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weatherwiz

Meteorologist
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Everything posted by weatherwiz

  1. A vigorous piece of shortwave energy approaches late Wednesday associated with a strengthening MLJ in excess of 100 knots along with a strengthening LLJ. A plume of rather steep mid-level lapse rates associated with the sfc low combined with a plume of WAA/theta-e will help yield sufficient elevated instability to yield the development of a low topped squall line southwest of southern New England. conditions favor this line to move through New England during the overnight hours yielding the potential for small hail and damaging winds.
  2. They're going to get smoked with LES in SW NY
  3. We’ll have more pollen accumulation in spring than we did snow
  4. time to crank Plains severe wx season...hopefully in time for my journey out west. Get the Plains hot at the end of May and then it rolls right into the Northeast for June and July. Summer of 2020 can be called the summer of damage
  5. That's absolutely absurd...beyond highway robbery and just taking advantage of people. That's pushing $750 a month. This state is pure garbage.
  6. We absolutely can start looking at 300= HR progs for convection. I like scrolling the mouse across the time on the SBCAPE charts...already started that
  7. Me either!!!! One thing that can really help is the consensus for ridging to become established in the west. That should at least help in wanting to drive a trough in the east but the key will be where the trough axis occurs...we'll likely have to fight southeast ridging but at least northern New England should continue to see snow threats...whether we can get the entire region involved would depend on many details.
  8. Correct me if I am wrong here but this was/is my thinking regarding the change. 1) When looking at the hard numbers or the forecast chart (such as below) you see a big drop coming...not only big but rather quickly But when I see "change" I look at it two ways... 1) What is causing the change? 2) Is the structure of the "big picture" changing? In assessing these two questions, what I gather is 1) There is some transient ridging which evolves and traverses the southern portion of the AO domain which leads to the big drop in AO which is further enhanced by the rather positive anomalies associated with the heights. 2) The big picture is not changing which is why it is still not a good pattern. The structure of the AO and Arctic domain remains...the TPV still remains quite strong, however, the most negative height anomalies just push a bit towards the opposite side of the pole (hence the "drop in AO"). Look what happens after this drop...the AO spikes right back up as that transient ridging either weakens or pushes east of the AO domain. I would even bet that when this drop peaks it ends up being slightly higher than forecast.
  9. Are we still holding out hope that these D10+ pattern changes are going to verify?
  10. I am just going with a friend...we are not doing a tour company. I know that could be a little risky as neither of have have done chasing out in the Plains and it's completely different than here in the Northeast, however, we're not looking to get up front and close to any tornadoes should we see any. We'll likely be tracking from a rather far distance. At worst (depending on storm mode and hazards) we would maybe try to get into some really good hail and winds.
  11. Drove to the Wolf Pack game with windows down on the highway...felt amazing.
  12. but the EML with a strong cold front is more likely to occur than a blizzard in Atlanta betcha I can find more severe reports around your area on June 5th historically than there have been snow reports
  13. Man people have a tough time letting go It will be June 5th and we'll have an EML in place with a strong cold front moving through and people are going to hope the sfc low jumps southeast and somehow that will produce snow
  14. I miss 40's of Steel Reserve Haven't had one since December 12, 2018. I retired from them as soon as I finished school.
  15. yeah definitely depending on what the reference location is...although I thought BOS was a bit higher. But Ray wasn't flat out wrong in that saying that...plus I'm pretty sure Ray was going by general metro area
  16. It's pretty dang close to double. Boston is well up in the 40's to probably around 50. NYC is somewhere in the mid 20's
  17. I remember too a while back reading some research into how there seems to be a pretty decent link between how these Pacific teleconnectors evolve and Atlantic teleconnectors, however, there were some major questions/lack of understanding...some believed if that understanding could be solved we could long-range forecast with great accuracy. There is also this one index...I think it's the Pacific-Transition (PT)...it's like a fall signal with data only available between Sept - Nov or maybe Sept - Dec...but some research showed a very high correlation to the fall phase of this index and winter pattern over the CONUS.
  18. That's a part of the glob where I would really like to focus on more weather wise. I think having a strong understanding/background on how short-term weather is performing across this area of the globe (this includes how the jet is behaving) can significantly increase medium (maybe even into the long-term spectrum...depending on what your definition is separating medium/long-term) range weather forecasting across the CONUS. But the WPO is a great place to start...I've been thinking of doing alot of stuff with NAO/AO...but I kinda want to revert and focus more on the western Pacific region. Isn't there some sort of (strong) correlation between behavior of the jet there and how it will respond here (like a 10-14...or 14-18 day lag)? Low east Asian MT anomalies/AAM anomalies eventually result in low Rocky mountain MT/AAM anomalies down the road = trough digging through the west?
  19. That's a very good point..and further emphasizes the reasoning of why we BD more frequently during the transition seasons. Very interesting too about eastern Asia/Japan...that would probably explain why that area is a major area of interest for those who monitor MT?
  20. I wouldn't mind snow/cold into April...I mean the last time that happened we had a monster severe wx outbreak only a month later. 2018 was wild...I think we even had snow showers down in Danbury around mid-April. I've always wondered this (I think I kinda had done some research with this a while back) but I would think we stand a better chance of having an active/early start to convective season if we're colder deeper into spring.
  21. Most of my cardio comes during the summer when I'm running between inside and outside when t'storms are coming
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