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PhiEaglesfan712

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Posts posted by PhiEaglesfan712

  1. Please keep the storm south. I have to travel up north to Vermont on Sunday. I'd much rather it hit North Carolina. My nephews (4, 3 on Sunday, and 5.5 months) have probably never seen a snowstorm before, and they'd probably welcome it. I've seen my fair share of snowstorms, and don't really need it right now.

    • Weenie 1
  2. I'm still very skeptical of this. 2003, 2010, and 2016 were all part of el nino events. Pretty much all the big events came either during an el nino and/or a +PDO. Even 1996, which was a la nina, had a +PDO. We currently have a -PDO and a slight -ENSO. If we get a huge event, it would be unprecedented given the PDO/ENSO state.

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  3. 9 minutes ago, Stormchaserchuck1 said:

    In Strong ENSO events the PNA usually holds the same state through Dec-Jan-Feb and sometimes March though

    Very intersting. Here are the strong ENSO years.

    El Nino

    1957-58

    1965-66

    1972-73

    1982-83

    1986-87/1987-88

    1991-92

    1997-98

    2009-10

    2015-16

    2023-24

    La Nina

    1955-56

    1973-74

    1975-76

    1988-89

    1998-99

    1999-2000

    2007-08

    2010-11

    Which of these years did the PNA not hold?

  4. 9 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

    I think it's pretty clear that it's not at this point. You don't get an epic mid atl stretch in latter January in a canonical front loaded La Nina winter. I think it's time to let that go.

    Yeah, if it was a front-loaded la nina winter, then the warm-up that started on 1/6 would have stuck. 

    • 100% 2
  5. 50 minutes ago, Krs4Lfe said:

    This winter is nothing like 2013-2014 or 2014-2015. We hear comparisons to those winters almost every year. Those there Nearly countrywide blockbuster winters. Aside from the Midwest and northeast, winter never arrived this year for most of the US. Warm and dry as far as eye can see. 

    Only East of the Mississippi. Those were record warm winters in the Western US, especially 14-15, but that one was a +PDO winter.

    • Like 1
  6. 25 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

    45 inches in Richmond? That would set their seasonal record in a one week period. Unlikely but there's always a first for everything. 

    We all know that isn't going to happen. We don't have a +PDO (like 2014-15) or +ENSO (like 2009-10). Those are the types of winters you need to produce a lot of snow in such a short period of time in the 2nd half of January and February. You're not going to get that in a -PDO/-ENSO like this year.

  7. 1 hour ago, TJW014 said:

    Could be looking at the first back-to-back winters (in at least my 24 year old memory) where Barnegat Bay completely freezes over. 

    Last year we had ice 6" thick, enough to get the ice boats out for some racing for the first time since 2018. 

    Did it not in 2013-14 and 2014-15, when we had impressive cold? The nearby lakes in my area (Aetna Lake in Medford, NJ) was completely frozen over in late February/early March 2015.

  8. 6 hours ago, SnoSki14 said:

    Really emphasizes that when things get warm they shatter records and the opposite side is only average to modestly BN at best. 

    Yeah, the last time the west was record warm (in 2014-15), at least there was an easy explanation: It was a strong +PDO winter, with a warm neutral/weak el nino. Easy to see in that configuration why you would get a record warm west and a well below average east.

    With the current configuration (-PDO/-ENSO/-IOD), there really is no reason why the west should be breaking their 14-15 records. You're not going to get anywhere near record cold in the east (like we did in 14-15) with that configuration.

  9. 16 hours ago, bluewave said:

    Another very interesting case study was the fall into winter 2012-2013 atmospheric patterns. We had a weak El Nino develop around Labor Day only to fade several weeks later. But the 500 mb atmospheric response and jet stream patterns from October on  were more El Niño-like. Then the very warm El-Nino-like December into mid-January. This was followed by the Southern Stream phasing in with the Northern Stream for the historic Nemo in February which followed the El Niño backloaded scenario. Those were the days before the WPAC warm pool became so dominant. So weak El Niño atmospheric states had no trouble coupling. 

    That failed el nino played a huge role in getting us the super el nino in 2015-16. If that el nino is stronger, then the super el nino never happens, and the PDO likely doesn't flip to positive in the mid-2010s. The years leading up to the super el nino shows us that a +PDO is probably more important for a cold/snowy winter than the el nino itself.

  10. 36 minutes ago, RodneyS said:

    Further research reveals that the last time California had neither drought nor abnormally dry conditions was more than 25 years ago -- December 2000.  However, in that month many other states were similary situated, with drought a relatively minor problem in the US. So today's situtation may be unique in US history; see Map Archive | U.S. Drought Monitor

    We had major droughts in the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic in 1998-99 and 2001-02.

  11. 2 hours ago, jwilson said:

    possibly lose their best TE also without a ready replacement.  Maybe Dallas signs another one-year deal.  He probably wants more security, at this point.

    If we don't keep Dallas, then we have to re-sign Grant Calcaterra. But we need to keep at least one, and draft a tight end in the early rounds.

  12. 5 hours ago, LoDelWayne said:

    Are we or aren't we getting a storm? That's the question.

    Probably not, and if we do, it will be mostly rain. There is just not much sustained cold air between now and the end of the month.

    I tried warning you all that if there wasn't a snowstorm in the first ten days of January, we might be waiting a while for one.

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