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40/70 Benchmark

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Everything posted by 40/70 Benchmark

  1. Difference being I don't think this season will be a one-hit wonder that is gone within days, like 2016.
  2. Colder version of 2015-2016, yes. I always agreed with that.
  3. How much did you get? Bare ground headed into last weekend?
  4. Yea, I mean .1 out of the range......doesn't make much of a difference. Its just noted for the purpose of verification.
  5. Yea, it will probably finish .1 above my 1.7 to 1.9 ONI range, at 2.0...so I'll give him props on the strength call. But I'm generally happy with where it looks like we are headed relative to my outlook. December was milder than I thought, though. I wish I had weighed 2015 more heavily.
  6. Quite happy with my January analogs. January Analogs: 1958,1964,1966,1973,1978,1983,1987,1988,1992, 2010 (x2), 2015, 2016(x2) The only reason I left 2003 off was because of the Pacific, but sensible weather wise, similar storm track, just milder in the aggregate. You can see how prevalent the +PNA was in Jan 2003, though....I didn't expect that and we haven't seen that. Granted the Pacific was also different in 2015 but I still included it because I thought it was a decent sensible weather match throughout the spring/summer and into the fall.
  7. Ranges from 2-3" left at my house. Down from a peak depth of 18". Full coverage, though...only grass is under and around the pine tree.
  8. Mild, Wind Swept Weekend Rains Represent Crucial Point of Inflection for Winter 2023-2024 Some Snow Possible Tuesday & Larger Threat Looms in Extended Range Fast on the heels of last night's heavy rains, the second in a sequence of dual heavy rain events looks to extinguish the balance of any existing snowpack across the northern portion of the region on Saturday. In a virtual reenactment of Tuesday evening, yet another short wave breaks off from the consistent energy feed out west and amplifies abruptly in the midwest, which results in yet another track through the Great Lakes. It is clear that any resistance to such a track form the developing NAO block will be insufficient to lead to a more wintry outcome as a result of the mild airmass left in the wake of last night's storm system. This may understandably lead the general public to the ill-fated conclusion that winter 2023-2024 will be relatively uneventful in terms of winter weather, much like last season, given the dearth of snowfall near the coast by the midpoint of the season. However, ironically enough, it is this mild weekend rainstorm that will play an instrument role in the inflection point at which this season diverges from the rather meek winter of 2022-2023. Seeds of Changes to be Planted this Weekend It was opined last fall that the first half of January would be relatively mild with snowfall focused over the interior. Thus far that has proven accurate given the mean temperature anomaly through the first week to ten days: And the first significant snowfall of the season last weekend. However, while the high latitude block that is currently developing is not going to keep this weekend's system from passing inland, it will act to ensure an avenue for the delivery of arctic air in the wake of the storm. And that is precisely what this storm will do, as it meanders about Canada and retrogrades underneath the Greenland block as a functional polar vortex lobe. And insodoing it will also force the potential system slated to arrive approximately late on Tuesday further to the south, ensuring primarily wintry precipitation and greatly increasing the risk for significant snowfall across the region and closer to the coast. And thereafter the plot thickens beyond mid month, as per the progression conveyed in the Eastern Mass Weather Winter Outlook that was issued this past fall. "This should largely be a tale of two months, as the warmer than average first half should give way to a colder second half that will be accompanied by the first of two historic seasonal snowfall potentials. The first half of the month should focus appreciable snowfall across the interior of southern New England, however, the coastal plane should join with a vengeance. A NESIS caliber storm is likely during the window between approximately January 22 and February 5". Indeed, high end potential looms as the NAO block begins to relax. And the polar vortex lobe translates east before lifting north into a "50/50 low" position, which will act to hold the cold air that it helped to deliver in the wake of this weekend's system. This is represents a rather robust signal, which is rooted in teleconnector convergence via mass flux throughout the hemisphere in both the Atlantic/Arctic: And the Pacific/Arctic: In what is a classic Archambault signal for a major east coast precipitation event. Keep all eyes on the blog for developments through the weekend and into next week as what ostensibly appears to be mild rain storm plays a crucial role in altering what has been a benign temperament of winter 2024. Indeed, changes appear to be afoot.
  9. https://easternmassweather.blogspot.com/2024/01/mild-wind-swept-rains-this-weekend.html
  10. I have an early write up done, but having problems uploading images, so will wait til home.
  11. That's my take, too....no one needs January 2004.
  12. January 2011 is just behind those 2 years for me.
  13. Makes perfect sense with warm ENSO climo.
  14. Difference is that we have an established Aleutian low by that point, which renders that Canadian ridging more spasmodic, as opposed to having the vortex in AK anchoring said ridging in place.
  15. The irony is that cutter Saturday evolves into the PV lobe that gets things cooking....remember what I said yesterday about cutters...
  16. He even weenied your laugh What a ruthless, emoji wielding assassin.
  17. What a torture chamber....but you can't help but look lol
  18. Wait a minute....it snowed in Albuquerque this week. Call it all off. Can't happen.
  19. There it is...old man winter with the bushy afro and thick late 70s stache....smoking a cigar by the end of the run lol
  20. I'll have that reenactment doll all ready for you to show me what old man winter did to you and where he touched you.
  21. Tell me all of your dirty little secrets in about 30 minutes....
  22. Only thing missing is you putting it all into motion for us, like a raunchy late 1970's weather porno....
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