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GaWx

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Posts posted by GaWx

  1. 11 minutes ago, mitchnick said:

    I don't know. But thought I'd mention it because I  would guess it's a possibility. You know us snow weenies...terribly vindictive! Lol

    Even if Weathernext2 is also off by one color, it would still be 6” at DC. I’d think 6” would be bordering on a  “major” hit there considering that I saw a stat that only 0.7 5”+ snowstorms hit DC each year at this link meaning many years don’t even get a 5” storm:

    https://downloads.regulations.gov/FWS-R5-ES-2016-0030-0073/attachment_18.pdf#:~:text=For four days a year on average%2C,events that occur about twice a decade.

     

    • 100% 1
  2. 33 minutes ago, EastonSN+ said:

    Still not getting there fast enough

    image.png.8713b9e2ad5a6126a534db5fa360ff02.png

    Keep in mind that phase 3 has on average been the coldest phase during the 20 La Niña Februaries since 1975. Note that the upcoming snowstorm threat period of Feb 22-23 centered on the Mid Atlantic is forecasted to be in or very near phase 3 fwiw all the while fighting the making it a challenge progged strong -PNA.

    • Like 1
  3. 1 hour ago, Upstate Tiger said:

    A quick AI search reports Washington Reagan 8.6" with annual seasonal average of 14".

    NY City has received 21.2" with a 25 year seasonal average of 29".

    I have measured just over 11" total in Lincoln County this season. My annual average states 5”.  

     You set up a good example of what I was referring to in my last post. If someone from Lincoln County, which has gone well over climo this winter with 11”, had moved to NYC for more snow this winter, he/she despite getting double that as of now (21.2” vs 11”) might end up mad if that were to be about it for the winter (that’s very doubtful though as this next storm could give them a lot but that’s beside my point). Why not be happy they got 10” more to enjoy as a result of moving? That’s why moving north often doesn’t work like one expected.

    • Like 3
  4. 24 minutes ago, Tacoma said:

    They don't need any more storms, they always seem to get good storms.  

    They seem to because they actually do as they have much snowier climo, of course, and thus get much more on average. Some there, just as seems to be the case in most subforums, are almost always mad. If they don’t reach climo they’re mad, which keeps them from enjoying what they do get. Thus in their own minds, they almost always “need” more.

     Some southerners move north for more snow. But then many of them feel the need to get much more in order to be as content. When despite getting more snow than in the S they don’t reach climo, they’re often no happier than they were in the south and sometimes madder! Why can’t they just enjoy the higher amounts vs what they got before? It might be better if they didn’t know climo.

    • Like 2
  5. 2 hours ago, roardog said:

    Don’t we usually start seeing the SOI start going more negative around this time of year for a developing Nino? So far, it’s still quite positive. That could also indicate a pattern change.

    Great point except that isn’t usually at least til Mar or April for even the strongest oncoming ones. And lots of times it isn’t till summer or even early fall, especially for the weak ones.
     In summary, it’s too early for a predominant -SOI even assuming El Niño is on the way in 2026. March is typically the very earliest.

    ——
    Edit:

    @LakeEffectOH is your avatar pic Mrs. Slocombe from “Are You Being Served?”

    • Thanks 2
  6.  Interestingly, the MJO forecasts of the major models are centered on phase 3 for Feb 22-23, the period of this snow threat. Based on Baltimore’s daily temperatures, phase 3 has by a good margin been the coldest MJO phase there during the 20 La Niña Februaries with it on average being 4F colder than the overall Feb Nina avg. Second coldest is phase 8, which has averaged 2F colder than the overall Feb Niña avg.

     In Feb of 1996, Baltimore got 8.2” during phase 3.

     In addition, forecasts have both a -EPO and a -WPO for Feb 22-23, two other favorable indices for cold. OTOH, the models have a moderate to strong -PNA for then, a potential negative factor for cold.

     So, MJO phase 3, -EPO, and -WPO would be favorable. But would a -PNA hurt?

    • Like 6
  7. 54 minutes ago, Stormchaserchuck1 said:

    Transition to El Nino should be fast

    3aa.png

    Thanks Chuck.

     Based on this OHC anomaly chart already showing ~+0.9C, I think your idea of a fast transition is quite believable as of now. However, keep in mind that this isn’t adjusted downward for relative (as in the RONI idea) purposes:

    IMG_8319.thumb.gif.582d74c4cf9be51cc6740f7d5e5d79d3.gif

    • Like 2
  8. 2 hours ago, Weather Will said:

    WB 6Z EURO AI

    IMG_8522.png

     This WB 6Z Euro AI op run based on 10:1 has 19” at DC! Of course the 10:1 is way overdone because it has temps 33-35 for the first half of the storm. And the WB Euro AIFS has issues as many of us know with too high snowfall in general.

     However, the WB 0Z CMC and 6Z GFS do have a big hit per Kuchera of 9”! That’s probably a more realistic scenario for the upside potential imho. If DC were to get 9”, it would be their biggest since the 10.3” of 1/12-14/2019!

    • Like 3
  9. 23 minutes ago, snowman19 said:

    Not saying it can’t happen, but the models have been awful with showing the MJO propagating into phase 8 since late November only to have it fail. I guess all we can do is wait and see if it holds and is real this time 

     

    16 minutes ago, EastonSN+ said:

    It did get to phase 8 twice, although for a couple days each. 


    The official record has the following for phase 8 in Dec and Feb this winter:

    Dec: 3-7, 15, 17-19. Was cold in E US overall.

    Feb: 1-7 (coldest phase 8 in Feb La Niña recorded MJO history (per Baltimore), which goes back to 1975)

    MJO phase each day:

    https://www.bom.gov.au/clim_data/IDCKGEM000/rmm.74toRealtime.txt

     

    Baltimore daily temperatures:

    https://www.weather.gov/wrh/Climate?wfo=lwx

    • Like 2
  10. 13 minutes ago, snowman19 said:

    Not saying it can’t happen, but the models have been awful with showing the MJO propagating into phase 8 since late November only to have it fail. I guess all we can do is wait and see if it holds and is real this time 

    Actually, phase 7 has on average (using Baltimore as a representative) been the coldest phase in March (1.7 BN) following La Niña winters with phase 8 second coldest (0.7 BN). But regardless, those are just averages with wide variances and the MJO seeming to have less influence in March vs Feb. Also, the combo of the progged -PNA, +AO, and +NAO would strongly favor mild in early March.

    • Like 2
  11. 1 hour ago, EastonSN+ said:

    The 2nd week of March SHOULD be a little interesting, although today's MJO forecast looks like its going into the COD. 

    image.png.8c622f672f62af4201372c9178193ab0.png

     I just completed my study of La Niña March temperatures by MJO phase at Baltimore (as a geographically centered rep. of the E coast).

     Before I show Mar, here’s a review of what I found for Feb Niña by phase:

    1: +2.1 (near Niña Feb climo)

    2: +4.4 (2nd warmest)

    3: -1.5 (coldest)

    4: +3.3

    5: +3.1

    6: +5.5 (warmest)

    7: +2.2 (near Nina Feb climo)

    8: +0.7 (2nd coldest)

    AVG: +2.5

    Range: 7.0

    —————

    Now, here’s the just completed March Niña by phase:

    1: +1.0 (near Niña Mar climo)

    2: -0.1

    3: +1.8

    4: +0.3

    5: +2.1 (2nd warmest)

    6: +2.6 (warmest)

    7: -1.7 (coldest)

    8: -0.7 (2nd coldest)

    AVG: +0.7

    Range: 4.3

    ———————

    So, how does March Niña compare to Feb Nina?

    -phase 6 warmest on avg for both

    -phase 7 coldest on avg for Mar vs phase 3 for Feb

    -avg anomaly for Mar (+0.7) not as warm as that for Feb (+2.5), which is intuitive for La Nina

    -Range of variation of averages by phase in Mar (4.3) not nearly as large as that of Feb (7.0), which is somewhat intuitive since temperature volatility tends to drop as we head into met. spring from the most volatile season, winter. This also may indicate  that MJO, itself, as a factor may not have quite as much of an influence in March as it does in winter

    -It’s important to always keep in mind that these are just averages of a wide range for each individual case from MB to MA temp. anomalies. Thus, whereas averages are informative, they don’t tell us how any one case will actually turn out.

    ——————

    Sources:

    MJO phase for each day:

    https://www.bom.gov.au/clim_data/IDCKGEM000/rmm.74toRealtime.txt
     

    Baltimore daily temperatures:

    https://www.weather.gov/wrh/Climate?wfo=lwx

     

    • Thanks 1
  12. 2 hours ago, bluewave said:

    Florida's citrus industry faces an existential crisis driven by climate-enhanced disasters, causing orange production to plummet over 90% in two decades to its lowest levels in over a century

    . Key issues include the incurable citrus greening disease (HLB), exacerbated by rising temperatures and extreme weather, alongside devastating hurricanes, droughts, and severe urbanization. 
    • Citrus Greening Crisis: A bacterial disease (HLB), spread by the Asian citrus psyllid, has infected nearly all Florida groves, resulting in small, bitter fruit and tree death.
    • Climate Change Amplification: Warmer temperatures have expanded the habitat for the psyllid, while changing weather patterns have brought more intense hurricanes (e.g., Ian, Milton) and severe droughts, which destroy trees already weakened by disease.
    • Production Collapse: Citrus production fell from ~300 million boxes in the early 2000s to roughly 12-20 million in the 2024–2026 seasons.
    • Industry Impact: The 2024-25 season was the least productive in over 100 years. Major growers like Alico Inc. are abandoning citrus, and acreage has dropped significantly,, causing supply chains to shift to imported juice.
    • Mitigation Efforts: Researchers and growers are testing antimicrobial treatments to combat greening, although these are costly and labor-intensive. 

     Thanks, Chris.

     I’ve followed Florida orange production closely since the late 1990s. The 2 main negative factors since then have been Citrus Greening and increased major hurricane frequency during 2004-2024. The hurricane damage was made worse by many of the groves migrating further south to S FL vs C FL being the heart of it earlier. Ironically, they moved further south because of the many devastating freezes of the late 1970s-1980s!

     This leads me to say that you left off a major positive factor related to CC: sharp drop in major freeze damage events. During the late 1970s-1980s there were many major freezes including Jan 1977, Jan 1981, Jan 1982, Dec 1983, Jan 1985, and Dec of 1989 (30% losses from this one, alone!). Since Dec of 1989, there has been nothing even close to these devastating FL orange crop freezes thanks in large part to CC, which you didn’t even mention.

    As a side note, major Brazilian coffee freezes have also dropped in frequency and severity since the 1990s thanks in part to CC.

    • Like 1
  13. 3 minutes ago, Stormchaserchuck1 said:

    Yeah.. I've seen them be constantly wrong since appearing on model pages. NWS doesn't even use them. 3 days ago I think they were showing 11" of snow here on the ensemble mean! I don't know why they are so flawed- it's suppose to be a new model. 

    I look (or more accurately laugh) at them mainly on WxBell. Are the Euro AI snow maps flawed on Pivotal and other places, too?

  14. 2 hours ago, Stormchaserchuck1 said:

    It's basically a fiction thread if all you're going to be doing is posting long range AI snow maps. 

    Chuck,

     Even the short range of the Euro AI has bogus snow. Check this stupidity out:

    The bogus 18Z Euro AIFS ens member 7 on WB gave Valdosta, GA, a foot of snow for the 6 hours ending at 7PM last evening lmao:
    IMG_8323.jpeg.b1b6a9691ae40d31a92c697bc8c91490.jpeg

  15.  I got ~0.75” of rainfall from showers mid to late this afternoon with some heavy for a short period. This is the most I’ve gotten in a day since at the very least Jan 18th.

     The new mini-drainage system that was set up in the back portion of MBY seemed to do pretty well although the real tests will probably not come til spring and especially summer.

  16. 1 hour ago, donsutherland1 said:

    Here are two big problems with his arguments:

    He writes:

    Regarding all the articles from so called authorities that climate change is already cutting back on food production:

    100% nonsense. It's the exact opposite. With crops, we can't tell how much impact is from CO2, climate/weather, genetics, fertilizers, use of pesticides/herbicides(technology).

     When you change numerous variables at the same time, like we do with crops, it's impossible to separate the impact from each one on the outcome.  

    Flaw: He claims that "it's impossible to separate the impact" from CO2, climate/weather, genetics, etc. Yet, he also claims that the idea that climate change is "100% nonsense." That's inherently inconsistent logic.

    He also states:

    ...we have 2 ways to address that with OBJECTIVE data which clearly speaks for the impact of photosynthesis by itself and for photosynthesis +climate change.

    1. The impact of JUST adding CO2 and not changing anything else...

    2. But other human factors impact soybeans, including climate change that we can't separate out.  

    Flaw: He oversimplifies things by ignoring the variable of temperature. Omitting temperature provides him the solution he seeks. However, cherry picking in pursuit of confirming one's biases is not a valid scientific approach. 

    Recent research provides a clear link between temperature and crop yields. For example, a May 31, 2024 paper in Nature Communications found:

    All specifications and weather data uncover an asymmetric relationship for the US where yields are increasing in temperature for moderate temperature ranges, but sharply decrease in temperature at the upper end.

    image.png.5e54292f233afd4d892d3dc56bd2c8f0.png

    Thanks, Don

    1. I felt that at a minimum that the wording wasn’t the best, possibly due to haste. I may follow up with him on that to get better clarification.

    2. He did mention the effect on crop sizes from the variable of climate/wx being hard to separate out. Doesn’t that include the variable of temperature?

  17. 6 hours ago, chubbs said:

    Per Wikipedia the CO2 Coalition is a climate denial organization funded by fossil fuel interests. The CEO is a former head of the American Petroleum Institute. Sure plant life thrived when CO2 was higher but natural temperatures change occurred  slowly which allowed accommodation through evolution. The idea that CO2 is plant food is climate denial myth. High temperature and intensification of precipitation counteract CO2 benefits on plant growth. The plants that thrived under higher CO2 were not the same plants in the same locations as today. For instance, If warming continues the Amazon rain forest and Boreal forests will transition to grasslands releasing large amounts of CO2. The same with animals, cold-blooded reptiles were favored in warmer times. Mammals were all small to shed heat. The bottom 2 links cover past mass extinction events. Notice how many where caused by episodes of volcanic activity that released CO2 and other greenhouse gases. 

    https://www.theclimatebrink.com/p/is-co2-plant-food-why-are-we-still

    https://www.sciencenewstoday.org/10-mass-extinction-events-and-what-caused-them

    https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/climate-change/19-mass-extinctions-had-co2-levels-were-now-veering-towards-study-warns

     

    Thanks, Charlie. Here’s Mike’s response to your reply:

     

     These people remind me of MAGA, seriously. It's complete fake climate crisis RELIGION.

     CO2 below 1,000 parts per million is a massively beneficial gas. To compare it to when CO2 was numerous times higher that this [sic] is a strawman attack (assigning a position that doesn't exist and attacking that position instead of the REAL one).

     And to keep projected CO2's increase for another 100 years and to keep insisting that the residence time for today's CO2 in the atmosphere is hundreds of years lacks critical thinking based just on how we watch it DROP during the Northern Hemisphere's growing season every year.  

     Ignoring the fact that fossils fuels are finite and will be running out well before then and the chances of us ever getting over 900 ppm, the optimal level for life/plants/crops is minuscule.

     So what if CO2 was X thousands of parts per million in the past????

     That is NOT what will be happening from CO2 increasing this time. The highest reasonable projection is still BELOW the optimal level of 900 ppm.

     Regarding all the articles from so called authorities that climate change is already cutting back on food production:

     100% nonsense. It's the exact opposite. With crops, we can't tell how much impact is from CO2, climate/weather, genetics, fertilizers, use of pesticides/herbicides(technology).

     When you change numerous variables at the same time, like we do with crops, it's impossible to separate the impact from each one on the outcome. 

     However, we have 2 ways to address that with OBJECTIVE data which clearly speaks for the impact of photosynthesis by itself and for photosynthesis +climate change.

    1. The impact of JUST adding CO2 and not changing anything else:

     Here is irrefutable evidence using empirical data to show that the increase in CO2 is causing a huge increase in crop yields/world food production. 

     We can separate the CO2 effect out from other factors effecting [sic] crops and plants with many thousands of  studies that hold everything else constant, except CO2.

     Observing and documenting the results of experiments with elevated CO2 levels tell us what increasing CO2 does to many hundreds of plants. 

     Here's how to access the empirical evidence/data from the site that has more of it than any other. Please go to this link:

    http://www.co2science.org/data/data.php

     2. But other human factors impact soybeans, including climate change that we can't separate out. 

     That's ok because we have something that looks almost exclusively at the increase in CO2 and climate change as the main factors.

     Planet earth has been a huge open air experiment the past XX years. The objective results are striking. The impacts have been mostly from changes in photosynthesis and changes in the climate. 
     

    Carbon Dioxide Fertilization Greening Earth, Study Finds

    https://www.nasa.gov/technology/carbon-dioxide-fertilization-greening-earth-study-finds/

    In addition:

    Earth greening mitigates hot temperature extremes despite the effect being dampened by rising CO2

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590332223005584

    ++++++++++++++

    Importantly, the indisputable science tells us that increasing CO2 allows plants/crops to be more drought tolerant(not the other way around). The reason is that plants open their stomata to get CO2 and while doing so, they transpire(lose water from their roots that get it from the soil) As CO2 increases, the stomata don't need to open as wide and this REDUCES water loss from their roots. It's rock solid agronomy/plant science. 

    CO2 Enrichment Improves Plant Water-Use Efficiency

    https://www.masterresource.org/carbon-dioxide/co2-increased-water-use-efficiency/

    +++++++++++++++=

    Despite me just PROVING the points with indisputable science above, this is what the very predictable response will be from people that posted to you previously with the same response they gave the first time:

    "Those are denier sources"

       NASA's satellite study showing the greening of the planet obviously can't be put in that category but CO2 Science and Dr. Craig Idso, an elite authority on plants and the impact of CO2/climate change, has been labelled a denier. 

    Never mind everything he shows is backed up with empirical data and rock solid scientific principles, which is why I use that source(as an atmospheric scientist for 44 years). If he or anybody else, including me, contradicts the mainstream view on the climate crisis.........they are discredited as deniers no matter us [sic] using 2+2=4  science to prove that 2+2 is not 5. 

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