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Weather extremes

How extreme does Taro's weather get?

The hottest, coldest, wettest and snowiest days Taro has recorded — the outer limits of what its weather can do, and how far they sit beyond a normal day.

Based on 34 years of daily weather observations (1991–present), from the Taro Island station 2 km away. Updated through August 2025 — an all-time extreme only changes when a more extreme day actually occurs, so some dates are old. That is normal, not stale data.

The four kinds of extreme

The hottest, coldest, wettest and snowiest single days Taro has recorded — each shown against what a normal day that time of year looks like.

🔥 Hottest day
102°F Mar 9, 1996

The three most extreme on record

1 102°F Mar 9, 1996
2 102°F Jul 9, 2005
3 97°F Sep 26, 2015
❄️ Coldest night
52°F Aug 7, 2006

About 24°F colder than a normal August night in Taro (typical low near 76°F).

The three most extreme on record

1 52°F Aug 7, 2006
2 63°F Mar 19, 2001
3 64°F Mar 25, 1994
🌧️ Most rain in one day
14.29 in Mar 30, 2010

The three most extreme on record

1 14.29 in Mar 30, 2010
2 7.90 in May 22, 2008
3 7.48 in Apr 14, 2020

In plain terms

In a normal year, Taro's warmest days reach the high 80s°F and its coldest nights drop to the mid-70s°F. But across the record it has gone as high as 102°F and as low as 52°F. A single day has delivered over 14 inches of rain. Those are the outer edges worth knowing if you are moving here, planning a trip, or thinking about a house.
Methodology & sources

Temperature & precipitation — modelled for this location from ERA5-Land reanalysis, a ~9 km global grid, because no long-record weather station is close enough to use.

How we build these numbers →