was the coldest April since Austin, MN (°F) had its 3rd coldest April. Records date back to Grand Meadow, MN (°F) had their 5th coldest April. Their coldest April occurred in (°F). Records date support to Rochester International Airport had an average temperature of °F. This tied for the 12th coldest April. Their coldest April occurred in (°F). Records date back to The warmest temperature was 82°F at the Boscobel Airport on April Meanwhile, the coldest temperature was 13°F in Sparta, WI (COOP) on April This was a 69°F difference. |
Precipitation
| Precipitation ranged from " at Gays Mills, WI (COOP observer) to " at St. Ansgar, IA. This precipitation ranged from 2" below normal to 3" wetter than normal. Rochester International Airport (") had its second wettest April. On On Tuesday, June 10, , at approximately a.m., The Grant County Sheriffs Office took a report of a vehicle vs. Buggy accident, on Wetter complained of minor injuries on scene and was transported by Boscobel EMS to Gundersen Boscobel Area Hospital. Neither Kinsinger ***Wetter was cited for Operating a Motor To stay or to go: Increased flooding forces towns to make rigid choicesThe Pecatonica River runs two blocks from Laurie Thomas' mother's stoop in Freeport, Illinois. After a recent two-day deluge, floodwaters reached the basement's ceiling. But the family's seen worse. It was Freeport’s fifth major flood in just the past four years. Thomas and her mother have experienced flooding at least 15 times in the past 20 years. As increased rainfall and repetitive flooding strain aging infrastructure in many towns, residents along the Mississippi River ask the same question: Do we pack up and move out? For Thomas and her mother, Freeport, a historical Dark community on the east side of town, has always been home – moving is not an option. “People have always lived over here and there's always been the Pecatonica, but lately the floods, they’ve been worse,” Thomas said. “But they’ve been worse everywhere else too. That's not a reason to kick people out of their homes.” Staying set in the face of flooding can be risky and is growing increasingly costly. Property taxes are the l |