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  2. You are looking at the global temperature jump in linear terms. First, what seems like a small rise in average global temperatures has much more amplified effects regionally. Second, SSTs in some tropical and even subtropical zones areas can cross a threshold where a nonlinear shift occurs. Resulting in standing waves that remain stationary for extended periods leading to very high local to regional warm departures. Unfortunately, there isn’t a guide we can consult which has a set SST level at which the changes will occur. As the climate is warming faster than our modeling technology can keep up with. So many of these shifts are only realized after the fact.
  3. The models have dried for Wednesday and Thursday and Sterling has went wetter for Staunton. https://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lon=-79.05445863492788&lat=38.16380555335593
  4. Please do Will. I always look forward to your Updates!!
  5. zzzzzzzzzzzz hopefully we get some canes going soon to give us something to track
  6. I think that dude is either in denial and just says "la la la can't hear you", or is just doing that to troll...been the habit pretty much since this tough stretch began. All we have to go is what's happened the last 9 (and likely 10) years. The reality is just what you stated. Now whether or not we get out of the PDO cycle and we can put together a better 10-year stretch remains to be seen...but at least for now this is where we at.
  7. But why is it happening every year now Roger? Are there chemicals they could spray over the forest from a plane to cause fire suppression?
  8. 12z Euro was a bit more robust at 850mb. Gets a good bit of rain into NC and points north. I think that much like Dexter, models could be playing catch up with this if there is a pocket of lighter shear available to the eventual low.
  9. a bunch of the fires are nowhere near people
  10. Yes, big win for GFS this week, but the EURO is trying to bring up a disturbance late Sunday into Monday now. Will add ensemble when it is out.
  11. If there’s no threat to life or property… absolutely let it burn. It’ll be after our lifetimes when that forest burns again.
  12. Signal is still kind of muddled but the 12z Euro brings a slug of rain into the DC area points east from whatever comes of the Atlantic lemon.
  13. From the maps available at the link below, I looked at the 50 Jul-Aug-Sep maps for each season 1975-2024 and counted the days. It took ~2 hours to count it accurately, but it was well worth the time so I could figure out how statistically significant the 39% of MH hitting during phase 2 really is. There are 4,508 days Jul-Sep 1975-2024 excluding 1978, which for some reason is blank. I counted 749 of those 4,508 days (16.6%) to be when it was in phase 2 (outside or inside circle). I rounded that up to 17%. The 16.6% is exactly 1 in 6 days rather than 1 in 8 days. That’s because there’s been somewhat of a tendency for the MJO to be longer in phase 2 in July-Sept vs the average of the other 7 phases for whatever reason. But even so, 1/6 is nowhere close to 39% as it is only 43% of it. Thus, I consider this to be a pretty strong signal for phase 2 http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/mjo/#tabs=Monitoring
  14. Today
  15. The Euro and GEM have caved to the dry GFS for the end of the week. The GFS has been dry consistently while the Euro has been wet consistently. This is a big win for the GFS and a kick in the groin to the Euro.
  16. What exactly would you like me to do? Lol I actually accepted the world is warming 2 decades ago just not a doomsdayer like you chump.What exactly is a boomer? Some one like me who worked full time while taking 18 plus credits and summer courses to get a degree to advance myself? Someone who worked 2 jobs or 70 to 90 hrs a week to support an ever growing family.? Someone who went to local board meetings to beg for local environmental change? I help raised 9 well rounded kids now 8 all who also work hard and are responsible inhabitants of the rock.
  17. One +0.4F change after a strong el nino may not seem like a big difference, but each one adds up. In the last 40 years, there has been a temperature jump following (1) the 86-88 el nino, (2) the 97-98 el nino, (3) the 15-16 el nino, and (4) the 23-24 el nino. If the temperature jumped +0.4F each time, we're talking about a +1.6F change over 40 years. That's big. We may even have another strong el nino in 26-27 or 27-28, which could create another temperature jump. If that happens, then that's 3 temperature jumps in about a dozen years.
  18. Is that where you and Diddy diddled?
  19. Maybe not near enough to a body of water suitable for scooping. Fires are huge/remote and there ain’t that many planes. Might as well get used to the smoke. It’s probably the future or atleast foreseeable future.
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