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  2. Get a house somewhere in ern yum county or the cape. It sounds like you don’t care about total snow and just want violence. That is a violent place.
  3. Hopefully spares ORD. Fly out Monday afternoon. Bad enough with flight reductions and TSA/ controller shortages.
  4. Nrn MO is not where I would go for winter. Maybe you get a rogue 8” blizzard but you aren’t getting much for average snow. No thanks. Boring .
  5. Lol at least you will cash in when we get another hurricane. But yeah if snow is your fetish then it definitely sucks.
  6. Many record lows will fall, especially in the South.
  7. I'm pretty sure that everything North of Kansas is colder than us in the winter. Just look at the climate data for places like Nebraska and Iowa in the winter. Even northern Missouri gets colder than us which is crazy. The ocean moderates tf out of us here. I can definitely see why some people like New england better with the massive amounts of snow in the blizzards, but like I said I find those high wind blizzards in the Midwest to be fascinating. Like a white hurricane.
  8. Just .21” here. Feels like a spring morning.
  9. I don’t know…I don’t think the Midwest is as cold as you are saying it is? Maybe far northern Minnesota and The U.P. of Michigan , and far northern North Dakota sure, but other than those places I don’t know. But everybody likes different aspects of storms, so it’s all good.
  10. Here’s today’s GEFS MJO forecast: EPS: ——————- Here are the 4 closest Niña Nov MJO analogs: 2007: 1998: 1995: 1985: —————— Now here are the 4 honorable mentions: 2022: 2008: 1989: 1983: @snowman19
  11. ALL HAIL THE NAM (we're almost in NAM 3km range now)
  12. Aside from the snow part, what else did I say that was wrong? Lol As for the snow, I guess my main issue with that part is that New England isn't as consistently cold in the winter like it used to be and like the Midwest still is. I don't think anybody can deny that fact. I'm not saying that every month has to be February 2015 but still. When it comes to blizzards I have more of a wind fetish than snow I guess. I'd be more interested in the Midwest blizzards with 3-4 inches of snow with 70-80 mph winds than our 1-2 feet with 40-50 mph winds. At least their 4 inches of snow will last all winter because it stays cold whereas our foot of snow will be gone the next week. Idk
  13. That’s very interesting. I didn’t specifically recall those two snowstorms, so I went to my data, and I can see why – they were definitely not the 2 biggest snowstorms of the season over here at our site. They were both fairly small, and well down in the hierarchy of the 61 storms on the season – they weren’t part of the top 10, and they didn’t even make the top 20. The 11/28-29 snowstorm (potent low pressure tracking across southern New England) brought 2.3 inches of snow and ranked 29th, and the 12/4-5 snowstorm (Clipper system racing eastward from southwestern Quebec to northern Maine) brought 2.9 inches of snow and ranked 23rd. It’s always amazing how two NNE sites at similar latitudes can have such different winter regimes. The largest snowstorms of the season over here were in January and February, and in terms of the 24-25 winter as a whole, most skiers/mountain recreation types in this area would probably take a repeat if push came to shove. It wasn’t a perfect winter, with a fairly weak November in the lower elevations and a relatively slow period leading into the first half of December and again near the holidays, but with all the local ski resorts in the Northern Greens ultimately recording 350”+ of snow and Jay Peak hitting 475”, combined with a very stable period in midwinter without any huge rainstorms, it was a solid performer.
  14. So the Euro and GFS have switched solutions such that the GFS gives us snow and the Euro doesn't because it goes to NC, but overall its the same look--gfs caves to the euro
  15. Maybe you missed what was asked..let’s keep it to weather. Take your crap to the proper thread.
  16. This was Nov 18 - 23 1953 - Residents of New York City suffered through ten days of smog resulting in 200 deaths. (The Weather Channel) In November 1953, a stagnant air mass settled over New York City from roughly November 18 to 23, trapping pollutants close to the ground and creating a dense smog that blanketed the city for nearly a week. Heavy use of coal-fired heating, industrial furnaces, incinerators, and vehicle exhaust filled the air with sulfur dioxide and soot that could not disperse due to the atmospheric inversion. As a result, air-pollution levels surged to dangerous concentrations, leading to a sharp increase in respiratory and cardiac illnesses. Health officials later estimated that between 170 and 260 excess deaths occurred during the event. The disaster became a turning point in U.S. urban air-quality awareness, helping to spur stronger local and national pollution-control measures in the years that followed.
  17. In my case I was born and lived in New Hampshire as a young child, love keeping tabs on New England weather, especially northern New England. When I retire there's a decent chance I'll become a local again.
  18. 0.34” overnight in my corner of Columbia.
  19. Bro, almost everything you said there is wrong. Lol. But whatever. Just so you know, Midwest and plains get less snow than most of New England.
  20. Through the first week of Nov Dep (rain) EWR: +1.8 (0.09) NYC: +1.1 (0.21) LGA: +0.9 (0.11) JFK: + 0.7 (0.01)
  21. Chill pushing into the upper midwest
  22. Maybe a couple hundredths. Fine with me as I have a ton of leaves to blow. Nice and dry..
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