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donyewest

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Everything posted by donyewest

  1. Yeah, I don't have time for discord, so you'll never see me post there.
  2. Agreed but the 99.99% winter season temperature-snow relationship run for what would be most of of my, and probably some of yinz, lifetime is essentially = 1 (unless I'm discussing with a statistician because they are all sticklers, in which case, my apologies lol).
  3. Furthermore, I have managed to get KPIT to concede that there are data quality issues w.r.t. temperature records when the NWS office took official measurements downtown before the move to Moon (airport). They have admitted that the records are biased because of all the surrounding industry - hot rolls of steel and giant coke ovens increase surrounding temps, surprise. So comparing record highs from 188x and the like to now is intellectually dishonest. Put another way: Even with the biased high temperature readings from the past, the presumption was that there would still be snow in the winter because surrounding areas were cooler in relation, but now Moon is as cool (read: same temp) as the surrounding countryside so it requires a totally different mindset.
  4. I would beg to differ, credit to Brian Brettschneider @Climatologist49:
  5. Only took 2 days and we're back above average for the month for daily high temp. (We were already above for daily low.)
  6. Pfft, not this guy. I keep receipts and hold grudges LOL Seriously though...I pay attention because a deficit is a deficit does a trendline make. It's like gambling: You lose, come back to the table to lose again, and then try to play catchup but odds are not in your favor. Snow is the only respite against the gloom of winter rain and swamp-humid days that run for most of the calendar year. Especially now that I have a kid, I want them to enjoy winter as much as me, and appreciate cold weather...not be one of those people loving a +25F run in the middle of winter because they are cooold and don't own sweaters?
  7. Coming from the south, I always opt to be cautious when there's ice in the forecast, but there's a big ol' nothing in Butler.
  8. 0.1" does for me if we trend towards the high end. My steep Pittsburgh driveway with that kinda ice is no bueno.
  9. Sure does. No gradual warmups (or cool downs) here.
  10. When I die, I want weathermen to be my pallbearers so they can let me down one more time.
  11. Drove through the Cranberry snow burst and it was really nice to see. Sun came out up here in Butler. You'd think it were coming down heavy with how slow the drivers were taking it
  12. Finally got some snow worth talking about! I've been so busy with work that I haven't had time to be upset at the lack of winter weather.
  13. I've been watching discussions around this and there appears to be a lot of apprehension on the hurricane outlook because of how anomalously high the Atlantic SSTs presently are. I tried to find studies on the balance point between Atlantic SSTs versus Nino intensity and there aren't many, prob because aren't many samples, ha. Heck, this blurb shows an 1899 analog which did have an active hurricane season. ECMWF pure model-based forecast just came out aggressively for an above-average season. Thing is, Nino shear is not as intense in the Gulf and mid-latitudes, and if there is a dip in Nino intensity or a block then the window may open for a hurricane to rapidly intensify. A hurricane, whether slowed/widened from shear or super cat 5, would ride up whatever high pressure region *cough*Bermuda/Azores*cough* available and that could open us up to a threat.
  14. The "Most similar city" made me think about the reports that show future (yr 2050, 1.5~3.0C) climatological transitions for metro areas. Poor wording but "what city will Pittsburgh feel most like in the future" stuff. I can't find the studies or bookmarks at the moment but did find this 2019 TribLIVE article, "Study: Climate change will make Pittsburgh feel southern by 2080," that showed we will feel more like Jonesboro, Arkansas. The visualization from University of Maryland (I goofed, this is the map linked in the article.) So, hey, we're way ahead of the curve here by already aligning with St. Louis, MO. Only ~200 more miles south and we will prove all of them wrong, under budget and ahead of schedule.
  15. Big ol' wildfire in Armstrong county yesterday. Big dummies burning when it's dry, making more work for firefighters.
  16. Round one storms have been trending north of us or puffing out, round 2 is what all the fuss is about.
  17. 88 would be downright bleak for early April. Those are August numbers.
  18. Seasonably appropriate but still early -> normal high for first week of April is upper 50s. https://www.weather.gov/media/pbz/normals/April data.pdf
  19. Yeah, that was when power went out everywhere. Looking at the West Penn Power outages map, there are still swaths of large power outages (>250 customers.)
  20. Damage reports/pictures on the KPIT Twitter are fairly significant, these winds were serious. Some *big* trees came down up just north of us (on powerlines no less). I was >< this close to pulling out the generator for the fridge and deep freezer.
  21. Watching CBS news app, Ray said his power went out at his home in Cranberry Twp, and ours goes out not 3 mins later.
  22. Got 2.051" since the Thursday early AM storms rolled through. I'd be ok with it if it had gently rained more/less all day but 1.134" in less than an hour on Thursday afternoon, 0.528" in 15 minutes according to the two radar sweeps, shot my nerves since there are still leaves everywhere, no plants blooming trying to soak it all up yet, so water pooled everywhere. I'm knocking on wood still because, even though the soil is inches-deep muck now, none of the trees around our property came down in the (undersold, imo) wind event today. Gettin' real tired of these Gulf Coast style 15-30min torrents that neither KPIT, the WPC, or even the SPC give much more than maybe a sentence or two like we're some afterthought up here.
  23. The first warned storm around 4:30 had rainfall rates (according to MRMS) of 6.5"/hr. It was crazy here, creek across the street went up faster than the flash flood we had 1.75yrs ago.
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