You choose, we deliver
If you are interested in this story, you might be interested in others from The Journal Gazette. Go to www.journalgazette.net/newsletter and pick the subjects you care most about. We'll deliver your customized daily news report at 3 a.m. Fort Wayne time, right to your email.

Local

  • Crowd of kids sees baby falcons banded
    The new baby was not happy. Far from it. She had been plucked from her cozy nest, put into a bucket with her siblings and was now being handled by two strangers, one of whom held her down on a table while the other clipped
  • 2 bus drivers fair after pileup
    Two Wawasee Community Schools bus drivers injured in Wednesday’s four-bus pileup were in fair condition Thursday in a Fort Wayne hospital, police said. John R.
  • Foundation sending $10,000 to Oklahoma
    The Community Foundation of Greater Fort Wayne sent $10,000 to the American Red Cross of Central Oklahoma to directly support the communities hit by tornadoes in the city of Moore and the greater Oklahoma City area May 19 and 20, according to a
Advertisement

64-degree high smashes city record

– Wednesday’s weather started out with a record-high temperature of 64 degrees shortly after 2 a.m., then took a complete U-turn, ending the day with chilly temperatures expected to stick around through the weekend.

“Temperatures are already falling and have been falling throughout the day,” Katie Gross, a forecaster at the National Weather Service in Syracuse, said Wednesday evening. “And they’ll continue falling throughout the night.”

The overnight low early today was expected to be 18.

Across the northern part of the state, today’s temperatures are expected to range from 15 degrees in the west to 22 degrees in the east, she said.

Wednesday’s high shattered the previous record of 55 degrees set in 1988.

And for any Hoosiers dreading more cold weather, keep in mind the lowest temperature on record for Jan. 30 was 8 degrees below zero, set in 1966, Gross said.

Fort Wayne residents should expect the chilly weather to remain throughout the weekend, though there’s not much snow on the radar at this point, Gross said.

“Any rain showers moving through the area will likely change from rain to snow, but there really shouldn’t be too much,” she said. “(Today) and Friday we’ll see some scattered flurries, but again, nothing much.”

With the start of February just around the corner, Gross said Hoosiers in the northeast part of the state have seen only 2.1 inches of snow in 2013.

The average high temperature for the month of January is 36 degrees and the average low is 20.5 degrees, Gross said. Those averages have been tracked since 1980, she said.

jcrothers@jg.net

Advertisement