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Searched: Report date on 1/4/2026.
Showing 1 - 50 of 131 Records. <Back  Page   Next>
Report DateStation NumberStateCountyScale BarCategoriesPhotoDescriptionView
1/4/2026  AL-WN-7 ALWinston Moderately Wet General Awareness
Fire
Plants & Wildlife
Society & Public Health
Steady rain amounting to near 1 inch occurred on Friday (01/03/2026), which helped to moisten soils. Fire risk and dust activity remain low and evergreen plants remain green.  View
1/4/2026  AZ-MR-658 AZMaricopa Mildly Dry General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Society & Public Health
2
Moisture levels are near normal but on the dryer side haven’t gotten rain in the past two weeks below average on rainfall during the winter season very little precipitation here and there gotten some wind in the past few days. Soil is a little bit moist but nothing that would indicate moisture in the air mainly due to the fog conditions right now sunny highs, 65 almost little to no clouds if some are by mountains, no drought or severe drought impacts, but below average for rainfall and snow records in the northern part of Arizona. General awareness, national weather service in Noah are indicating that there is a below average of recorded rainfall in this season of the year and also in the monsoon season air quality is not too good. We had some fog and the air was very muggy and the air quality was high. Weeds are growing really fast due to the soil moisture, but no rain in the past two weeks  View
1/4/2026  AZ-MH-25 AZMohave Near Normal General Awareness
No drought status condition along the lower Colorado River valley. New year's moisture bringing wet conditions totaling 0.72" in a 4-day period! Desert floor green up with emerging vegetation.  View
1/4/2026  AZ-NV-42 AZNavajo Mildly Dry General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Colder last week with highs in the 40's before slowly warming and ending the week with a high of 58° on Saturday. Lows started out in the 20's before warming into the 40's when a couple of weather systems moved through. Lows cooled again afterwards. The low of the week was 20° on Tuesday. Clear to partly cloudy to start the week before unsettled weather starting on New Year's Eve, Wednesday, and continuing until Friday. It was a warmer system with no snow and not very much rain. A total of .08 inches fell for the week. It was breezy at times during the week. No change in plant life in the surrounding wildland areas. In the garden, the Christmas rose in blooming and daffodils are starting to poke out of the ground. The robin continues to frequent the yard eating old crabapples still on the tree and drinking out of the pond.  View
1/4/2026  AR-PL-1 ARPolk Mildly Dry General Awareness
We received 0.03” of rain this week and have only had 0.29” in the past 5 weeks. This is much below average so conditions are mildly dry. The soil moisture is low and cool season crops are showing some drought stress. Streams and water levels are lower than expected for this time of year. The small stream nearby has quit flowing but does have some pools of water. We were placed in a burn ban this week due to high wildfire risk.  View
1/4/2026  AR-SL-42 ARSaline Moderately Dry Plants & Wildlife
Rainfall totals for the year were down by almost 3". Burn bans in most counties around the state due to lack of rain. Above normal temps affecting plants & animals. Creeks & lakes are low. Fewer birds being seen. Birdfoot violet (a spring annual) seen blooming 2 days ago.  View
1/4/2026  CA-HM-5 CAHumboldt Severely Wet General Awareness
Agriculture
Business & Industry
Fire
Plants & Wildlife
Water Supply & Quality
Rain the second half of the week brought 2.83", with Water Year now 28.36", 148% of normal.The only drought area this week is Modoc County. High 58.6F, low 45.7F. The Mad River is just above the monitor stage at 15.7 feet/13,853 cfs--Eel River just below its monitor stage at 13.6 feet. Local rivers remain cold with temperatures in the upper 40s. Wapiti out in the cattle pasture near Blue Lake. Arcata had a devastating fire Friday, January 2nd. Seven businesses, an entire half-block in downtown, burned to the ground, the fire driven by the high winds that afternoon, and a ruptured gas line. No lives lost or injured. Fire departments from every community from Weott to Trinidad responded to help.  View
1/4/2026  CA-MD-42 CAMendocino Mildly Wet General Awareness
After such a dry start, December ended above normal, following an above Normal November. January is also starting off wet, already at 40% of normal. Some ponding in the roads and fields, water in ditches. Our catchment tanks are overflowing (although that is not new-happened in November). Local rivers are no where near flood stage. This is a very warm fall/winter so far. We only have fires when it is below 50 in the evening; that has only happened a handful of times so far and didn't start until December. One year it was almost every night and started at the end of October.  View
1/4/2026  CA-MD-45 CAMendocino Moderately Wet Business & Industry
Plants & Wildlife
Tourism & Recreation
Water Supply & Quality
Another 3.60 inches of rain over the past four days. Some heavy gusty winds and downpours, but no power outage this time, at least for our area. We are now at 21 inches for the rain year, so about half way to the 40 inches goal. Ocean conditions were very severe, with small craft warnings all along the coast, so no fishing or water sports. Lots of tourists in the area despite the rainy weather. The rain has improved the condition of some of the shrubs that depend on the winter rains, and some of the early bulbs and tubers are showing green. Big flock of Dark-eyed Juncos in the garden during the rains picking up the seed we put on the ground.  View
1/4/2026  CO-EP-449 COEl Paso Mildly Dry General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Becoming repetitive. Warm, dry, and gusty. Continues to feel like we skipped over winter to another season. I watered our lawn this week, some green grass is still showing.  View
1/4/2026  CO-GF-88 COGarfield Severely Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Fire
Plants & Wildlife
Tourism & Recreation
Water Supply & Quality
No skiing so far, and none likely any time soon. If this keeps up, family members coming the middle of the month will likely bail.  View
1/4/2026  CO-LR-1272 COLarimer Moderately Dry General Awareness
Fire
Plants & Wildlife
Society & Public Health
Tourism & Recreation
Water Supply & Quality
Still very dry conditions here. The wind has not helped. My heretofore (pitifully) scarce snowpack has now disappeared and the wind keeps blowing. I have observed only Traces of precipitation thus far in the New Year. Last calendar year ended with 67% of PRISM Normal precipitation. Water Year to Date is 49% of PRISM Normal. There was very little snow when I hiked in the National Park on Friday morning, although we were pelted with wind-driven snow and ice coming from the west. Maybe 1" to 1.5" of new snow on the unbroken trail. Sledding hill at Hidden Basin has been closed for a couple of weeks due to lack of snow. Around the cabin the "meadow" is looking very dry. With all of the seasonal plants in dormancy it looks very brown. We are attracting a lot of birds to the bird bath in the garden. Mostly crows, Steller's jays, ravens, magpies, and lots of LBBs (nuthatches and juncos mostly). The elk herds up here have thinned out. Saw one group of about 70 animals just down the road two days ago browsing on dried grasses and shrubs. Saw two huge herds down the mountain near Loveland where they tend to gather for the winter. Black-tail (mule) deer are still hanging around the area. Snotel sites are reporting 61% of Median SWE in my 6-Digit HUC and 76% in my 8-Digit HUC. The only active stream flow gauge in my area is reporting average runoff today compared to 30 year record. No new fire restrictions in place other than the permanent ones. No active prescribed burns in the area. Everyone up here is concerned about the lack of precipitation.  View
1/4/2026  CT-MD-21 CTMiddlesex Near Normal General Awareness
All water courses appear at normal seasonal levels.  View
1/4/2026  DE-SS-3 DESussex Near Normal Morris Branch is receding and iced over. A mostly dry week with only .02" measured and several trace amounts.  View
1/4/2026  FL-MA-38 FLManatee Severely Dry General Awareness
While we did get .51" of rain last night the ground, plants, and retention areas are still very dry.  View
1/4/2026  FL-OR-40 FLOrange Near Normal General Awareness
Typical Central Florida winter: excellent weather with a short wave or two, barely making it across the finish line here.  View
1/4/2026  FL-PN-79 FLPinellas Moderately Dry General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
We're in a drought even though we had a quarter of an inch of rain last night! Areas with no irrigation or drying up and wilting.  View
1/4/2026  GA-FN-11 GAFannin Moderately Dry General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
We've moved to D-2 drought ( severely dry).Deer are even nibbling my Burford holly. I continue to water my shrubs put out in spring to give them their one year establishment time. Hopefully the fescue will fair okay with 2 months of under 2 inches of rain.  View
1/4/2026  GA-MD-5 GAMcDuffie Moderately Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Plants & Wildlife
Recent rain is welcome but more is needed.  View
1/4/2026  HI-KI-2 HIKauai Mildly Wet General Awareness
Relief, Response & Restrictions
December was the wettest month in 2025 and these several days in 2026 seem to be an extension of that which is good ... temps are still cooling bumping below 70 degrees and that is also a good thing ... Happy New Year to the CoCoRaHS admins and volunteers! ...  View
1/4/2026  ID-BK-27 IDBannock Moderately Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Energy
Fire
Plants & Wildlife
Water Supply & Quality
General: I originally dropped our rating down to severely dry, based on the lack of snow to date, but then moved it back up to moderate, based on gauge catch. We have had 12.9" this winter, and by the end of January we expect 67". Admittedly, January is young, but this has been a very dry "winter." We have had 2.16" of melt this month, with most of that falling in rain. While liquid is great, it doesn't bank for spring melt, and that's critical for the aquifer. Agriculture: This has to be guarded, based on snowfall. We have virtually nothing on the ground, and at this point we should be measuring in feet. Energy: Even with clear panels, we have cloudy/drizzle conditions that reduce production. We consumed 33.58kWHR yesterday, but only produced 28.25 kWHR. Fire: risk is low right now. Plants/wildlife: Again, everything hangs on water. water: This is worrying, for sure. Our gauge catch is up somewhat for the year. We have received 9.38" of liquid (gauge catch), and our 5 year average is 8.97". My real worry is that almost none of this is snow. Again, I'm basing this on early days for January, admittedly, but there's not cold weather in sight.  View
1/4/2026  IL-CP-1 ILChampaign Moderately Dry General Awareness
1
0.25" of rain in the past week, so the dry weather continues. December ended with 1.36" of precip, 58 percent of normal. Total precip for 2025 was 29.956", 76 percent of normal and the driest year at my location since I started keeping records in 2003. Photo shows the spillway at Homer Lake. Water has not flowed over the spillway in months.  View
1/4/2026  IL-HY-30 ILHenry Mildly Dry General Awareness
Water Supply & Quality
December ended on a really good note. A 24-hour event that started with rain on the 28th and ended with some light snow on the 29th produced 1.06" of gauge catch and ended the month of December with a slight surplus. MTD was +0.06" (103% of NOAA Norm), YTD for 2025 only -3.95" (89% of NOAA Norm) and WYTD -1.32" (82% of NOAA Norm). Because the ground was soft, most of that moisture soaked in. The Mississippi and Green Rivers remain low with some ice coverage. The Rock River has been experiencing some minor flooding due to ice breakup and jams. That trend will continue this week with daily high temps in the upper 40's and lower to mid 50's. There looks to be chances for rain toward the end of the week so hopefully there will finally be some measurable precipitation for the new year.  View
1/4/2026  IL-KN-67 ILKane Near Normal General Awareness
Conditions are normal for this time of year.  View
1/4/2026  IL-MCH-13 ILMcHenry Near Normal General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
1.33 inches of precip this week, most as rain, though some of it fell as 2.0 inches of snow. 2025 closed with my station receiving YTD precip of 33.74 inches, compared to the 30-year NOAA norm of 37.19 inches, minus 3.45 inches, 91% of normal. Bird feeder and heated bird bath have frequent visitors, the pileated woodpeckers are calling, and three bald eagles landed in a tree in the back yard.  View
1/4/2026  IN-BR-6 INBrown Near Normal General Awareness
Agriculture
Routine outdoor activity continuing as usual.  View
1/4/2026  IN-OW-9 INOwen Near Normal General Awareness
1
Normal conditions, no adverse affects  View
1/4/2026  IN-PR-3 INParke Mildly Dry General Awareness
overcast most of week cold breezy  View
1/4/2026  IA-BT-24 IABenton Near Normal General Awareness
Temp: 31°F Humidity: 79% Wet Bulb: 29°F Dew Point: 25°F Barometer: 30.00 in Hg Average Wind Speed: 1-8 mph for the past 24 hours High Gust: 1-16 mph for the past 24 hours AQI: 57 without wood smoke adjustment 33 with wood smoke adjustment Weather this past week has been quite interesting in respect to temperatures as they were below freezing, and this past Monday 29 December 2025 we did have Blizzard Conditions. Cedar River is still low at the Mt. Auburn Boat Ramp, there is still flowing water in the river to include ice.  View
1/4/2026  IA-BC-9 IABuchanan Mildly Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Plants & Wildlife
Moisture for the week was 0.34 in and a trace. Nice full moon on Friday night but to cloudy to see it on Saturday night. Some manure hauled again yesterday. Snow piles still around in areas but if the temps get as warm as forecast early in the week, they may be gone. Other than lack of much snow cover, pretty much looking like a normal winter at present.  View
1/4/2026  IA-HR-16 IAHarrison Mildly Dry General Awareness
0.02 of precipitation last week. Which fell in the form of fog and drizzle. Conditions are turning slightly dry, as only 0.30 of precipitation fell in December. No snow is on ground., due to above normal temperatures.  View
1/4/2026  IA-TY-2 IATaylor Mildly Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Not much change from last week. Still warmer and drier than normal. Only frost in the ground is in shaded areas. Heard of some anhydrous being applied last week.  View
1/4/2026  IA-WR-5 IAWarren Mildly Dry General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Not much change the past week as temperatures averaged a little over one degree above normal, and less than a tenth of precip. With temps near normal the pond has a thin ice sheet now, which will probably melt again this coming week. Few animal sightings this past week with only a few owls calling through early nightfall. Small streams are running, but quite low. Happy New Year, the country surely needs one.  View
1/4/2026  IA-WB-17 IAWebster Mildly Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Plants & Wildlife
About 0.1in precipitation this past week, temperatures have been slightly warmer than normal. Otherwise no real changes river, lake and stream levels continue very low and top soil moisture continues unchanged and is only partially frozen.  View
1/4/2026  KS-SG-242 KSSedgwick Near Normal Almost no precipitation for December. Some foggy days where moisture "hung in the air."  View
1/4/2026  KY-GY-9 KYGrayson Near Normal General Awareness
Agriculture
Plants & Wildlife
0.49” rain start of the week. Ponds unchanged, creeks slowly flowing. On our 40mi town trip, one more bean field down, 2 left. Red shouldered hawks hunting daily, but the harriers seem to have moved on. Turkeys still talking in the woods. Coyotes howling at the Wolf moon. No deer seen.  View
1/4/2026  ME-WL-8 MEWaldo Moderately Dry General Awareness
The ground was dry before it froze and the snowpack has very little water in it. Snowfall changing to rain doesn't help much since it just runs off.  View
1/4/2026  MD-WR-31 MDWorcester Mildly Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Energy
Plants & Wildlife
2025 summary from eastern Worcester County, MD (Using midnight to midnight data) - The average daily maximum for the year was 66.1 degrees and the average daily minimum was 49.2. The highest daily maximum was 98.4 on 28-JUN and the lowest daily maximum was 21.6 on 21-JAN. The lowest daily minimum was 11.8 on 23-JAN and the highest daily minimum was 80.4 on 17-JUL. The temperature reached 90 or above on 18 days. The maximum temperature was 32 or lower on 10 days. The minimum temperature was 32 or lower on 68 days. The last 32 degree reading in the spring was 09-APR and the first 32 degree reading in the fall was 11-NOV, giving a growing season of 222 days. The dewpoint reached 70 or above on 84 days and 80 or above on 17 days. The average daily humidity was 77.0%. Total rainfall was 46.03 inches, which is slightly above the average. Measurable rain was observed on 107 days. Total snowfall was 18.3 inches, which is well above the average. Snow was observed on 15 days, with 9 of those days having a measurable amount.  View
1/4/2026  MA-BA-51 MABarnstable Near Normal General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Relief, Response & Restrictions
Water Supply & Quality
more rain, some snow  View
1/4/2026  MA-BA-57 MABarnstable Near Normal General Awareness
Agriculture
Fire
Plants & Wildlife
Water Supply & Quality
December finished with a total catch of 2.94” - only 57% of PRISM average. But thanks to a VERY wet October and a slight November surplus we’re still running at 113% of the average for the first quarter. Ground is currently snow-covered and pond (at more or less normal winter height) has mostly iced over. Plenty of sign of terrestrial wildlife, including active birds at feeder, but most waterfowl have moved to more productive waters.  View
1/4/2026  MA-BE-36 MABerkshire Near Normal General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Tourism & Recreation
An inch and a third of rain early last week brought the totals for December, the year, and the water year to just above normal. The rain washed away much of the snow but a snow storm on New Years day added some back. The current snowpack is 5 inches. Greylock trails are snow covered but remain closed to snowmobiles due to insufficient snow cover. Snow cover in the fields is barely enough for cross country skiing. Tracks in the snow show activity by deer, coyote, fox, porcupine, rabbits and squirrels. No bear tracks; they must have finally gone into hibernation.  View
1/4/2026  MA-PL-48 MAPlymouth Near Normal We got .72" of precipitation in the past seven days. The ground is still snow covered and temperatures have been below average.  View
1/4/2026  MA-WR-41 MAWorcester Near Normal General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Water Supply & Quality
0.96 precipitation during the past week. 3.77 imches precipitation in December 7.25 inches of snow, normal conditions for early January 3 inches of snow on the ground.  View
1/4/2026  MA-WR-112 MAWorcester Near Normal General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
Tourism & Recreation
This past week brought cold temps, mostly in the teens and 20s, and three days with a little snow totaling 0.45". No surprises for the winter season. The snow was light and fluffy, easy to move around to keep walkways and all clear. Backyard critters are much the same, squirrels and rabbits, and the usual birds including Juncoes, sparrows, crows and starlings. Also visited by a pair of cardinals and spotted a nuthatch walking upside down on a tree near the feeder. Skiing at the local hill (hardly a mountain but a great place for kids) is still busy especially with school vacation week. It's all good...  View
1/4/2026  MI-AN-25 MIAllegan Mildly Wet General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
This past week started with a dramatic return of winter bringing us high winds and heavy rains that suddenly turned into a blizzard-like, bomb-cyclone storm, followed with daily snow flurries. The week started with a warm temperature getting to 55F, then daily highs dropped to seasonal average or below for the rest of the week. We've had 6 days of precipitation starting with 1.59" of rain followed by a total of 10.7" of snow, giving us a total of 2.37" of precipitation and Mildly Wet conditions. We had a return of a snowpack ranging from 2-5" with some 10-11" drifts. Canadian Geese have been nosily flying low over our yard, and many birds have returned to the bird feeder. Our December ended with a monthly total precipitation of 4.23", which is 1.63" above the PRISM monthly 30-year average. We had a total snowfall for December of 23.2" of snow; and since the beginning of November we've had a 45.2" snow-total.  View
1/4/2026  MI-BN-3 MIBerrien Moderately Wet General Awareness
Plants & Wildlife
For the week ending 1/4/2026, conditions were MODERATELY WET. The 7-day cumulative precipitation total of 2.37 inches was 204% above the 13-year (2009-2022) average of 0.78 inches and in the “severely wet” range; the 30-day total of 3.74 inches was 9% above the expected 13-year average of 3.42 inches and in the “near normal” range; and the 90-day total of 10.96 inches was 7% above the expected 13-year average of 10.25 inches and in the “near normal” range. There were 5 days of measurable precipitation (all from rain), with a maximum of 2.00 inches on the 29th (all from rain. There were 5 days of Snowfall (total of 7.4 inches) & 7 days of Snowpack (median of 3.0 inches). Temps ranged from 62 F (on the 28th) to 14 F (on the 2nd), with average Hi/Lo temps of 45/37 F (-12/-17 relative to last week). Precipitation Trends—December Totals: 4.25 inches (up 1.67 inches, 165% of PRISM Normal; 2025 Calendar Year Totals: 36.84 inches (down 3.79 inches, 91% of PRISM Normal). Winter Conditions (November 1-to-Date)—New Snow on 24 days, with total of 36.8 inches (vs 17-year averages of 14 days and 23.8 inches); Snow Pack on 35 days, with average daily depth of 4.5 inches (vs 17-year averages of 19 days and 3.5 inches). The big weather event of the week was the 2.0 inches of liquid precipitation (92.5% from rain) and 3.5-inch snowfall on the 29th, which was followed by sub-freezing temps for the rest of the week. The cold and persistent snow cover brought many small birds to the feeders. Single Coyotes were seen crossing a frozen Crescent Lake on two different days.  View
1/4/2026  MI-BN-28 MIBerrien Mildly Wet General Awareness
Tourism & Recreation
Last week began with a dramatic transition from unseasonably warm and heavy rains and strong winds back to wintery weather. Temperatures after Sunday have usually remained freezing all week but nothing below the teens. Light snow, almost daily, and a nearly persistent overcast sky has characterized this week. Lake Michigan isn’t freezing yet although ice is forming on lighthouses and natural features around the St. Joseph River entrance. Lake Chapin is developing a thin layer of ice over less than 10% of its surface. Hickory Creek has not frozen but drainage ditches have. Outdoor winter recreation is resumed. The gauge catch totaled 2.41 inches with most of that coming from Sunday’s heavy rains. The snowboard gathered 3.6 inches of snow but this was probably low due to high winds. SWE from the snowboard was 0.37 inches. Overall, conditions are mildly wet.  View
1/4/2026  MN-AA-169 MNAnoka Mildly Dry General Awareness
Agriculture
Business & Industry
Plants & Wildlife
Tourism & Recreation
2
Total precipitation for our station this past week was 0.44 inches with 1.37 inches for the month of December and 0.08 inches for the month of January so far. Total snowfall for the week was 5.4 inches (4.2 inches in December and 1.2 inches in January). The year 2025 saw a total of 30.61 inches of total precipitation (93% - 98% of normal from 2024) and a total snowfall of 39.6 inches. The snowpack depth this morning is 8.0 inches with a snow water equivalent (melted value) of 1.36 inches. Temperatures have ranged from approximately 0°F to the low 30’s. This week marked a traditional transition into mid-winter, characterized by fluctuating temperatures, periodic light snowfall, and typical January freezes. The week began with moderate temperatures that peaked above freezing on Wednesday; however, a cold front moved in for the New Year, bringing predominantly cloudy skies and light, periodic precipitation. All agricultural fields are currently dormant with deeply frozen soil. Local flora has entered winter dormancy; deciduous trees remain bare, while hardy conifers, such as White Pine and Spruce, provide the only green canopy. Wildlife activity is limited to winter-active species. Whitetail deer and wild turkeys are frequently sighted foraging in wooded areas, and while migratory birds have moved south, resident species like cardinals and chickadees remain active at feeders. Large pileated woodpeckers have also been spotted. Ice fishing has begun on smaller lakes, though ice thickness varies. Snowmobiling and cross-country skiing on groomed or high-elevation trails remain popular. The beginning of January 2026 is trending significantly colder than January 2025, consistent with a traditional La Niña winter pattern. We are ending the week with cloudy skies, moderate air quality, and a moderate breeze from the southeast. Light snow flurries or freezing rain is possible later today with highs in the mid-20s.  View
1/4/2026  MN-HN-128 MNHennepin Moderately Dry General Awareness
Energy
Plants & Wildlife
Relief, Response & Restrictions
Society & Public Health
Tourism & Recreation
2
The WSW that kicked off last week produced a variety of precipitation causing havoc mostly on the roads. We had Rain. Freezing Rain and Snow. Much of the Ice remains on less traveled surfaces (sidewalks and some city streets) even with an application of salt. The Snowpack has remained steady, while the bottom 5” is now a hard crust. Lack of Sunshine also was a contributing factor. This was a complete 180 from the previous week. Looks like we’re in for another similar week coming up, less the Snowfall, but periods of more Freezing Rain. Forecast: Continued Overcast skies with several bouts of Fog throughout the week. Temps holding steady, mid 20’s to low 30’s. Some chances of Freezing Rain and a possible Snow Shower towards the end of the week. Looks like a typical Winter week to kick of the Blues.  View
1/4/2026  MN-HB-40 MNHubbard Moderately Dry General Awareness
December precip., water equivalent, was 1.1", pretty average. Ongoing long-term water/snow deficit continues.  View
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