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About Carvers Gap

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Four Letter Airport Code For Weather Obs (Such as KDCA)
KTRI
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Tri-Cities, TN
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December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
I will re-respond. Mercy! Cold source. Check. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
I found this analog in the d6-10 analogs of CPC. 1-7-94. I could see that being usable. John always has to remind me of that winter. I had to go back and look it up. Sure enough, that winter I had to drive to campus on frozen interstates for about a week. My apartment started leaking as water backed up under the ice. It may be a reach on my part, but that analog makes some sense, and it has fit recent winters. I don't know its ENSO state, but that might be one to think about. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
I am gonna tag @John1122in this. His records are easily the best and most uncorrupted that I know of. They are rigorous and have good fidelity to boot(they are his family's for those who don't know). He might be able to shed some light on Maue's thoughts and hopefully chip in some insight. John, I am not asking you to support or criticize RM...just to add some context to the cold forecast in Alaska and in relation to our area. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
Nice post. Interesting find by Golf. I keep an off-and-on eye on the coldest modeled mins for North America during the winter. I do that just to monitor how cold our cold source could be. The coldest I can find right now is low -60s. Now, that is pretty cold, but the record is -81 in the Yukon in 1947 according to a quick search. This is not for you, Jed. I know you know this. I am just trying to save a second post. Models have been having crazy amounts of feedback this winter. I think they are vastly overdoing certain features(Baja, NW Pac lows on repeat, western Canada cold?) which causes wild feedback all over the Western Hemisphere. I am not sure why this is happening. I don't know if there is a data ingest problem or programming has been changed/updated across models. Maybe they have a bug? But I have observed some pretty big errors. It reminds me of the 4' of snow forecast for Charlotte one year...and it never materialized. It was feedback which sometimes occurs to the SE of the southern tip of the Apps. Places on the map to watch for feedback...Baja, NW Pac, Aleutians(but not as bad as one would think IMHO), and Greenland. Now, the fun thing about that area of South Carolina which tends to feedback....sometimes it actually has extreme precip events. Think Helene. All of those other places have had extreme events...sometimes I think models go to that extreme due to those data sets. I would guess that Canada is going to be very, very cold this winter. That is a pretty easy guess as it already has been there this season. I think it finds its way south 1-2 times, and that will be plenty for most. Like you, I don't see even 100 year cold up there right now. But we'll see. Not everything is feedback though. I guess maybe the thing that concerns me some is that many of these cold fronts are getting much colder as we get closer to the event - that is kind of unusual. That might be a signal that the air mass up there is strong. We have good snowpack for it to move quickly. I would be more than thrilled to track an all-time great Arctic outbreak w/ lots of snow. I just don't know that we are gonna get much lead time on that... That said, I do think the strength of the cold is currently and is going to be in the future...a problem for modeling this winter. We have had some winters where we get a trough in the East, and there is only Canadian or weak polar air to fill it. This stuff is legit Arctic air. Let's not forget the SSW....we haven't had the cold dive to our side of the planet with that recently. But Russia and/or China have been hammered when that occurs. Sometimes, it does come to our side of the planet. Is this one of our years? Maybe, and there is some evidence to support that but just to early to know. edit: On an interesting note, my daytime highs for the past couple of months have sometimes been well under the point and click forecasts. I am ready for a few days of warm air. I keep waiting on some warm mornings! It was not warm this morning. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
Yeah, that is extra special mojo right there. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
So far, we have a brand new baby Flash and a Nick Saban connection in this thread. The day just keeps getting better. The point and click below is pretty wild in my book. Is the "thunder in the mountains" rule going to score coming out of this? I am gonna post these here and see how many verify.... My iPhone has my local at 60F on Sunday for a high and then maybe doesn't go above freezing again until Wednesday(not this Weds)!!! The Native Americans noticed Chinooks first in the Pacific NW according to Wikipedia(I did not know this). I am nearly certain the Native Americans of the Plains were thankful for it. In the Plains, chinooks also helped farmers get their cattle through winter. It also allowed for snow to evaporate and dissipate, thus limiting catastrophic snowmelt during spring. It has a purpose. Great article here in this link. https://sheridanmedia.com/news/185207/history-chinook-winds/ It has been scientifically determined that the Chinook wind, falling from mountain to plain is warmed at the rate of about 1–degree for each 180 feet of descent. A fall of 5500 feet from the summit or the Cascade mountains to the wide plateau of the interior will rise the temperature of the wind by about 80 degrees. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
Just tagging on to @Matthew70's post...Here is the Euro Weeklies (ensemble) map from a week ago and compared to todays run for December 30th. There is a PNA ridge which is likely just temporary. There is a -NAO whose duration is TBD. The Rex block relaxes. This could easily flip back, but that is big change. Want to guess what caught the trend? The Euro control of all things. The extended version of the deterministic run possibly sniffed out out this cold front at full range(360 hours). -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
Digging through ensemble members. It looks like there is potential for another strong cold front on Jan6-7 - per GEFS. This looks like a very active pattern coming up in regards to cold. Let's hope some precip can work its way in. I would think clippers and NW flow would be on the table for even norther portions of Gulf States IF that pattern verifies. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
I know this is a bunch of posts and my apologies. The 12z para GDPS goes back-to-back w/ cold fronts beginning w/ the 28-29th. We could certainly be cold and dry. That is with precedent. However, the storm track should be suppressed with this. With the return flow behind these fronts, one would think at some point either the cold air doesn't get out of the way(over running WAA) or the warm air doesn't get out of the way. To me, the para GDPS is a logical path forward, but by no means not the only one. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
Take a look at the difference in on the ensemble between 18z GEFS yesterday and 12z today...I have been griping about this for weeks. This is for Dec 28-29. There were a few really strong warm air masses embedded in the ensemble mean. They were greatly skewing the mean - even though there were a greater number of colder members included. As we get closer to the event, the anomalously warm air masses are subtracted. And we get this substantial move. Do I still think we see chinooks? Yes, that seems baked in the cake. However, this may we a winter where the colder air masses get colder as reality gets closer. Those are kind of fun winters BTW. We don't get a lot of those. Normally, we see cold air masses moderate as they get closer to reality - Ex A is early December. To be clear, I do want to see a few more runs before declaring the Jan 2-3 cold air mass has legs. If models are flipping this much, they could easily flip right back. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
The gradient boundary presses further and further southward with each passing surface wave. If we can line up precip on an east-west boundary, we could see a slider in play. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
Just for kicks and giggles...12z AIGFS gives us this look. That will certainly change, and was a red herring in early December. However, IF the second cold shot is real, I would certainly think winter wx might be on the table. At some point, one of those warm air masses with lots of humidity won't get out of the way fast enough. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
The 12z AIGFS(no idea how accurate that model is???) also sends a pretty strong cold shot around Jan 2-3. It is more Texas centered, but spreads eastward. It has an anafront - there is that word again. Models were overly strong w/ the early December cold. We have to guard against that, but this is January. Climatology favors colder air masses. -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
Here is what is interesting. The Euro doesn't see cold...until it does. When it finally gets it in its crosshairs, we usually are good. So, on to the 12z Euro....There is a cold front on the 28th which is getting colder with each run - thanks to @GaWx for the ensemble info. The Music City Bowl...moderation of temps would be appreciated(Dear CMC). I about froze at the Vandy game w/ a stiff little 5-10mph wind in my face in the South end zone. In my younger days, no problem. Back to the point...the Euro has another cold front on the 2nd which looks legit cold. General takeaways....IF the NAO is in place and has staying power, it very well could pinwheel one cold shot after another w/ warm interludes. It would force that cold well south per @Daniel Boone's comments - I agree. Those were some WILD runs at 12z. Want some fun? Go look at the 500 map for the CMC at 240. Then, go look at the surface pressure anomalies under that. Then, go look at temp departures from the norm. Single digits sitting under a monster 500 ridge. How does it doe that? Welcome to the NAO. Basically, the cold air gets sent into the SE, and it can't escape out to see due to the Atlantic block. It gets trapped. I have no idea if that is right...just so counter to what we normally look at. BUT, if that is really, that is an ice storm setup if I have ever seen one. Like I said...crazy 12z runs. The interesting question. Is modeling still playing catchup? -
December 2025 Short/Medium Range Forecast Thread
Carvers Gap replied to John1122's topic in Tennessee Valley
The 12z Euro is about to send it late in that run....
