Welcome
to the Pennsylvania State Climatologist Home Page. The goal of the State Climatologist office is to provide the most accurate and complete climatological data available for the commonwealth of Pennsylvania. This data is presented in several different ways to allow the user maximum flexibility for searching our archives. Throughout the various sections of our page, there are help files to explain how to navigate the pages, and explain the data within them. We here at the State Climatologist office hope that you find our page a useful resource tool. As this page is ever evolving, please make sure to visit periodically for new additions.
Latest Updates
March 13th, 2013 - Want to see an old newsletter? Visit our "Pennsylvania Observer" archive in our features section or by clicking here .

August 1st, 2012 - Summaries of Pennsylvania weather for each month will now be available in the PA Blurb section of the home page located beneath the Daily Almanac.

March 1st, 2012 - Now available - The first experimental National Long Range Forecast for Feb-Mar 2012 is now located in our features section.

November 7th, 2011 - A new web page, Pennsylvania's Changing Climate, is now available in the features section.

Daily Almanac - May 25, 2013
City Normal
High
Normal
Low
Now
ALLENTOWN 74 5156
ERIE 71 5254
JOHNSTOWN 70 5350
MIDDLETOWN 75 5461
PHILADELPHIA 75 5862
PITTSBURGH 74 5257
SCRANTON 74 5152
UNIVERSITY PARK 72 5157
WILLIAMSPORT 74 5157

PA Blurb - April 2013

For three consecutive Wednesdays (April 10, 17 and 24), strong to severe thunderstorms rumbled across the Commonwealth resulting in 110 wind damage reports and over a dozen hail reports, but no tornadoes. Despite a very chilly start to the month with snow showers in many sections, the majority of the days (14-18 days) averaged above normal temperatures resulting in a slightly above average April. Rainfall was sporadic and only a few places had above average precipitation (mostly in the northwest). The southeast counties were the driest as only 40-50% of normal rain fell. Compared to 2012 which brought a killing freeze to many regions last April, this month was rather typical so most fruit trees and ornamentals were a week or two behind normal blossoming (and 5 weeks later than last year). The societal impacts of the weather were minimal in Pennsylvania during April 2013.

General Information

Temperatures Across Pennsylvania


Current PA temperatures