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powderfreak

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Everything posted by powderfreak

  1. Yeah I remember now, I thought you meant a model prog... but yeah when the track for rain can be 2000 miles wide and the track for siggy snow is like a 200 miles wide, it’s definitely easier to get the former over the latter.
  2. What map is that? Sounds interesting lol. Or man you mean that one that shows the narrow tracks needed for a big snowstorm while the zone for a Rainer is like 2,000 miles wide?
  3. The liquid still boggles my mind... sure ratios were part of it but that band laid down a swath of 2-3” QPF at temps in the teens. I’ve seen a lot of folks online just pin it on ratios but that band was extremely efficient at ripping moisture from the sky. Both BGM and ALB cleared 2” water in like 12 hours in a snowstorm. And those ASOS water numbers are insane. ALB was even slightly SE of the band and ripped 0.93” water in 3 hours. BGM’s 1.11” in 3 hours has to be one of the more incredible liquid numbers in a fronto band on the cold side of a nor’easter. That’s just choking snowfall. Models printing that QPF get tossed on here prior to a storm because it’s just hard to fathom.
  4. Yeah it crushed it. Love the GGEM, always keeps the dreams alive. It was by far the most correct here.
  5. But it's the GGEM. We all shovel a lot of GGEM snow.
  6. Yeah snow likes to find 10:1 over time, but that has to be one of the more impressive positive busts of all time within that band. Put that in the scrolls. Modern models can still royally f*ck up at like 12 hours lead time.
  7. I'm still in awe. Hopefully folks realize just how rare this is. That was a very high end event.
  8. I'd imagine he saw at least 1.80" water... just incredible amounts of QPF given the model runs yesterday.
  9. 3.5” here which is 3.5” more than expected, ha. North shift clipped us. Nothing at all in the northern part of the county.
  10. Can anyone think of another storm that had such a long axis of 40"+ reports to the NWS? PA/NY/VT/NH on the list. This isn't like one weenie got excited somewhere or some isolated report. That's a legit axis of 40+ in a coastal storm.
  11. Ha I was just thinking it looks like a Sierra storm. You don’t see chairlifts not run due to too much snow in the East that often.
  12. Yeah I get it. I just like to stand up for the Ops teams when I see it. The operations guys at all of the mountains are essentially exactly the same before and after company changes. We all just have passion for snow and running ski areas. The other stuff you mention is more company level for sure.
  13. To be fair, I chatted with some colleagues in Operations down there and they could only get 1 lift running today due to the intensity of the snowfall. Chairs were getting stuck elsewhere around bullwheels and it sounded like a complete cluster. I mean it snowed 40+ inches in like 10 hours. I don’t think we would’ve been any better at Stowe, that’s just a crippling snowfall, ski area or not. Especially when most of your employees can’t get there because it’s snowing 8” an hour at 6-8am.
  14. The fact that multiple states exceeded 36” is pretty wild... PA/NY/VT/NH (not sure what max in ME was). With numerous 40”+ amounts legitimately reported is crazy. Not slant sticking but 40” on the ground with photos. Cant wait for the write ups on this one by the NWS offices.
  15. More than my season total in like 10 hours and all on the ground at once lol.
  16. Holy shit. I thought it was done but you got 8.7” in two hours, ha!
  17. 3” up here. Those are the 7am Cocorahs numbers. At least got the grass covered again lol.
  18. Where’s the band? Lol. These aren’t final in spots either.
  19. Me too. Dumbfounded. Just incredible forcing. The other thing is it was an incredible model bust or forecast bust. The Euro had a place like Ludlow getting 3-6” yesterday I think.
  20. I think there are going to be some good case studies on that mesoband at some point. It had QPF and crosshairs in the DGZ. I bet they still had 2”+ water in a narrow zone in that band. Its fluffy but there’s still water in it based on the reports. Like BGM’s 42” had 2.80” water. Good fluff factor but 2.80” QPF in 24 hours at temps in the teens is nothing to scoff at.
  21. Yeah I mean those rates are the only way to get like 41” of depth in 11 hours. They had bare ground at midnight. At some point it had to be like a foot an hour. Im blown away, I’ve never seen anything like that. 12am... bare ground 11am... 41” depth.
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