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PhiEaglesfan712

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Posts posted by PhiEaglesfan712

  1. On 11/15/2025 at 5:36 PM, WestBabylonWeather said:

    On this date in 2020, tornados? 

    I don't think so. That was the day my brother and sister-in-law got married. I remember it being 70 and sunny in the morning, maybe a little breezy and cloudy in the afternoon during the ceremony, but no tornado.

  2. 6 hours ago, bluewave said:

    This is the first time in a while that the 11-15 day ensembles have had this much of a warm bias in the East. 
     

    https://frontierweather.dtn.com/verification.html

    IMG_5457.png.29283864719bcc04d8be4be028899042.png

    This map is very reminiscent of fall/winter 2010-11. Of course, we had a very relaxed Pacific jet that year, which explains why we went cold in the East all the way through December and January, despite their being a deep -ENSO/-PDO/-IOD. Even when things moderated out in February and March 2011, those months weren't particularly that much warmer than average. (We eventually got the warmth that year, from April-July.)

    We don't have a relaxed Pacific jet this year (at least I don't think), so I'd be shocked if went cold all of January. I expect a reversion to the mean, and a torch to start at some point in January, continuing into February.

  3. 40 minutes ago, TheClimateChanger said:

    Whoa. What is going on in Pennsylvania and New York on Friday? :lol:

    YjIerHS.png

    They're saying a snowstorm is going to happen. I don't know to believe it.

    Fun fact: On March 29, 2025, widespread upper 70s/lower 80s were observed in our area.

  4. 51 minutes ago, Roger Smith said:

    Probably the way models are trending, it's becoming a question of whether the milder air ever makes it past central NJ but I think temps will spike at around 45F for a few hours late Christmas Day, then slide down into high 20s setting up a solid wall of icy resistance when the Friday wave drops southeast, could lead to a much heavier snowfall than forecasts are currently saying (can't say record because it's 78 years after 12-26-1947). A few days ago it was looking like a very mild two days 24th-25th and now it's looking more like a couple of hours of slight warming. Encouraging when the models bust on the warm side. 

    What about the 12/26/2010 snowstorm?

  5. 14 minutes ago, GaWx said:

    It sure is. I already posted after the first storm a prediction of 21” minimum for Jan+, alone, in top of whatever Dec ends up with.

    lol, January isn't coming close to 21 inches of snow. The snowiest January since the 2016 storm was 2022, and that was 15.3 inches, and 2018 is the only other year since then that has even topped 10 inches.

    I'd be willing to bet that January ends up with less than 10 inches of snow and an above average temperature departure.

    • saywhat? 1
  6. Just like I did on 3/29/2025, when in doubt, go the the NWS, which says too warm for snow:

    Christmas Day
    A chance of rain before 1pm. Cloudy, with a high near 44. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
    Thursday Night
    A chance of rain after 1am. Cloudy, with a low around 39. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
    Friday
    Rain likely. Cloudy, with a high near 57. Chance of precipitation is 70%.
    Friday Night
    A chance of rain before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 39. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
    Saturday
    Mostly cloudy, with a high near 51.
    Saturday Night
    A chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 39. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
    Sunday
    A chance of rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 51. Chance of precipitation is 40%.
    • saywhat? 1
  7. 11 hours ago, RedSky said:

    Small chance of snow on the 23rd 

    When will it snow it would be great to watch snow falling two days before Christmas- 2am-8am the same time every single time

     

     

    The miracle White Christmas in 1998. Temperatures really torched that month, with 2 days in the 70s in the first week, and temps in the mid-60s as late as the morning of the 22nd. Then, temperatures fell throughout the day, leading to the snowstorm on December 23-24, 1998.

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  8. 5 hours ago, EastonSN+ said:

    IF IF it happened that way, at least this December was better snowfall wise than 1989 lol. That year had a heartbreaking snow to rain storm in the middle of one of the coldest Decembers in history. 1989/1990 was probably the most disappointing in my lifetime.

    2000-01 was the most disappointing in my lifetime. I know this one technically ended with above average snowfall, but the epic snow bust in early March left a very sour taste. Oh what could have been if the forecast had even come close to verifying.

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  9. 30 minutes ago, 495weatherguy said:

    Don’t remember the torch. Remember the cold though. It was brutal 

    I was too young (about a year and a half), but the weather records show that the January 1990 average temperature was 15 degrees warmer than the December 1989 average temperature. That type of temperature jump is something you see from March -> April or April -> May. You don't see that in the dead of winter. It's like spring began in January that season.

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  10. 3 hours ago, bncho said:

    Genuinely curious--could you provide some examples?

    The most obvious ones are the most recent: 2016-17 and 2022-23.

    2 hours ago, MJO812 said:

    Nothing

    I have a hard time seeing a torch in January and February with a neutral enso going into el nino.

    In case you forgot, here's what happened the last time a dissipating la nina led into an el nino:

    cd73_196_27_132_348_21_18_40_prcp.png.df676d64808e0b7f6c921024344ff948.png

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  11. 3 hours ago, leo2000 said:

    Yes, that looks to be happening and even if it gets mild somewhat in early January but that may not happen as models have been forecasting warm in the long range and it never materializes. I think we could have indeed some storm threats before Christmas and on Christmas itself. 

    January and February are going to torch. 16-17 is probably the best analog. This could be a great snow season if you live in Syracuse. Not so much if you live in Atlantic City.

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  12. 16-17 was generally a torch in January and February in the Eastern US. It just had a very odd distribution of snow. It was the snowiest season ever in Syracuse (almost 160 inches). But places like Baltimore and DC only got ~3 inches of snow. Talk about a very sharp cutoff.

    08-09 is another weird one. Despite how cold October-January was, it would have went below average on snow without the KU on March 1-2.

    NJSnow-02Mar09.png.00a99dc67c5e14a290ecccf65a6ff54f.png

  13. 10 minutes ago, GaWx said:

    MJO still hadn’t gone back into 8 as of 12/12 with it technically still in a very weak 7 per the record: so, 12/8-12 in very weak phases 5-7 essentially neutral with it not far from the center

    IMG_6137.thumb.gif.b23f5634e4a649880aed866627f7b2d0.gif

    Looks like it's completely in the center. That's a bullseye if we're playing darts.

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