Jump to content

weatherwiz

Meteorologist
  • Posts

    77,929
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by weatherwiz

  1. Probably going to go hang in North Branford for a bit in the field next to police station. It's a nice open spot. But that still may be just a bit too much into marine influence. Maybe I'll do Wallingford.
  2. Yeah 6.5 C/KM is respectable. Of course steep lapse rates aren't a requirement for severe weather, they are when you're talking about the potential for widespread and high end severe weather but you can still get severe with weak lapse rates, its just more very localized and typically not high end.
  3. Yeah we see stuff pop more easily but the trade off is weaker activity. This is why pre-frontal troughs hurt us more often than not...once we get the convective temp reached we start popping too early. This is one reason why those EMLs are so important. they keep a lid on things until the strongest forcing can arrive
  4. probably producing hail west of Bristol
  5. ughhh I think it has ticked east a bit...maybe be along the NY/CT border. well at least we'll start seeing more pop
  6. poor mlvl lapse rates and the forcing still too far west. I'm wondering if maybe the pre-frontal trough can stay a bit stationary if that can allow for a bit of a boost in a few hours but it probsly shunts east
  7. It's headed towards Springfield and I'm in Branford
  8. ifthat sucker can strengthen that may become a supercell
  9. I'd watch that cell headed towards NW CT
  10. Curious to see what happens between 3-6 PM. The forcing is still pretty west and even seems a few hours slower than what was modeled. But dynamics are increasing a bit and we're backing the sfc winds somewhat, at least locally. The pre-frontal trough is pretty east though...once that goes through maybe we can keep enough instability for some scattered stuff with the front early in the evening
  11. That is a very valid point. At the least though, I still think we may see lots of cloud debris from convection across northern Plains into Canada depending on exact flow orientation
  12. Yeah I was not pleased when I saw that this morning. Maybe the NAM was just overplaying them or maybe the convection from yesterday in the OV region just destroyed the EML plume. Could have got too much of a cold pool with the convection
  13. Next week going to be convectively active and lots of clouds/convective debris around.
  14. damn I had lapse rates up on mesoanalysis and saw an area of 7 and got excited...then I realized it was 2-6km lapse rates I had up
  15. This stuff killing the potential damn
  16. the HRRR is WAYYYYYYYY off
  17. RIP to those who didn't listen to Kevin.
  18. If we had the steep mid-level lapse rates in place I would be pretty concerned with that 3km look. I'm sure we're going to get convection to fire today but it may really struggle to strengthen much...the dynamics will help a bit but its really warm in the mid levels.
  19. It always intrigues me when the 3km is on the aggressive side b/c more often than not it is meh...and ends up nailing it. Anyways, 12z observed soundings are kind of garbage...though the BUF sounding shows stronger shear aloft which should overspread western areas later
  20. The one other thing I really need to start doing is something like a weekly monitoring/assessment once we enter the Fall. Take some time and assess the real-time global regime, analyze how forecast models are evolving the pattern globally, and closely analyze the medium/long range and then try and do some sort of verification once we get into that time range. I just hope I get time to do this...I start grad school in a few months and doing 2 classes + still working so I am going to have to discipline myself
  21. Agreed, probably not flushed out quite yet. One thing I really want to explore though is getting a better understanding of the wildfire smoke and that volcanic eruption from, what a year or two ago and developing much more knowledge of the chemical reactions which occur higher in the atmosphere. I know there must be multiple papers on this so that's where i will start but I have to think these episodes have had a much greater impact and is being overlooked. I mean the abundance of the smoke (assuming its getting into the stratosphere but the water vapor from the eruption)...the concentration of the particles have had to impact how the upper atmosphere structures and evolves.
  22. I plan on doing this shortly. I've been working on composites a bit. I also want to work on a different approach which isn't as ENSO focused...which will help this year given we may be more neutral-ish. But I was thinking this...we are at a much different atmospheric state across the hemisphere now than we have been over the last several years, particularly across the PAC/CONUS...may not mean anything but we have been saying we need the atmosphere to flush out and maybe this is it!
  23. One of my favorite parts of convective forecasting is the nowcasting element! Yes it has, even elsewhere across the country too. 3km did much better in the midwest yesterday.
×
×
  • Create New...