Last year, Sahara sands blowing over the eastern Atlantic Ocean put a damper on some hurricane formation off west Africa.
The poor Scottish bastids in Boston will be tricked into thinking every June is as nice as this one, so far.
It's been execeptionally consistently, warm, dry, and sunny. Eastern Mass is in drought and my lawn is already brown. El Nino? Global Climate Change?
Doesn't matter. I need to plan accordingly, adapt, and plant things that are full-sun, heat-tolerant, drought-tolerant, and perennially hardy to USDA Zone 4 or lower ... I'm in USDA Zone 6, but that's based on long-term averages.
New England weather doesn't give a damn about "norms" and "averages". It can be 105o in some Summers and below 0oF in some Winters. I have to plan for the extremes if I want my landscape to be resilient.
Blue, Rye, and Red Fescues (typical Northeast lawn blend) don't stand a chance, especially with our annual Summer water bans. I'm all in on Tall Fescues ... they ain't pretty, but they turn green again towards Fall.