Jump to content

40/70 Benchmark

Members
  • Posts

    72,399
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by 40/70 Benchmark

  1. Its good when its warm for the east, bad when its cold...sounds reductive, but that philosophy if fail-proof over the past 9 years.
  2. One thing I will say is that EURO product looks to have a pretty poleward Aleutian ridge...more stout than the 2016-2024 mean.
  3. I haven't posted about this system once throughout its entire life. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
  4. 1991, 1992 and 2011 didn't, although the former two were directly following Pinatubo, so bit of an asterisk there. Obviously the winter is very likely to average a +NAO and probably AO, but I think what this means is we may see at least one month with decent blocking, which jives with my early inclination from looking at analogs.
  5. I haven't seen anyone suggest a cold December.....what I have seen is the suggestion that it will be the one month featuring temps relatively close to normal during a very mild winter.
  6. Makes sense to me....ONI is often rubbish in this new world.
  7. Yea, I agree that sounds ludicrous, but I do think that it could slow the rate of warming....again, that is all I took from this.
  8. Def. grain of salt after reading this site last season and then seeing how the winter evolved....but does lend creedence to my idea that the winter shouldn't be wall-to-wall ++AO/NAO.... https://www.severe-weather.eu/long-range-2/south-pole-stratospheric-warming-winter-2024-2025-influence-forecast-united-states-canada-europe-fa/ Main points: A strong stratospheric warming event is ongoing over the South Pole. It will disrupt the southern polar vortex and help to create and sustain high-pressure anomalies on the surface. The south pole pressure forecast for August-October shows a prolonged period of high-pressure anomalies, creating a negative circulation pattern. Past data and studies show that prolonged high-pressure anomalies over the South Pole in the August-Oct period can influence the weather over the Northern Hemisphere in the following weeks/months. The most likely cause of the weather impacts is the stratospheric connection between the northern and southern polar vortex that helps to transfer the atmospheric dynamics. The prevalent signal in the data shows that strong high-pressure anomalies over the South Pole in the August-Oct period correspond to lower pressure anomalies over the United States and Canada in the Winter season. The data also shows colder-than-normal temperatures over much of the central and eastern parts of the United States. Over Europe, the prevailing signal is a high-pressure anomaly and warmer temperatures during the Winter season. The main final point: These signals and connections are not a fixed rule, as the signal is weak enough to indicate it is not a main (large) driving force of the Winter weather patterns. But it is still visible and does show some form of a role in the overall large-scale atmospheric circulation.
  9. I didn't see any mention of the term "ice age, except from you. I was simply inferring from the article that the cessation of the Gulf Stream could act to quell the uber-rapid "hockey stick" rate of warming that he have observed recently....but I'm sure that would have some drastic implications.
  10. Yea, the path to said balance may not necessarily be hospitable for society.
  11. What is interesting is the implication that the cessation of the gulf stream could cause a dramtic cooling over N America and Europe at some point. I have always maintained that the planet will likely find a way to balance things out, as it usually does. We'll see....def out of my wheelhouse.
  12. https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2024/08/02/climate/atlantic-circulation-collapse-timing
  13. I think its a given that Canada will be colder than last year, so at least New England can pull off a serivcable snowfall season if we can have some better fortune with respect to the timing of +PPs. For instace, while the jet mechanics may trigger amplification well to the west, there can still be some appreciable front end snowfalls with better timing. We haven't even had much of that the past couple of years. That is often what distinguishes a "meh" season from a truly horrendous one.
  14. As you so often point out, CC was in its relative infancy back then.
  15. If it strikes us, it will have already moved inland over the southeast. There is no scenario at play where this thing gets pulled quickly to the north just off of the coast.
  16. Ineedsnow is like the reincarnation of James.
  17. Either is fine by me considering what the last two winters have looked like. I will take a holiday season that isn't prohibitive to snowfall and feels festive.
  18. I would take a neutral December and mild rest of the winter.
  19. Totally agree. I continue to feel as though the winter will be fairly mild overall for the east, but not as exotically so as last season.
×
×
  • Create New...