30 day rainfall:
Station Number: OH-HM-24
Station Name: Cheviot 3.4 W
Report Date: 5/30/2020
Submitted: 5/30/2020 6:19 AM
Scale Bar: Severely Wet
Description:
2.14 inches of rain in the past week and 7.45 inches of rain in May. Soil is completely saturated. Standing water in swales and runoff coming off hillsides.
Categories:
General Awareness
Agriculture
Plants & Wildlife
Frozen. What you are seeing is likely the result of 2 severe late freezes which have impacted many of our trees and landscape plants. May 17, 2020
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This report is specifically for the Arbor Doctor’s location 3.4 miles west of Cheviot, OH, in the western suburbs of Cincinnati in southwest Ohio. This location is also an official cooperative observation site for the National Weather Service listed as Cheviot 3W.
What is the Condition Monitoring Report? See these links for more information:
Search condition monitoring reports for the entire US>>>
CoCoRaHS Condition Monitoring Report Map>>>
Please remember to water…correctly!
Water once per week, one inch per week, under the entire branch spread, in the absence of rain, May through November. Either rainfall or your watering should equal the one inch per week. Put out a sprinkler and a straight sided soup can or rain gauge and measure one inch per week.
Watering: How and when>>>
Watering Trees and Shrubs>>>
Soil Moisture Index:
Meteorological Versus Astronomical Seasons. Spring is here!
Spring: March 1-May 31; Summer: June 1-August 31; Fall: September 1-November 30; Winter: December 1-February 28 (29)
You may have noticed that Arbor Doctor, meteorologists and climatologists define seasons differently from “regular” or astronomical spring, summer, fall, and winter. So, why do meteorological and astronomical seasons begin and end at different times? Read more here>>>
Spring leaf out (click on map to enlarge):
Spring bloom index (Click on map to enlarge):
Soil temperature map
Soil temperatures across the US.
Kentucky Mesonet including access to temperature, precipitation, soil temperature and soil moisture across Kentucky