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Dry June, Wet July, & Tropical Rain in August [Video]

This summer has brought us record heat on July 15 of 99 degrees for the high in Greensboro at the Piedmont Triad International Airport. SUMMER 2024 We have had three heat waves from the end of June through the end of August with drought conditions that were nearly wiped out even before Tropical Storm Debby arrived in North Carolina.JUNEThe beginning of June started with highs in the 70s and comfortable conditions and a few days of light rainfall. By the end of the month, hot and dry conditions began with our first round of 90s for 2024. We reached a high of 97 degrees in Winston-Salem on June 26. as the hottest day in two years and hottest day for 2024 as of August 31, 2024. Parts of the Piedmont Triad went into abnormally dry conditions as drought concerns worsened. We ended the month with more than three inches below normal rainfall totals.JULYJuly started out strong by turning up the heat! We had 13 days of 90 degrees or more prompting a Heat Advisory for parts of the Piedmont Triad. A few scattered storms developed before many of the Fourth of July festivites got underway. You can checkout our ulocal North Carolina Facebook Group members’ photos in this summer slidewhow for the month of July.Early July also brought the first hurricane of the season and a landfall in the United States along the Gulf of Mexico. Beryl missed making landfall in Jamaica, but it came dangerously close and brought major damage to the island’s west coast. On its path through the Caribbean, Beryl became a major hurricane and reached Category Four Hurricane status.With light and sporadic rainfall, hot temperatures, and plenty of sunshine, most of North Carolina was thrust into a drought. By the middle of the month, we also reached our hottest day of 2024 at 99 degrees as recorded at the Piedmont Triad International Airport. [/twitter]Here’a look at the July 18 drought map showing severe drought for parts of the Foothills.As Meteorologist Brian Slocum reported, July 2024 was the wettest July in 40 years. PTI Airport received more than a foot of rain from mid-July to mid-August, about three times our normal rainfall over that period. The rain has helped ease the impact of the very hot and dry period in late June through mid-July. For more on the mid-summer drought, check out Meteorologist Brian Slocum’s Drought Story.By the end of July, we were monitoring the tropics for what would become Hurricane Debby.AUGUSTIn the first few days of August, rainfall returned with steamy 90s through August 3rd. [/twitter]Take a look at our ulocal North Carolina Facebook Group in our August slideshow. Tropical Storm Debby was on the way to bringing major impacts to North Carolina and the Piedmont Triad on the morning of August 8. By late afternoon August 8, Tropical Storm Debby made a beeline for the Piedmont Triad and was downgraded to a Tropical Depression by 5 p.m. Tornado Warnings were issued for the Northern Piedmont as Debby’s damaging wind gusts and rotating storms lifted through the Triad.Debby brought damaging winds with deadly consequences. A severe thunderstorm embedded in Debby’s tropical bands caused the death of 78-year-old Hilda Jones of Browns Summit on the night of August 8. She was seeking shelter in her Rockingham County mobile home in Southeastern Rockingham County. From the first mainland landfall in Floida through the tropical storm impact in North Carolina, there were 8 reported deaths due to Debby.For more on damage and flooding, here is our slideshow from Debby’s path through the Piedmont Triad. Tropical Storm Debby dropped beneficial rainfall across the Piedmont Triad from Burlington to Boone. Just one day after Debby became a depression, lingering tropical moisture brought intense flooding to the Piedmont Triad along a stalled frontal boundary. Later that night, after I posted those storm cloud photos, a Flash Flood Emergency was issued for Guilford County. Three to Five inches fell in less than 40 minutes in some areas of western Greensboro and Guilford County causing at least a dozen water rescues and damaging property as cars across the city became flooded.After the storm passed, Brian Slocum reminded us to look up for the peak of the Perseid Meteor Shower.On August 12, Laura Wilmoth captured the Northern Lights in Laurel Springs, North Carolina during the early morning hours.Chief Meteorologist Lanie shared more about Ernesto forming in the Atlantic Ocean- a tropical system we had been monitoring for more than a week for chances of development.Another heat wave brought more hot 90s and high heat indices by the final weeks of August along with a pleasant surprise of Hurricane Lilies blooming at Reynolda House Museum of American Art.

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Youth football safety debate is rekindled by deaths of 2 players [Video]

Ryan Craddock had seen his share of tragedy during his two decades as a coal miner and firefighter.Then came the toughest heartbreak of all: his own.Related video above: Football player dies of head injury received in practice at West Virginia middle schoolCraddock and his family are mourning the loss of his 13-year-old son, Cohen, who died from brain trauma last month after making a tackle during football practice at his middle school.Cohen’s death, and the death of a 16-year-old Alabama high school player from a brain injury on the same day, have sparked renewed debate about whether the safety risks of youths playing football outweigh the benefits that the sport brings to a community.”I don’t think we need to do away with football,” Craddock said. “A lot of people enjoy football, including myself. I just think we need to maybe put more safety measures out there to protect our kids.”Craddock is among those who believe that some concrete actions need to be taken to prevent more deaths.Proposals in individual states to ban tackle football for younger children during a critical period of their brain development have gotten little traction. At the same time, youth participation in tackle football has been declining for years, and efforts to steer young boys into flag football are growing.In 2023, three young football players died of head injuries, and 10 players died of other causes, such as heat stroke, according to the National Center for Catastrophic Sports Injury Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Robert Cantu, medical director of the organization, which has been tracking football-related deaths for more than 40 years, calls that a “typical” year.”So I would not be particularly alarmed about two deaths in a week,” he said. “But I would be very alarmed if we had two deaths per week for four or five weeks in a row. Because we’ve never had that before.”Cantu also subscribes to another philosophy: “No hits to the head are good,” he says.In the past, Cantu has recommended that for kids under 14, there should be no tackling in football, no heading in soccer and no full-body-checking in hockey.In football practices, at least, most helmet-to-helmet contact can be eliminated by using noncollision methods such as tackling dummies, said Cantu, who is also co-founder of the Boston-based Concussion Legacy Foundation, which supports patients and families struggling with brain-trauma symptoms. He suggests children play flag football until they enter high school.Flag football is already wildly popular among girls and is sanctioned as an Olympic sport for men and women at the 2028 Los Angeles Games. About 500,000 girls ages 6 to 17 played flag football in 2023, according to the National Federation of State High School Associations.Whether that popularity transfers to boys remains to be seen. The Concussion Legacy Foundation has a “Flag Football under 14″ initiative and has compiled a list of Pro Football Hall of Famers who waited until high school to play tackle football, including Tom Brady, Jerry Rice, Jim Brown and Walter Payton.”I suggest age 12 would be a good place to start the conversation,” said Dr. Chris Nowinski, the foundation’s CEO and a former WWE wrestler who retired due to a concussion. “But any minimum age requirement that takes into consideration brain health for children would be welcome.”Nowinski said even the NFL has limited full-contact practices during the regular season and recently changed kickoff rules aimed at preventing concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a degenerative brain disease that medical studies have linked to the head trauma of NFL players.”Yet middle and high school football has made neither change,” he said.Efforts to ban tackling in youth football have met strong resistance. A New York lawmaker fought unsuccessfully for 10 years to enact such a rule. In January, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said he would not sign a similar bill if it were to reach his desk.There has been some progress, however. For instance, all 50 states have some form of sports-related concussion laws, mostly requiring athletes to leave a game or practice if a concussion is suspected and be cleared by a medical professional before they can return.An increase in reported concussions from 2005-06 through 2017-18 was likely due to that additional education and awareness, said Christy Collins, president of the Indianapolis-based Datalys Center for Sports Injury Research and Prevention. The center uses a sampling of high schools nationwide to calculate injury rates involving football practices and games combined.”Athletes (and their parents) may have been more likely to recognize symptoms of concussion and report those symptoms to medical professionals,” Collins said.Loren Montgomery, who has won nine Oklahoma state championships in 14 seasons as the head coach at Bixby High School, believes football is “safer than ever.” He cites efforts to minimize injury risk, such as penalizing helmet-to-helmet contact and certain types of blocks, along with technology, including cognitive tests for concussion assessment and protective soft-shell helmet covers known as Guardian caps.”Obviously, there is inherent risk in all contact sports, but the values of teamwork, hard work and overcoming adversity far outweigh the risk involved,” Montgomery said. He allowed his son to play football starting in the fourth grade, “and I believe it has made him a more well-rounded young man.”Guardian caps are used from the NFL on down to the youth level. One cap made by Guardian Sports sells on Amazon for $75. But the caps have only a six-month limited warranty from the date of purchase, meaning they could be pricey for a school district to have to replace every season.Guardian Sports also warns on its website that no helmet, helmet pad or practice apparatus prevents or eliminates the risk of concussions or other serious head injuries while playing sports.Still, Craddock has vowed to look into the caps’ use at Madison Middle School in Cohen’s memory.On Wednesday, several days before his son was to be laid to rest, Craddock found the strength to speak with Cohen’s teammates.”I told them that this was a bad accident, to move forward,” he said. “I didn’t want them to have the weight of my son on their shoulders. But I wanted them to play for him. I wanted them to play ‘Cohen strong.'” Riddle reported from Montgomery, Alabama.