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Winter of 2015-16 Prediction Discussion


dmillz25

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To me it's alll about can we hang on to the -epo for a third winter. If so more cold an snow. If not with a moderate to possibly strong Nino it will probably be mild and wet. (Good interior snows)

So if anyone says they know for sure without knowing those factors is lying.

I think the one thing that is for sure is its a pitiful hurricane season

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This is my take of it. My prediction is a couple cutters, several swfes, a -NAO that will last long enough for a KU to happen. A couple coastal huggers and about 4 miller As and Bs. Totals for NYC 55-65 inches more north and east.

A few changes. Going with 35-45+ inches now. Factors are of course el niño and Atlantic and Pacific blocking

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A few changes. Going with 35-45+ inches now. Factors are of course el niño and Atlantic and Pacific blocking

Well given its a complete crapshoot right now I'll say 15-20" with a lot of rainy nor'easters. If we see a more west based Nino or a stronger possibility of a -EPO then those amounts could be far greater.

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This will be the first snowless winter in NYC history.

:snowing:

You have to wonder if that's possible given the 2.8" in 72-73 and all of 97-98's snow came in late March. It may be a possibility in a warmer climate as I believe DCA only had 0.1" in 72-73. Definitely not a possibility in the northern suburbs where I live but for Central Park and other extreme coastal areas.
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You have to wonder if that's possible given the 2.8" in 72-73 and all of 97-98's snow came in late March. It may be a possibility in a warmer climate as I believe DCA only had 0.1" in 72-73. Definitely not a possibility in the northern suburbs where I live but for Central Park and other extreme coastal areas.

I'd say it is possible.
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You have to wonder if that's possible given the 2.8" in 72-73 and all of 97-98's snow came in late March. It may be a possibility in a warmer climate as I believe DCA only had 0.1" in 72-73. Definitely not a possibility in the northern suburbs where I live but for Central Park and other extreme coastal areas.

I don't think even NYC will ever see a snowless winter.

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You have to wonder if that's possible given the 2.8" in 72-73 and all of 97-98's snow came in late March. It may be a possibility in a warmer climate as I believe DCA only had 0.1" in 72-73. Definitely not a possibility in the northern suburbs where I live but for Central Park and other extreme coastal areas.

 

I mean, it would have to be like a one in 500 year event, a la Sandy or something.  It's hard to imagine no snow in NYC for an entire winter, given its geographic location.

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Lol, almost impossible. I'm pretty sure I will see at least 1 snowflake each year. :santa:

 

I think the definition would be "no measurable snowfall" for the sake of this thought experiment.

 

It's going to be a long, long time before climo warms to where no accumulating snow is a realistic possibility at NYC, so we'd literally need a 'perfect storm' of conditions to make it happen... but should it occur in the reasonably near future, it'll be more interesting than any historical snowstorm/sequence IMO.

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 Here are my early thoughts... The PDO will remain positive through the winter. The EPO will teeter between neutral and weakly negative. What will really help us out is that the AO / NAO is predominately negative. NYC receives 53 inches. Please don't trash me- its only a prediction/gut early call. :mapsnow:

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