vortex95
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"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
Talking about low track, this storm was a bit odd. It tracked just outside the benchmark, yet you look at the SNE snowfall plot (attached), things stand out. To have ptype issues or lacking big snowfalls on the Outer Cape, and yet heavy snow lacking once you get to the NH border and in the Berks, and monster totals "wedged" in-between, is atypical for a New England snowstorm. Typically, if the S+ does not make it into NH or Berks, there are *no* ptype issues in SNE or any issues are corrected quickly due to the ageostrophic flow/backing winds as the low wraps up well to the S and SE, so even the Outer Cape will do just fine, at least later in the winter season. Sure, PVD gets an all-time snowfall smashed, but BOS/ORH/CEF/BDL not even top 10, in fact, not even *close* for any of these cities? That's quite a disparity, probably the biggest one on record for a New England snowstorm. So in some ways, this was *not* a classic snowstorm for SNE or New England. The storm's big S+ area was rather confined and small N and NW of the low center, and the models overdid the big amounts in Berks and srn VT/NH until the last minute. I was confident 15-25" would make it into these areas, why not?, based on the track of the sfc low, that's what you'd expect! Do I sound pedantic? Well, the details count here, as they do in all sciences. Subtle differences not so obvious can and are *huge* as to sensible wx for an event. I go back to my previous (long) post on this thread, "one size does not fit all" and thus you can't gloss over any event calling it "perfect" or "classic" or "what it should be." That's not how the wx, climate, and atmosphere work. One explanation I think for the odd snowfall pattern/gradient is the cut-off 500 low stayed well offshore. For the best expansive comma head S+, you want sfc low right near the benchmark, but the 500 low to pass right over or very close to the BOS-ORH-BDL-PVD zone. You get the biggest height falls and max dynamic cooling aloft, so "part 2" of the storm (no mdt-hvy snow break though) is solid fluffier, more convectively-driven snow. In this case, the 500 low as it passed SNE was almost co-located w/ the sfc low. That's not common for a classic blockbuster for New England. Why was that? Well, no blocking over NAMR for one. In fact, deep 500 low near Greenland! Second, no polar jet at all. Just one big solid jet across the cntrl/srn CONUS. Hard pressed to call it a STJ though! And remember, some posts I saw elsewhere on this, the CONUS pattern 2 before the storm, it was pointed out, "does this look like a 500 flow over the CONUS and a blizzard on the E Coast 2 days later??? (attached is the 2/20 12z 500 analysis). Where is your cold confluence over the NEUS? No Hudson Bay vortex! See what I mean, non-standard not just in the smaller-scale for the event itself, but the larger-scale across NAMR!!! Third, the 500 low itself, going by its last closed contour, was rather small. Look at 18z 2/23 GFS 500 analysis below. The last closed contour extended only from central ME to about RIC's latitude. Also, the elongated of the trough as a whole to the SW?, again, not something you see typical for a KU! Comments? -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
The below is a bit of a rant, but I know the snow weenies of this forum will appreciate detailed and proper meteorology when it comes to snowstorms! And I cannot emphasize this enough, when you know wx history so you can quote examples to support your position/argument, it makes a huge difference (see "one size does not fit all" statement below). Concerning the link in the quoted post. "Goldilocks situation" -- first I have heard of this label concerning a snowstorm, at least for track. The Blizzard of '78 tracked farther NW, and look what the did, snowfall heavier both in absolute totals and areal coverage. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/monitoring-content/snow-and-ice/rsi/nesis/19780205-19780207-5.78.jpg There are other cases, of course. There is no studies or literature I am aware of that say, "if a low pressure takes X track, that means the max amount of snow will be Y" or "X temps present, then Y snow." Actually, when you think about it meteorologically, these statements are ridiculous IMHO. Low pressure track is one of *many* factors for total snowfall, and can't be treated in a vacuum. The list is long, and I know the weenies here know the below, but worthy laying out anyways! 1) High pressure - Its position, NW, N, or NE? How strong/expansive? Is there even a high? (there are a few KU cases where *no* high existed). 2) UA jet structure/features - Is it just the PJ involved (northern stream), or the STJ (southern stream), or both? Is it a full phase of both jets (or s/w trofs)? Position of entrance/exit regions of the jets? When/where does this phase occur relative to the location of interest? 3) Antecedent air mass - How cold is it pre-storm? Low-level cold only or deep layer cold? Is there any cold at all pre-storm? (we know about that -- look at the Blizzard of '97!). 4) Size - How large is the storm, both sfc and aloft? Is it just a little "dent" at 500 (Feb 1983), or a massive 5 contour 500 cut-off (May 1977)? 5) RI - At what lat/lon does the RI take place, if any RI at all? RI is not required, neither is an intense sfc low - see the big snowstorm last month. 6) Speed/direction - Does the storm stall/slow/loop or move along? And slow movement for a blockbuster is not required. Look at the Bliz of '93. As typical w/ Gulf waves, it *flew* NE! And then you get the weird outliers, like March 8-9, 2013 (a CoastalWx fav). Low pressure 600 mi SE of ACK and yet 1-2 ft in parts of SNE. MQE gets 29.8" for a top 5 snowstorm (up to the time). So how does the work for a track correlation? The point is there is no "one size fits all" for snowstorms, and wx in general. Oh, we try to force things into such categories/classes, but nature doesn't give a hoot about what we try to do or think! And the article linked, in general, it has some glaring generalizations and glosses over important details, as to dilute things down for general public consumption? But it not just about things being diluted, some things are factually wrong or overstated/exaggerated. "The nor'easter quickly intensified to easily qualify as a “bomb cyclone" and featured thundersnow and lightning, two things rarely seen in snowstorms." First, "thundersnow and lightning" treated as two things? Well, you can't have one w/ the other. Saying "lightning" in this case is superfluous. If you have thunder, you *have* to have lightning, so just say "thundersnow." Second, thundersnow is not rare in snowstorms, or not as rare as claimed to be. Sure, at any *one* location it is rare, but when you include the entire areal coverage of the snow and the existence of the storm itself? "An unusual combination of winter and summer weather — thundersnow and lightning — flashed at times with this storm, thrilling meteorologists on air. That's because “you only see it in the most intense winter storms,” Where does it say thundersnow is only seen in the most intense winter storms? The famous Dec 1996 Cantore ORH video, that nor'easter was pretty avg for a winter storm for intensity. And based on what? Central pressure?, max winds?, total snowfall? You don't need an intense storm to get CSI and thus slantwise convection for thundersnow. The article mentions it if were any colder there would not been as much moisture in the air to feed that snowfall. Really? Anyone ever hear of the fluff factor and snow ratios? How about what happened in Jan-Feb 2015 in SNE, for that snowblitz, it was unusually *cold* for so much snow, and all-time records were set. So absolute total moisture availability is not always a deciding factor, neither are temps! "A little farther inland and its would have lost its ocean energy" Huh? Are we talking about tropical cyclones or baroclinic winter storms? And since when is "ocean energy" required for intense blizzards and snowfalls? See the OH Valley Jan 1978 blizzard (957 mb) or November 1950 Appalachia monster (62" in WV). I could go on and on, but you get the idea! -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
Really tired of these kind of statements from various media outlets and organizations (not upset at you MJO812 ), as if it is AK vs. the rest of U.S. for cold/snow, and anything in the CONUS for cold/snow that "outdoes" AK means it is significant. These kind of statements are more for content and engagement bait that drives the social media algorithm than anything else. Anchorages avg winter snowfall is 76.4" and so far this season, they have 65.6" as shown above. However, what they conveniently leave out on the infographic is that avg season-to-date snowfall for Anchorage is 61.4". So nothing unusual going on in Anchorage for snowfall this snow season. And Anchorage for a location in AK for snow is relatively "low" for the state as a whole, so not a good comparison location. Bu the general public doesn't know that. They think AK is all cold/snow to the extreme. See what's going on here? Make more out of what it really is, or turning the ordinary into the extraordinary for wx (all too often done these days by the MSM). It's the same for temps, and this created hype has already happened this winter. Well, we all know that when it CONUS is very cold, AK is often very mild, so temps warmer in AK in the winter than say in the Deep South are not uncommon. Why don't they compare Fairbanks for snowfall? That's b/c they have had 89" so far this winter. Well, that won't work for hype, will it? Must be nice to cherry-pick locations to "force" significance. And there have been a significant number of winter seasons where locations in southern New England have outdone the larger cities in AK, so again, how is this a big deal in the large pix? -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
I recall this incident quite well, and the filed court case was of public record. Holy cow, if even 1/10th of what was claimed occurred in that court paper, it is unreal BS like that went on for *any* length of time. -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
I know BOS has had issues for observers and snowfall since the NWS moved to Taunton in the mid-90s. But I did not know the LEQ was such an issue. Has the LEQ been a problem for a long time? Same w/ PVD? And I know for much of the time, the snow obs have not been taken at Logan, but from observers close to the airport, which is fine, but couldn't the off-site snow observer do an LEQ? Then they could take that LEQ and mesh it w/ any ASOS rainfall, and come up w/ a reasonable amount. -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
It's really an insult to the climate record. And how much is based off of such records, and it is this bad? And there are ways to mitigate snow loss from wind w/ equipment. Blue Hill has done it forever. -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
Sorry if this has already been brought up, but so many posts, it's hard to read them all! So w/ no augmented ASOS snow observations at PVD 05-10z and it appears at least a foot fell during that time, how does that work? Going by just SOG is an issue in this case b/c of the blowing and drifting, never mind settling as temps where 31-32 F during this time. And LEQ for PVD CLI on 2/23 .58" and 35.5" of snow?? Same w/ BOS .47" w/ 17.1" of snow?? This is a *major* problem and significant impact to the climate record. Also, we are drought conditions currently in the NEUS, but are we really or it is as bad as it is shown on the U.S. Drought Monitor? LGA/JFK/EWR/PHL/BWI do not have this snow/LEQ issue. Same for many other ASOS climate sites around the country. -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
Is weatherwiz "mad" he only got, what, 10" total???? -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
With this being said from CoastalWx, and him getting two 20"+ blockbusters in Weymouth in a month, I *never* want to hear him Cartman b*ticin' about no snow or saying "THIS BLOWS" again!!! Recall earlier this winter, "THIS PATTERN BLOWS" was said by him, even though it was much better overall for New England even early on w/ the big snows in Nov on Mt Mansfield. That should have set him on a more positive path for the odds of a good winter. -
"Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
vortex95 replied to Ginx snewx's topic in New England
Just catching up on reading all these ob posted for this storm. Attached is the CG plot from around 3am Monday. That is a *lot* of CGs for S+ bands well N in the cold sector of a coastal, looks like several dozen over a 2 hr period. I can't recall that so many near or over SNE for a snowstorm, even the Bliz of 93. On the BOX radar from 257am Mon attached, the uber snow weenies here I bet can answer this question. That much solid 30 dBZ in multiple bands for for a SNE snowstorm? Often it is more peppered dBZ 30-35 within 20-29 dBZ for bands like this, but not so solid. So how does this radar rank for S+ weenie bands? And BOX radar was not running "hot." I checked OKX at the same time and the dBZ matched over SE CT. -
Tony, I have been on the New England section of this board a lot more recently. You'll find that the uber of uber snow weenies all here, and the passion has not waned. "CoastalWx" probably tops them all, at least for number of posts he has done over the last 15 years (take a look at his stats). Boris
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Heaven help us when the next hurricane make a direct hit on SNE. Even a weak hurricane like Belle from Aug 1976 would be really bad. Look at what Irene did in 2011 and that was only a 50 kt TS. And any of the hurricanes that hit from 1938 to 1960? We'd be talking 50-75% of the population of MA/RI/CT alone w/o power, that would be 6.5 to 9.8M in a relatively small area, by far the biggest outage for the region. Sandy had about 8M w/o power, but that was stretched from BOS to DCA, big difference! Since it has been since 1991 for the last direct hurricane strike, the trees have not been "taxed" hard by big wind for a long time while they are in full leaf, esp. inland sections, so that is going to make it that much worse when we do get one. Sure, going a record 34 years w/o a direct strike has its positives, but there is a flip side as well.
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vortex95 started following "Don’t do it" 2026 Blizzard obs, updates and pictures.
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I did discuss the social aspect of thing in my first or two posts on Blizzard of 78 comparisons. And you bring up the social aspects of things made me think more. These days it is TMI to the extreme, and so often, people do know not *what* to think concerning the forecast, esp. when it comes to stormy wx. Oh, *we* know on this forum what is what, but we are a small minority. The avg person has a tough time w/ wx these days, and I don't blame them! They have no idea who to trust, or even where to starts to try to get the best wx info. And w/ the hype out of control, ppl get frustrated and start to tune it out. Once again, i don't blame them at all. They are so sick of every wx event treated as if the end of world is nigh, who wouldn't get fed up??? This is why I think now, the social sciences concerning wx are now the most important. Our forecasts have come such a long way and are so good now, that's not the problem anymore. The problem lies w/ presentation and communicating that info, and having "too many cooks in the kitchen" -- armchair wx ppl on social media thinking they are the "da bomb", among other things, all vying for attention and trying to monetize their content! Not sure how to address these social issues, and it is a very complex problem. But just understanding why things they way they are is a good start!
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It's a weird hybrid. The sfc low formed over the Carolinas but not really a secondary b/c the primary low, if you want to call it one, is quite weak and just has been sitting in place over the ern Great Lakes. It isn't a clipper type low associated w/ a strong polar jet trough that is steadily moving ESE that phases in w/ a southern stream s/w trough. There is no real polar jet, but not really something you could call a STJ either! Just one big solid jet across the center of the CONUS, in the mean anyway if you avg the wavelengths. Doesn't matter in the end though. Get the blockbusters any way you can!
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Oh yes, when I got my first FWD car in 1998, it made a world of difference driving in snow, never mind the anti-lock brakes. You had to work at it to actually fish-tail or wipe out in an open parking out testing things out!
