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snowman19

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Everything posted by snowman19

  1. Your hero says the east is going mild mid-December. Didn’t expect you to post his new tweet
  2. Twitter is saying it has that bias and an amped bias because it doesn’t show what they want….
  3. Agree. The consistent +SOI run is indicative of ENSO-atmospheric coupling. And if people are correct that there’s tropospheric coupling with the upcoming record strong SPV, that’s a really bad sign with the PAC changing the way it is. That’s going to re-enforce +AO/+NAO and leave no way to possibly blunt the PAC onslaught
  4. @Bluewave The entire ENSO gyre is switching into a mode much more favorable for region 3.4 cooling, +SOI and enhanced trades finally. This should wipe out the +AAM/Nino like effects. Paul is expecting this to continue throughout December and possibly into early January. It’s also going to constructively interfere with the MJO Maritime Continent forcing and the -IOD. The question is do we see enough cooling to get a trimonthly weak Niña ONI? Paul thinks the distinction between weak La Niña and cold-neutral really isn’t going to matter in this case:
  5. It really wasn’t that long ago. Remember December, 2022? The “textbook, classic”, “OMG”, dream pattern for blockbuster KU’s up the coast? Some people were guaranteeing an arctic cold, crippling snow blitz and were making daily comparisons to January, 1996. “Buckle up, get sleep, it’s coming”. “This may be historic”. I remember that month very well
  6. Agree about the MJO Maritime Continent forcing. My guess is that the models have to adjust to the new EWB/+SOI/ENSO 3.4 cooling regime before you see an across the board reflection in the AAM. Just like the models adjusted to the unexpected WWB/+AAM spike/ENSO warming we saw a couple of weeks ago
  7. I don’t think there’s any question that the 1st 2 weeks of December look cold. The ambiguity starts mid-month. The GEFS is going to a -PNA/SE ridge pattern, EPS holding status quo. Shades of the last couple of years when the EPS was really bad with the PAC pattern and it played catch up as we got closer. Last winter in particular, the EPS was pretty bad in that regard. I’m not really sure what they did with the upgrades, but at least on the PAC side, the EURO leaves a lot to be desired
  8. We are starting to see the effects of the MJO forcing and the WWB induced +AAM wearing off on the models in the long range. They are becoming aggressive with developing a -PNA around mid-month and pumping a SE ridge/WAR. The models are also getting stronger with the EWB in 3.4 and developing a pronounced Modoki event. It looks like the SPV is going to get very strong with nothing to limit it strengthening into mid-December. Luckily still no signs yet of it becoming coupled with the TPV or it would completely rout any source of arctic air and lock it over the pole. It is however, following the typical high solar/+QBO/-ENSO progression so far
  9. The RMM plots are way too noisy. @bluewave uses the VP/OLR plots, which are much more accurate
  10. @Gawx Sunspots soar to over 200 again and geomag on the way up. Wish @Isotherm still posted on here to get his thoughts on everything going into winter….
  11. Finally looks like we are going to see a very strong EWB in 3.4. This one looks real, gaining strength and moving up in time
  12. With today’s rain, most areas are saved from the driest fall on record. However, this met fall will almost certainly end up in the top 5 driest falls on record region wide
  13. The EPS playing catch up in the PAC again. While the PDO has weakened since the beginning of November, it is still extremely negative, as is the PMM and IOD. In the Atlantic, the New Foundland warm pool is still going strong (+AMO): The waters in MJO phases 4-6 are still anomalously very warm and that’s the general area where the atmosphere is going to want to fire convection, law of thermodynamics, convection over the warmest SSTs. I think the answer to what’s going to happen once the WWB/+AAM effects on the wave train wears off is starting to be answered. The models are starting to finally reflect an MJO response around mid-December. We are seeing a very positive push in the SOI and are also seeing a very strong EWB in ENSO region 3.4. It is no doubt going to cool (possibly significantly) in December. Very clearly, a “Modoki” event is taking shape. There is also an absence of upward wave flux/warming into the stratosphere and that is going to allow the SPV to significantly strengthen next month. This fits with the -ENSO/+QBO/solar max base state. The saving grace with regard to the stratosphere is that there aren’t any signs (yet) that the SPV is going to couple with the TPV:
  14. IMO some people are being way premature (mostly in twitter land) with assurances at the end of November, that the early December pattern is “locking in” for the rest of winter. Who knows, maybe it does. But based on the totality of everything happening now and has happened synoptically over the last few weeks, I think that may be a really huge mistake to be so sure of something “locking in” and being completely dominant for the next 3-4 months. That’s how you paint yourself into a corner you can’t get out of and lose credibility if it all goes by the way side
  15. @40/70 Benchmark While I firmly believe this period coming up is WWB/+AAM forced, the reality is that it’s not going to last forever. Eventually that WWB/+AAM effect wears off and the wave train will adjust. I’m seeing some folks arguing that the MJO is going to be a non factor this winter and IMO that is not going to be the case. While the MJO is getting muted right now, I don’t think that remains to be the case. Here’s a good discussion:
  16. The CFS is a joke. It insisted on a huge blowtorch December for months on end then does a complete 180 the last week. Terrible model
  17. You point out a real important and big difference between now and 13-14, 14-15….those winters both featured a very muted, retracted PAC jet that allowed the pattern to go stagnant and basically remain in place for months with very few, brief and far between interruptions
  18. I think the larger issue is the EPS’s handling of the PAC in the long range. For whatever reason it does a really bad job on the PAC side, has for years and it hasn’t gotten any better. Last year was a great example. Surprisingly, the GEFS has done way better and the EPS is always playing catchup. I’m not really sure what they did as far as the EURO upgrades but it hasn’t helped
  19. EPS and to a certain extent the GEPS (though not nearly as bad) has been doing this in the long range for years now. The EPS is by far the worst at constantly trying to incorrectly weaken and retract the PAC jet and it’s an ongoing issue despite the upgrades
  20. A classic “front-loaded” Niña winter is typically cold from November/December to mid-January then it goes mild. February and into March are usually the “canonical” Niña torch months
  21. I’m not an Eric fan as you know, but he does have a good point. And it would go along with the ongoing drought cycle we’ve had since August, minus last week’s blip
  22. Would you actually be surprised if this trends way drier Anthony? Besides the one lone anomalous event we saw last week, this has been the same old story since the drought started in mid-August. Status quo dry pattern, minus that one blip in a sea of dryness. It’s been finding ways not to rain for months. I wouldn’t be shocked one bit if December ends up cold and dry @Stormlover74 Take the under on this event. I think this trends drier and drier from here on out
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