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weatherwiz

Meteorologist
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Posts posted by weatherwiz

  1. 1 minute ago, WinterWolf said:

    Bottom line, it’s a pretty nice look…despite the BS that some are spewing.  

    Yeah I don't know what else to say. I mean December was not bad overall and it could have been worse. Sure I guess we could have had more snow given how cold it was and yes some areas got more than others, but it wasn't a shutout and nobody got shutout. Were people expecting 20-30"? We get snow...people complain because it wasn't enough, we don't get snow and people complain. People want snow and there are offerings of potential and people complain. I don't even know what the expectations are anymore lol

    • 100% 1
  2. 2 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

    right ... the veneer of this is pretty. 360+ hours ...  obviously low skill so whatever.  But this isn't first time we've seen this, this winter season so far.  These ranges of the ensemble means don't typically have coherent pattern signals.  I mean, I've seen less clear pattern implications on a D7 ranged charts plenty of times over the years... Usually, at this extended range, the flow looks annular about the N. Pole, almost equidistant.  You know ...circular.  It's the mean of the noise, of all ensemble members wondering off of daydreams over time.   This intrinsically means that the vast majority of them have a hard on for a -EPO at a range where they pretty much never have clue.  I've never seen this before like I am seeing it this specific winter thus far.    

    Can ens

    image.png.d861f33777ad5d35d831e24f8df9ed84.png

    EPS

    image.png.d140ce693ff1e86a5e11a3bbec5a5fee.png

    GEFS

    image.png.9d07863a33afde7c3491d57b0010a18f.png

    It's definitely an extremely intriguing look and what I like about it is this type of pattern opens the door for some southern stream involvement and that would at least offer some potential for a bigger storm. But why I also love the Jan 10-15 period is we may see a relaxing NAO during that period, or the NAO becoming less negative and at the same time we're seeing variations within the state of the PNA. The pattern will not be void of energy and storm chances. If we want to add another layer to this is we will have the PV displaced on our side of the hemisphere. 

  3. 26 minutes ago, Baroclinic Zone said:

    Also there could be some OES enhancement with relatively warm sst in mid 40s and 800Mb temps around -12C.

    Yup...great post. The environment isn't too terribly far off from what you would see with a LES environment. Should actually be some weak instability present...not sure if we're looking at enough to yield thunder potential but I could see a very narrow area of enhanced lift. Someone could def pull off 3-4" on the Cape

  4. 17 minutes ago, WinterWolf said:

    And where we are at the moment too.  Because the bombs Paul…they aren’t being affected by this idea in other parts of this country currently.  Just like they weren’t being affected here during the 2000’s and 2010’s. But other parts of the country at that time were struggling, but we weren’t. So that tells me, that again, it’s a cycle.  And we will come out of it, like we did after the last dearth where nothing(very little) worked out here(the 80’s). 

    Hey I'm with you...I have no doubt we will cone out of it and we will get smoked again. I get there is a luck factor in this and there are things we don't truly know or understand, but all we can do is try to use data and knowledge to further understand. At this point we are closer to getting out of this and I can't see us staying in this drought for much longer. 

    22 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

    Explain to me like I am 5 years old why a fast flow makes favorable tracks for the midwest and Maritimes more likely than the east coast...the west warm pool, I understand....

    It's more of a theory at this point so I don't have a ton of data or reanalysis maps I can throw into this...but would be a fun project to dig deeper. Anyways, we have to look at the jet stream on a global scale and all the influences which shape the jet stream structure, position, and strength. As you know, when the jet stream is faster, it becomes more difficult to really amplify the jet stream (not impossible but just more difficult). I just think that where we are positioned globally, we are in a spot in which the faster winds result in an increased probability for amplification to our west and then just to our east. 

    Where I've started to develop this idea was based on some of the weather across the West the last few years. Remember a few years back the West was getting absolutely pummeled for a 6 week stretch which was something more akin to what you would see in EL Nino versus La Nina. The orientation and structure of the jet stream was not what you would typically see. 

    This is all a ramble...but I will eventually get back to you with more coherent thoughts. 

    • Like 1
  5. 1 minute ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

    I don't see why a faster flow is more likely to place the trough axis unfavorably for the east coast relative to any other area of the globe.

    It's not like it's just applicable to our area though, the concept would apply to other areas of the globe too. For us it's just a product of where we reside regionally. 

  6. 22 minutes ago, WinterWolf said:

    Been trying to say this for a long while. That’s all you need to see(bombs everywhere else ) to know that idea(Hadley cell and fast flow) is complete BS.   It’s just random bad ju ju…and that’s it. At some point it will change, like it did for us through the 2000’s and 2010’s, when pretty much 90% of all SW’s came together for us no matter what. 

    Actually that would be incorrect. Fast flow doesn't necessarily inhibit storms from bombing out nor does changes in the size and structure of the Hadley Cell. They just influence the jet stream differently and shift around regions which are favorable for deep cyclogenesis. A faster flow makes it more likely for storms to bomb out farther to our west versus towards the coast and then for storms to bomb out as they move just off the coast towards Atlantic Canada. 

    • Like 1
  7. I could see accumulating snow possible for far southeastern Mass Wednesday night into Thursday with that system. That's a heck of an amplifying shortwave trough moving across the region. In fact, I would not be surprised if that ended up resulting in SLP a bit farther south and west than what the GFS has. Wouldn't take a heck of a lot to get it to blossom a bit earlier

  8. 5 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

    12/26/10 was also great here but had arctic sand in between here and the Berks. 
     

    But that was an odd one because the deformation band certainly got deep into SNE, it’s just that there was not much in between Boston and the Berks.

    Was that the one where the SLP got really low and it resulted in the precipitation to become more banded in nature versus a uniform precip shield. It was like a tropical storm with heavy bands of snow and nothing in between. 

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