The mostly bare ground near and around the weather station promotes hotter
temperatures on sunny afternoons.
Not exact matches
On a glorious and
sunny May
afternoon, with
temperatures soaring to the high 70s, Dean James Ryan felt compelled to remind the 701 soon - to - be graduates about the unexpected challenges faced by those who had withstood an historic winter in New England.
Since the wind
on summer
afternoons is usually from the south, the brush and the trees and the structures to the southwest, south, and southeast of the station would cause poorer ventilation through the weather station and would also promote higher
temperatures there
on sunny afternoons.