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donsutherland1

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  1. My comment regarding snowfall only goes through December 20th. I think if things grow more favorable for the East Coast, it would be during the December 20-31 period as things stand now. Things can still change beforehand, because teleconnections forecasts lose skill beyond 10-14 days.
  2. Today's PNA value was -0.355 with five of the first six days of December seeing negative values. The forecast calls for a continuation of the negative PNA: Nevertheless, the WPO is forecast to dive to below -2.000 on the EPS and to -3.000 or below on the GEFS. As a result, a foundation is being laid for much of eastern North America to wind up colder to perhaps even much colder than normal during the December 11-20 period. This pattern would tend to focus the snows on the Great Lakes region while the East Coast sees lesser snows. PNA- setups typically favor lighter snows on the East Coast. The single exception during December since 1980 was the Boxing Day Blizzard of 2010. Such strongly negative WPO cases also see warmer than normal conditions in the Southwest.
  3. Washington, D.C.'s distribution of December days with measurable snowfall and the highest daily amount for each date. Highest percentage of 1" or above amounts: December 10 5.7% days (8 cases) Highest percentage of 6" or above amounts: December 24 1.4% days (2 cases)
  4. A weak system brought an area of 1"-3" of snow to parts of Virginia and Maryland with a few locally higher amounts. Washington, D.C. picked up 1.1" of snow. Meanwhile, farther north in the New York City area, the temperature fell to near record and record lows in parts of the region this morning. Low temperatures included: Albany: -1° (old record: 2°, 1886, 1926, and 1929) ***Coldest so early in the season since 1976*** Binghamton: 3° (old record: 5°, 1971 and 1989) Boston: 12° Hartford: 5° Islip: 21° New Haven: 14° (old record: 15°, 1966) New York City-Central Park: 20° New York City-JFK Airport: 20° (tied record set in 1966) New York City-LaGuardia Airport: 20° (old record: 21°, 1942) Newark: 20° Philadelphia: 25° Poughkeepsie: 6° (old record: 7°, 1966 and 1989) Providence: 13° White Plains: 14° (tied record set in 1966) The weekend will be cool but dry. A fresh surge of cold air will arrive Sunday night. The ongoing stretch of below normal temperatures will likely continue into or through the second week of December. December 1-10 will be a solidly colder than normal period. The potential exists for the coldest first 10 days of December since at least 2007 (33.4°, 5th coldest December 1-10 since 2000). The five coldest December 1-10 periods since 2000 were: 1. 30.6°, 2002 2. 32.2°, 2003 3. 32.4°, 2000 4. 33.1°, 2005 5. 33.4°, 2007 All 5 of these cases had measurable snowfall in Central Park. The ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly was -0.1°C and the Region 3.4 anomaly was -0.6°C for the week centered around November 26. For the past six weeks, the ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly has averaged -0.18°C and the ENSO Region 3.4 anomaly has averaged -0.67°C. La Niña conditions will likely continue through at least mid-winter. The SOI was -33.01 today. The preliminary Arctic Oscillation (AO) was -0.968 today.
  5. 878 NOUS41 KLWX 051709 PNSLWX DCZ001-MDZ001-003>006-008-011-013-014-016>018-501>508-VAZ025>031- 036>040-050>057-501>508-WVZ050>053-055-501>506-060509- Public Information Statement Spotter Reports National Weather Service Baltimore MD/Washington DC 1209 PM EST Fri Dec 05 2025 The following are unofficial observations taken during the past 3 hours for the storm that has been affecting our region. Appreciation is extended to cooperative and CoCoRaHS observers, Skywarn spotters and media for these reports. This summary also is available on our home page at weather.gov/baltimore ********************STORM TOTAL SNOWFALL******************** LOCATION TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS SNOWFALL MEASURED (inches) DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ...District of Columbia... American University 1.1 1100 AM 12/05 Broadcast Media MARYLAND ...Baltimore County... Edgemere 0.2 1052 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Reisterstown 1 NE T 911 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Bentley Springs 1 E T 1130 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Calvert County... Prince Frederick 1 S 1.5 1000 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Chesapeake Beach 1.5 911 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Carroll County... Eldersburg 1 ESE 0.5 935 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Charles County... Waldorf 2 W 2.0 935 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Frederick County... Point of Rocks 1 NE 0.8 915 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Adamstown 1 ESE 0.6 1000 AM 12/05 NWS Employee New Market 2 NW 0.5 930 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Garrett County... Oakland 0.5 1039 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways Grantsville 5 W 0.5 1038 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways Grantsville 4 E 0.5 1040 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways ...Harford County... Bel Air 2 NE 0.5 1140 AM 12/05 Broadcast Media Chrome Hill 2 SE 0.3 1122 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Forest Hill 2 SW 0.1 930 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Howard County... Elkridge 1.4 1140 AM 12/05 NWS Employee Laurel 2 N 1.0 1200 PM 12/05 Trained Spotter Gaither 2 SE 0.6 1200 PM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Montgomery County... Gaithersburg 1.5 935 AM 12/05 Emergency Mngr Norbeck 1 ESE 1.4 945 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Washington Grove 1 N 1.3 1000 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Damascus 3 SSW 1.2 1003 AM 12/05 Co-Op Observer Gaithersburg 1 SW 1.2 1015 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Damascus 1 S 1.1 924 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Bradley Farms 1 SSW 1.0 1044 AM 12/05 NWS Employee ...St. Marys County... California 2 W 2.2 1125 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter California 3 W 1.3 1103 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter VIRGINIA ...Albemarle County... Crozet 1 W 4.2 930 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Earlysville 3 NW 3.0 1028 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Arlington County... Rosslyn W 1.7 1100 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Baileys Crossroads 1 1.6 1110 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Barcroft 1 WNW 1.4 946 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Reagan National Apt 1.1 1000 AM 12/05 Official NWS Obs ...Augusta County... Staunton Arpt 3 WSW 3.5 925 AM 12/05 Broadcast Media Summerdean 3 SE 3.5 1041 AM 12/05 Broadcast Media Greenwood 3 NNW 3.0 1145 AM 12/05 Public Afton 1 WNW 3.0 1150 AM 12/05 Public ...City of Alexandria... Alexandria 1 W 0.8 945 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...City of Fredericksburg... Dunavant 1 S 3.0 1000 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Fredericksburg 2 E 1.8 1150 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Clarke County... Berryville 1 NNW 1.0 945 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Culpeper County... Culpeper 1 W 1.4 1015 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Fairfax County... Herndon 1 NNE 1.0 1020 AM 12/05 NWS Employee ...Frederick County... Stephens City 2 E 1.5 1030 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Highland County... Hightown 5 NW 3.0 951 AM 12/05 Public Hightown 3 NW 3.0 953 AM 12/05 Public Monterey 3.0 1009 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways ...Loudoun County... Hughesville 2 W 1.6 918 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Ashburn N 1.5 1000 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Arcola 1 NNE 1.3 1040 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Arcola 3 S 1.2 1050 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Dulles International 1.1 1012 AM 12/05 Official NWS Obs ...Madison County... Big Meadows 2.5 1141 AM 12/05 Public ...Nelson County... Wintergreen 5.0 1015 AM 12/05 Law Enforcement Wintergreen 2 WSW 5.0 1018 AM 12/05 Law Enforcement Shipman 1 WNW 4.0 1000 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Rockfish 2 WNW 3.8 1015 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Page County... Stanley 2 WSW 2.0 1000 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Prince William County... Manassas 3 SSE 1.5 1015 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Woolsey 1 SW 1.2 930 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter ...Rockingham County... Clover Hill 3 WSW 3.0 932 AM 12/05 Broadcast Media Broadway 3.0 1042 AM 12/05 Broadcast Media Cherry Grove 3.0 948 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways Swift Run 2.0 1142 AM 12/05 Public Massanutten 1 SE 2.0 1100 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Elkton 1.9 1132 AM 12/05 Public ...Shenandoah County... Basye 2.0 922 AM 12/05 Broadcast Media ...Stafford County... Fredericksburg 4 NW 1.8 1123 AM 12/05 Public ...Warren County... Front Royal 1.5 1143 AM 12/05 Public Linden 3 W 1.3 1037 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter WEST VIRGINIA ...Grant County... Petersburg 1.0 1012 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways ...Hardy County... Bean Settlement 2.0 1054 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways Baker 2.0 1052 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways Wardensville 1.5 1055 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways Moorefield 1.5 1051 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways ...Pendleton County... Circleville 3.5 1034 AM 12/05 Trained Spotter Seneca Rocks 2.9 1014 AM 12/05 Public Franklin 1 N 2.8 939 AM 12/05 Emergency Mngr Franklin 2.8 947 AM 12/05 Dept of Highways **********************24 HOUR SNOWFALL********************** LOCATION 24 HOUR TIME/DATE COMMENTS SNOWFALL MEASURED (inches) MARYLAND ...Charles County... La Plata 6 SE 2.5 1000 AM 12/05 CoCoRaHS VIRGINIA ...Highland County... Mill Gap 1 SW 3.2 1000 AM 12/05 Co-Op Observer ...Loudoun County... Lovettsville 3 ESE 0.7 917 AM 12/05 CoCoRaHS &&
  6. Actually, it's more common than it might appear. Since 1884-85, Washington, DC recorded an earlier first measurable snowfall in 52 (36.6%) cases than New York City. The most recent such case occurred during Winter 2023-2024. Since 2000, Washington saw an earlier first measurable snowfall in the following seasons: 2003-2004 2005-2006 2009-2010 2010-2011 2023-2024 2025-2026
  7. Four of the first five days of December have seen the PNA come in with daily values < 0. The baseline idea of a predominantly negative PNA for December appears on course, especially if the latest guidance winds up being reasonably accurate. Latest GEFS PNA forecast: However, the WPO is forecast to be strongly negative. As a result, the WPO should overwhelm the PNA- and allow generally colder than normal conditions to persist in much of the eastern half of North America during the December 10-20 period. Some milder days are plausible, but the period will likely feature below normal temperatures overall. The Southeast has the highest probability of seeing a break in the cold due to the PNA- connection to SE ridging. The most recent ECMWF weekly forecasts: December 8-15: December 15-22:
  8. The sample size is too small for meaningful comparisons. However, 10-20 days after the bottom, there wasn't a clear increase in subtropical moisture during La Niña and borderline La Niña/neutral-cool winters. In a few cases, there was an atmospheric river directed at the West Coast.
  9. The temperature fell to 0F (-17.8C) in Albany. That broke the daily record of 2F (-16.7C) that was set in 1886 and tied in 1926 and 1989. It is also Albany's coldest temperature so early in the season since December 3, 1976 when the mercury hit -1F (-18.3C).
  10. The EPS and GEFS are indicating that the WPO will spend much of the December 10-20 period at or below -2.000. Regardless of whether the EPO is positive, AO is positive, and PNA is negative, severely negative WPO patterns tend to overwhelm the impact of the other teleconnections. Such patterns typically feature colder than normal conditions in the eastern half of North America and warmer conditions in the western half. December 15-18, 2013 offers a representative case with the distribution of warm and cold anomalies:
  11. JFK Airport has now reached 20°. That ties the daily record that was set in 1966.
  12. Some 6 am temperatures: Albany: 2° (tied record set in 1886 and tied in 1926 and 1989) Binghamton: 5° (tied record set in 1971 and tied in 1989) New York City-LaGuardia Airport: 20° (old record: 21°, 1942) White Plains: 14° (tied record set in 1966) Albany has its coldest temperature so early in the season since 1989.
  13. The coldest air mass so far this season is now overspreading the region. The temperature will tumble into the lower 20s by tomorrow morning in New York City. Many areas outside the City will see lows in the teens. Daily record low marks for December 5th could be challenged or broken in Bridgeport, New York City-JFK Airport, New York City-LaGuardia Airport, and White Plains. The weekend will be cool but dry. A fresh surge of cold air could arrive Sunday night. The ongoing stretch of below normal temperatures will likely continue into or through the second week of December. December 1-10 will be a solidly colder than normal period. The potential exists for the coldest first 10 days of December since at least 2007 (33.4°, 5th coldest December 1-10 since 2000). The five coldest December 1-10 periods since 2000 were: 1. 30.6°, 2002 2. 32.2°, 2003 3. 32.4°, 2000 4. 33.1°, 2005 5. 33.4°, 2007 All 5 of these cases had measurable snowfall in Central Park. The ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly was -0.1°C and the Region 3.4 anomaly was -0.6°C for the week centered around November 26. For the past six weeks, the ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly has averaged -0.18°C and the ENSO Region 3.4 anomaly has averaged -0.67°C. La Niña conditions will likely continue through at least mid-winter. The SOI was -43.70 today. That is the lowest SOI figure since February 9, 2024 when the SOI was -46.54. The preliminary Arctic Oscillation (AO) was -0.366 today.
  14. And perhaps that figure has increased a little more today with the snow squall that blew through.
  15. Retired After Last Use December had begun on a strangely toasty note. The temperature had climbed to a balmy 57° (the third time in the last five years the mercury reached at least 57° on the first day of December), and the New York Public Library, perhaps out of nostalgia, perhaps out of quiet defiance, filled the marble halls of its iconic Beaux-Arts Fifth Avenue building with sepia-toned photographs of children tunneling through drifts taller than themselves. The exhibit captured an era that residents increasingly believed had slipped out of reach. A public weather notice board calling itself "American Weather" had given the display a name that struck Marisol, a student at Columbia University, as both melodramatic and heartbreaking: “The Final Snowfall.” Walking home after a full day of classes, Marisol passed one of Midtown’s newest absurdities: a synthetic snow dome where wealthy Manhattan parents paid $95 an hour to show their children what “winter” once felt like. She never stepped inside. Those plastic flakes felt like an insult. Her father had always said that snow gave New Yorkers a common language of spontaneous generosity. Cheap plastic could never measure up. Almost four years had passed since the last daily snowfall of four inches or more. Even two consecutive snow-starved years had never occurred before. Four such years were unimaginable. As Marisol passed one of American Weather’s public boards, a small sculpture beside it stopped her cold. There stood a dented aluminum snow shovel mounted upright like a relic. At its base, an engraved bronze plaque read, “Retired after last use: February 21, 1929.” She felt her throat tighten. "Snow is something you can only remember now," she thought. Then came the second thought. It was a much darker one, perhaps from having spent too much time reading "American Weather" on her way home from classes. "Soon there will be no one left who remembers at all," she worried. Her grief was premature. Just over two weeks later, a storm swept across the City, dropping 6.7" of snow on December 17 and another half-inch the following day. Less than two months after that, an even larger snowstorm buried Central Park beneath 10.0" of luminous white. Today marks the 1,405th consecutive day without a daily snowfall of four inches or more. Pessimism mixes with fatalism. Yet New York City has lived through snow droughts before, even as this one is the longest on record. As happened in December 1932, the streak will break. Eventually. Even with supercomputers, AI-driven forecasts, and models capable of simulating the atmosphere down to microphysical detail, the exact date of the next significant snowfall remains unknowable at this time. Patience is required. But so is confidence. December is now on course to register its coldest start in more than fifteen years. That's a hopeful start. The arrival of the cold reveals that Winter has not yet forgotten New York City.
  16. Here's the data for New York City: Below are the composite 500 mb anomalies for WPO<0 December cases for 4" or more daily snowfall. To date, the guidance does not suggest the kind of pattern shown below. It should also be noted that snowfalls tend to be light during the first half of December when the AO/NAO/PNA are all negative.
  17. It also looks likely to persist through at least mid-December, if not longer.
  18. Yes, there's a different methodology. I use the BOM values when assessing patterns and impacts.
  19. The coldest air mass so far this season will overspread the region tomorrow night. The cold front could touch off a few scattered snow flurries or snow showers. The temperature will tumble into the lower 20s by Friday morning in New York City. Many areas outside the City will see lows in the teens. It now appears that the weekend will be cool but dry. A colder than normal pattern is in place. A prolonged stretch of below normal temperatures will likely continue into or through the second week of December. December 1-10 will be a solidly colder than normal period. The potential exists for the coldest first 10 days of December since at least 2007 (33.4°, 5th coldest December 1-10 since 2000). The five coldest December 1-10 periods since 2000 were: 1. 30.6°, 2002 2. 32.2°, 2003 3. 32.4°, 2000 4. 33.1°, 2005 5. 33.4°, 2007 All 5 of these cases had measurable snowfall in Central Park. The ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly was -0.1°C and the Region 3.4 anomaly was -0.6°C for the week centered around November 26. For the past six weeks, the ENSO Region 1+2 anomaly has averaged -0.18°C and the ENSO Region 3.4 anomaly has averaged -0.67°C. La Niña conditions will likely continue through at least mid-winter. The SOI was -28.49 today. The preliminary Arctic Oscillation (AO) was -0.144 today.
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