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NorthHillsWx

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Posts posted by NorthHillsWx

  1. 1 hour ago, Met1985 said:

    The weeklies had done pretty good until we hit the later half of January then they just latched onto the non existing blocking.  I do know there is another SSW coming soon but we will see. 

    They’re great when they predict above average temps bc that’ll give you a 90% hit rate these days

    • Like 2
    • Haha 1
  2. 49 minutes ago, GaWx said:

     For the purpose of making the readers laugh and not to be taken seriously, the Euro Bleaklies have for March a mild first third, a short transition, and then a cold last half due to a combo of +PNA/Aleutian Low and a strong -NAO/-AO. I feel like I’m having deja vu all over again as Yogi Bera would say. Don’t shoot the messenger as I’m just messaging the super important inaccurate Bleaklies. Nothing much else is happening anyway.

    Weeklies are as trustworthy as my high school girlfriend 

    • Like 1
    • Haha 7
  3. There’s a small sliver, roughly the mason Dixon line to eastern PA, of the east coast that’s done well this winter. Other than that, pretty much the entire east coast has shared in the misery. Parts of the MA had a great week in January and Connecticut had localized jackpots from a coastal storm recently but the vast majority of the east coast is in this same snow drought. I wonder if those years noted above featured failures for the entire east coast such as this has or if it was more regional to the southeast 

    • Like 1
  4. The fact hours 210-318 on the 06z GFS are all rain illustrates why some doubt it will ever snow again. 1040 high moving into Maine with a trailing wave, blocking, and coastal development with precip back to mountains. Not even a pixel of digital blue. It requires more stars to align for snow here now than for the panthers to win a Super Bowl 

  5. So far at RDU, 14 of the first 19 days have been above average for high temps this month, including two days where the daily low temp stayed above the average high temp for the date. Only saving grace has been it’s been relatively dry meaning we’ve had some phenomenal weather days. But we’ve been so far removed from even thinking about snow besides on a weather forum it’s literally become a pipe dream around here

  6. 1 hour ago, BooneWX said:

    This hurricane season could be nuts. Sea surface temps in the MDR are comparable to what we typically see in June. I don’t doubt that the same Mets who were throwing out analogs like 2010 for this winter will be screaming “2005” for hurricane season soon :fever: but they may be right this time or at least closer to correct. 

    I feel like NC and most of the Atlantic seaboard has gotten exceptionally lucky since Florence. I have a gut feeling that changes this year. Everything screams an exceptionally bad season for the basin 

    • Like 3
  7. 4 hours ago, jpbart said:

    The perfect set up for the March killing frost.  Ah life in the south.

    It doesn’t seem to be that far ahead here compared to normal. That being said, the last few Februarys have been so warm that maybe it’s skewing what normal is… Blooms on most flowering trees but nothing popped yet 

  8. 1 hour ago, eyewall said:

    Is being below freezing this morning the pattern change? ;)

     

    13 minutes ago, CaryWx said:

    Overcast and cold.  This is your winter 2024 snow day.  A real dry bob.

     

    Watching that slug of moisture going from the gulf out into the Atlantic is extremely frustrating. I’ll call the opaque sky and 30’s a win this year, closest thing to snow we’ve had this year smdh

    • Like 2
  9. One other symptom I believe we’re seeing of a warm Atlantic has played out in the MA and NE over the last week. They got a perfect track coastal storm and, other than a few bands where rates overcame BL temps, most areas struggled to accumulate. Boston was mostly rain from a storm traveling south of the 40/70 benchmark in mid February! You cannot tell me that the sst anomaly along the east coast wasn’t at least partly to blame for the outcome of that system in areas where the flow came off the water. Now for the flip side- this clipper that just went through. Without any coastal influences and no coastal flow, it was able to produce a stripe of snow from 8-14” from the Midwest to the coast. In fact, even areas outside the band were able to accumulate efficiently. I know the DC area got screwed but that was mostly due to the storm track and lack of precip in that area. 
     

    My point is this: both of those were borderline BL temp setups and one was far more efficient at producing snow than the other. Down here, EVERY event just about is borderline, and given the same setup as they experienced, that 2-3 degree coastal influence due to excessively warm sst can be the difference between what, given normal sst, would be a winter storm vs a rainstorm. Just pretty wild to see in many regards a clipper outperform a juiced up coastal in prime climo in NE

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