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weatherwiz

Meteorologist
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Posts posted by weatherwiz

  1. 13 hours ago, Hoth said:

    Don't worry. They're all at @weatherwiz house.

    Actually I've seen very few myself. Maybe a few. 

    For my birthday my girlfriend got me this little device thing where you like put it over the spider and then slowly move a notch and it traps it so you can put it outside. It actually works kind of well but I told her I can only deal with that up to a certain size. 

    I think there has only been one in the bathroom and I caught one crawling on the floor when I was cleaning. Other than that, nothing else.

  2. Just now, Wxbear25 said:

    yup. Between the multitude of moving parts, the poor data-region the primary feature is coming out of, the potential spin-up of convective-driven vorticity east of the main feature and whether or not that can gain latitude and the overall anomalous nature of the entire setup, this would be the storm to catch people by surprise

    I'm more concerned with the upper level evolution, and I think moves from things such as the GFS are closer to producing here than it may seem, so I've not yet given up hope, but I'll admit it definitely is much more annoying than last storm where we knew we were getting hit, just trying to fine-tune all the smaller details.

    He're we're trying to fine-tune the entire damn system lol

    100% agreed. 

    Overall, it seems very unlikely we see the changes needed but it's much closer than it appears. I also hate comparing storms, particularly different setups and this is nothing like last week. This is a totally different animal and additional processes being added. 

     

    • Like 1
  3. 5 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

    The whole setup sucks...trough is so far east....GFS shifted west with the trough but the low still escapes with convection...we need a wholesale shift west in successive model cycles. 

    The trough being too far east may be the overarching death killer here. I feel like the GFS is being way too aggressive with that convection, both with scale and intensity. If we remove that, we end up with a much more consolidated system that comes up the coast a bit closer but the trough probably would yield a result just favorable enough for areas towards the Cape

  4. 5 minutes ago, Cyclone-68 said:

    One thing for sure…We haven’t had a winter this cold in several years. And I didn’t miss it 

    I've actually changed my perspective on this and I think the massive snow cover has helped with that. When I was outside the other night, it brought back some good memories. A deep snow cover with frigid temperatures and a gusty wind...kind of makes you remember what winter should be. Not to mention just soaking up the landscape around you. It also reminds me of the Little House on the Prairie Book series...I can image myself in the Dakotas in the early days during blizzards and frigid temperatures. 

    Also, this will make the warm weather that much more welcomed and enjoyable when we reach that time

    • Like 2
  5. 3 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

    That’s not the actual low track…not sure why it’s depicted that way. The low actually starts off the coast of Savannah (after a weak vestige near FL panhandle 12 hours earlier) It’s not over interior NC and moving northeast. 

    Using snow maps to indicate storm track or trends in anything is just lol

    • Haha 1
  6. 3 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

    just using your chart here...

    yeah, it's almost to the point of frustration that the models appear to be disconnecting the wave -space arguments in their physical result/processing. That ridge being over Idaho ...if anything that presupposes a position near WV with that tough axis.. which would probably parlay quite favorably.     That's a bizarrely stretched looking gunk L/W filled with distractions...

    Also, the size of that high pressure system is massive, stretching from the upper-Midwest into southeast Canada southwest into the southern Plains...that as well argue for something farther north and west for track 

  7. 1 minute ago, dryslot said:

    Your getting both of those pinwheeling to the NNE, Lot of these models have this dual low structure, Models struggling to where to place the low at the surface off the coast.

    Yup...this is a model weakness in these airmasses. Forecast models don't have the necessary resolution to accurately handle this so you'll see the models just want to put the low where the warm air is. 

    We certainly can't rule out a dual low structure either and there is a chance that this system has more in the way of convection associated with it which adds additional problems (as we know)

    • 100% 1
  8. 2 minutes ago, Go Kart Mozart said:

    Dig more west, or not so deep?  I think we want closure closer to Norfolk rather than Myrtle Beach.  Maybe digging west accomplishes the same thing?

    Yeah we definitely do not want this thing closing (at H5) too early. I think we'd even want it to be a bit farther north than Norfolk in a perfect world. But if we can dig that trough slightly more west and deeper that would certainly help tug this west a bit. However, thinking about this more closely, I question as to whether we would want this to dig more west and deep...if that happens we could run the risk of tracking this up right along the coast or even slightly inland. 

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