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GaWx

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Posts posted by GaWx

  1. From several showers and a severe warned thunderstorm, I received ~1.75” yesterday. That put me then at ~3.80” MTD.

     I received more rain overnight of varying intensities and it’s still falling very lightly with constant rain since late last night. I’ll post the total for this later. It will be >0.5”.

     No more watering for at least awhile!

    • Like 1
  2. 30 minutes ago, bluewave said:

    Yeah, the other overlapping marine heatwaves are adding warmer La Niña-like influences to the mix. Especially when the forcing extends closer to the Maritime Continent which pumps the Southeast ridge. 

    This is why the pattern has been so much warmer in the East this spring into June than we have typically have seen during past developing super El Niños.

    But the next 10 days look more Nino-like with a trough centered near the Great Lakes and less warmth in the East.

    https://mesonet.agron.iastate.edu/plotting/auto/?_wait=no&q=24&which=cd&csector=conus&var=high&w=rank&p=day&year=2026&month=5&sdate=2026%2F06%2F01&edate=2026%2F06%2F19&cmap=RdYlBu&_r=t&dpi=100&_fmt=png

    IMG_6693.thumb.png.0ca774f17507e955442b7bb24ff940ee.png

     

    2026 warmed to +1.2 relative OISST on June 17th, which is 0.1 warmer than the warmest week on record (back to 1982) centered nearest to June 17th, 1997’s +1.1:
     
    2026: +1.2

    1997: +1.1

    1987: +1.0

    2015: +0.9

    1982: +0.8

    1994: +0.7

    1991: +0.6

    2002: +0.5

    2009: +0.4

    2023: +0.4


    IMG_0733.thumb.png.e5b436ec0da9bcf5f6b5eaac1ff4ffcf.png
     

    Data source:

    https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/indices/rel_wksst9120.txt

    • Thanks 1
  3. I had received ~0.65” of rain since my last report. 

     In addition, today I’ve been getting a strong thunderstorm that has had a warning since ~4PM. I got 1”+ very quickly. Some CTG lightning nearby. Rain now letting up.

    • Like 2
  4. On 6/13/2026 at 2:03 PM, GaWx said:

     Models are suggesting -SOI will lessen. There’s chance -SOI will end 6/16. If so, could be 6 days of +SOI before goes back -.

     Guessing per models

    6/14: -15 to -20

    6/15: -6 to -13

    6/16: +5 to -6

    6/17: +8 to -5

    6/18: +16 to +1

    6/19: +21 to +4 (the high point)

    6/20-4 should drop back down and get back to negative by 6/21-2

     

     

     

     

     
    SOI daily: Prediction from 6/13………actual

    6/14: -15 to -20…….-25

    6/15: -6 to -13…….-13

    6/16: +5 to -6………..-3

    6/17: +8 to -5……….-1

    6/18: +16 to +1……….+4

    6/19: +21 to +4 (the high point)………?

    6/20-4 should drop back down and get back to negative by 6/21-2………..?

    • Like 1
  5. On 6/12/2026 at 8:38 PM, GaWx said:

     Today’s -29 is the 33rd straight day with a sub -5 SOI. Tomorrow will make 34. That’s pretty historic because that will make it the 3rd longest sub -5 streak on record back to 1991! The only two longer ones were in 1997-8 and they were extremely long: 51 and 42 days, respectively.

     The beauty of the SOI is that it doesn’t appear to be strongly affected by CC. Thus it doesn’t need a RONI-like adjustment to remain a good indicator of ENSO strength.

    The sub -5 SOI streak ended at 36 days. The only longer ones back to 1991 are the 51 and 42 day streaks of 1997-8.

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  6. On 6/11/2026 at 9:43 PM, Upstate Tiger said:

    So we have officially entered El Niño phase.  Most agree it will be strong and possibly super El Niño.  
     

    The strongest El Niño on record was the super El Niño of 1877/1878.  It actually started in late 1876 and was fully established in spring 1877.  
     

    The winter of 1877/1878 was known as the year without winter, especially in the Midwest and eastern US.  Farmers actually planted in February.  
     

    This El Niño is starting a little later and no two are the same but at this point, an above average temp winter would be a good bet.  

     In the Midwest it was, indeed, quite mild. But in the NE, it averaged only moderately AN with Dec AN but Jan-Feb pretty close to normal. Jan actually was slightly BN in some cases like at NYC.

     In the SE, only Dec was a mild month. Jan was slightly to moderately BN and Feb was not too far from normal. Thus DJF averaged only slightly AN to NN in the SE.

    SE example for DJF 

    Asheville: 43.6, 35.2, 39.8

    Jan was 35.2/BN with 8.5” of SN (double the normal) from two ~4” snowstorms. The coldest was 7F.

    Knoxville was similar. Savannah also had a BN Jan.

     

    • Like 1
  7. BULLETIN
    Tropical Storm Arthur Advisory Number 5
    NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL012026
    1000 AM CDT Wed Jun 17 2026

    ...TROPICAL STORM ARTHUR DEVELOPS NEAR THE MIDDLE TEXAS COAST...
    ...LIFE-THREATENING FLOODING EXPECTED ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE
    SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES...


    SUMMARY OF 1000 AM CDT...1500 UTC...INFORMATION
    -----------------------------------------------
    LOCATION...28.6N 95.8W
    ABOUT 40 MI...65 KM ENE OF PORT OCONNOR TEXAS
    ABOUT 190 MI...300 KM WSW OF LAKE CHARLES LOUISIANA
    MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS...40 MPH...65 KM/H
    PRESENT MOVEMENT...NE OR 45 DEGREES AT 9 MPH...15 KM/H
    MINIMUM CENTRAL PRESSURE...1001 MB...29.56 INCHES


    WATCHES AND WARNINGS
    --------------------
    CHANGES WITH THIS ADVISORY:

    The Tropical Storm Warning has been extended westward to High
    Island, Texas.


    Reason for upgrade:
    1200 UTC TAFB Dvorak classification indicated enough convective 
    organization to designate the system as a sheared tropical cyclone. 
    Within the past hour or two, buoy observations and a ship report 
    have indicated tropical-storm-force winds occurring within this 
    convection. Additionally, Air Force Reserve Hurricane Hunters 
    investigating the storm found peak 850-mb flight-level winds up to 
    52 kt, which also suggest this system has reached tropical storm 
    intensity. Based on these findings, the system is designated as 
    Tropical Storm Arthur with an intensity of 35 kt.
    FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

    INIT 17/1500Z 28.6N 95.8W 35 KT 40 MPH
    12H 18/0000Z 30.0N 94.2W 30 KT 35 MPH...INLAND
    24H 18/1200Z 31.9N 91.6W 20 KT 25 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW
    36H 19/0000Z...DISSIPATED

    $$
    Forecaster Reinhart
    Big win for Joe Bastardi!
    • Like 1
  8.  Woodstock, GA, (25 miles N of ATL) had 3 widely spaced thunderstorms yesterday!

     It looks like my home area in SAV had several rounds of significant rainfall the last 72 hours with the heaviest being ~1.1” for the 24 hours ending at 7AM today using Cocorahs as a guideline. For the last 72 hours, I roughly estimate 1.4” fell at my location, which is also near my MTD.

    • Thanks 1
  9. 2 hours ago, WxWatcher007 said:

    Flash flooding in the south as odds increase…

    Tropical Weather Outlook
    NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL
    200 PM EDT Mon Jun 15 2026
    
    For the North Atlantic...Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of America:
    
    Northwestern Gulf of America:
    A trough of low pressure located over northeastern Mexico is 
    producing a large area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms.
    Development is not expected during the next day or so while the 
    trough remains inland.  However, the system could re-emerge over the 
    northwestern Gulf of America late Tuesday or Wednesday, and 
    environmental conditions there are marginally conducive for the 
    formation of a short-lived tropical storm on Wednesday into 
    Thursday.
    
    Regardless of tropical cyclone formation, interests across southern 
    and eastern Texas and portions of Louisiana and Mississippi should 
    prepare for periods of intense rainfall over the next several days 
    which could produce widespread, life-threatening flash, urban, and 
    river flooding. Gusty winds and coastal flooding are also possible 
    along portions of the northwestern Gulf Coast, and Tropical Storm 
    Watches or Warnings could be required on Tuesday.  Additional 
    information on this system can be found in products issued by your 
    local National Weather Service Forecast Office or NHC Key Messages.
    * Formation chance through 48 hours...medium...40 percent.
    * Formation chance through 7 days...medium...50 percent.
    
    $$
    Forecaster Blake
      

     I’ll consider this a win for Bastardi if it actually becomes a TC. He predicted back in April a Gulf TC due to MJO phase 8 being bullish for Gulf TCs in June. This could provide major drought relief for a good portion of the SE!

     This is now Invest 90L:

    https://ftp.nhc.noaa.gov/atcf/btk/bal902026.dat

    • Thanks 1
  10. 1 hour ago, mitchnick said:

    Here are CPC numbers for all 4 Enso areas for 6/10/15 & 6/10/26:

    10JUN2015     25.5 2.0     27.8 1.2     28.7 0.9     29.8 0.9
    10JUN2026     26.1 2.7     28.3 1.6     29.2 1.5     30.1 1.3ⁿ

    If you divide Enso 1.2 anomaly into the other 3 areas' anomalies for both years, you get respectively  60%, 45% and 45% in 2015 and 59.25%, 55.55% and 48.15% this year. Comparing the 2 years, Enso 3 is nearly identical for both years and 3.4 and 4 are a hair warmer this year than 2015.

    Obviously, there may be other ways to figure it, but I'd have to say that they are very similar with a slight edge to 2015 as being more east based under this method.

    P.s. @GaWx will surely check my math! Lol

     Thanks, Mitch. Indeed, “E based” can be defined in numerous ways as it’s not black and white, of course.

     Here are the relative anomalies for the strongest of years in 3.4 as of the closest week centered on June 10th back to 1982:

                                1+2         3         3.4         4

    09JUN1982        -0.2        0.8        1.0       1.1 

    11JUN1997         3.0        1.3        0.8        0.2

    12JUN2002        -0.3        0.6        0.8        0.7

    10JUN2015         1.8        0.8        0.6        0.7

    10JUN2026         2.1        1.0        0.9        0.7

     

     Just looking at this period rather than model progs for fall/winter, here are my rankings of most to least E based:

    1997, 2026, 2015, 2002, 1982 though 2026 is only slightly ahead of 2015

     

    • Like 2
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  11. 21 minutes ago, snowman19 said:

    @GaWx  Is the current MEI rise from March through May actually the biggest rise on record for that index like I’m reading on twitter? I only have the data through 1979 right now

    I see only 1979+ in the table. Based on it, the 2026 rise from MA to AM of 0.9C (-0.6 to +0.3) is the biggest rise for MA to AM since at least 1979. The previous biggest was the 0.7C of 2015:

    https://psl.noaa.gov/enso/mei/

    • Like 1
  12. On 6/13/2026 at 12:38 PM, GaWx said:

     Despite being steady last 7 days, I predict that 3.4 will warm by 0.3 in Mon’s update because of how the weeks compare.

    Nino 3.4 officially warmed by 0.2 in today’s update from +0.7 to +0.9:

     

                                   1+2        3         3.4      4 

    06MAY2026         1.0        0.5        0.4        0.5
     13MAY2026         1.3        0.6        0.4        0.6
     20MAY2026         1.6        0.7        0.5        0.6
     27MAY2026         1.7        0.8        0.5        0.7
     03JUN2026         2.1        1.0        0.7        0.7
     10JUN2026         2.1        1.0        0.9        0.7

     

    https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/indices/rel_wksst9120.txt

    • Thanks 1
  13. 15 hours ago, ORH_wxman said:

    Area on 6/13….8.66 million sq km

    Heres how other years faired on the same date (I.e, 2012 had 420k less area than this year on the same date)

     

    2012: -420k

    2025: -130k

    2019: -60k

    2016: -50k

    2007: +150k

    2020: +190k

    2011: +230k

    2010: +240k

    2023: +250k

    2022: +280k

    2021: +300k

    2017: +310k

     

    Still a lot of time left in the critical month of June. We’re lagging 2012 decently but it’s definitely possible to catch up. On the flip side, if we continue to lose ground to 2012 over the next couple weeks, then we can rule out a new record this year. Most of the cake gets baked in May and June in the arctic sea ice workd

     

     June MTD is by a good margin the coldest on record N of 80N! Furthermore, June 9-13th has averaged ~-4C, which is ~2C colder than what had been the coldest on record, 2014! Records go back to 1958!

    This is pretty surreal in our warming world:

    2026 coldest for June 1-13 ~-3.5C and June 9-13 ~-4C!

    IMG_0666.png.177fadef8d570d498823e619f6ecf7f5.png


    2014 2nd coldest for June 1-13 ~-2.5C and June 9-13 ~-2C:

    IMG_0673.png.6da2a743e8d69b22db7fbfa865f52ba2.png


    1966 3rd coldest for June 1-13 ~-2C:

    IMG_0623.png.2fdf28d9a69a05a7a2833dcf09ca2513.png


    1980 3rd coldest for June 9-13 ~-1.3C:

    IMG_0668.png.283b10ee6f032f8cb4737e2da9885b56.png

    • Like 1
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  14. 18 minutes ago, Stormchaserchuck1 said:

    There is some overlap, but ENSO and the PDO effect different areas in the Pacific - ENSO is further east and PDO is further west. 

    1aa.gif

    Chuck and others, check this out:

    June MTD is by a good margin the coldest on record N of 80N! Furthermore, June 9-13th has averaged ~-4C, which is ~2C colder than what had been the coldest on record, 2014! Records go back to 1958!

    This is pretty surreal in our warming world:

    2026 coldest for June 1-13 ~-3.5C and June 9-13 ~-4C!

    IMG_0666.png.952671cbae9ec63df84e73c21a518429.png

    2014 2nd coldest for June 1-13 ~-2.5C and June 9-13 ~-2C

    IMG_0673.png.9c2c82ca3ecda08834ebc8e2dbbce69e.png
     

    1966 3rd coldest for June 1-13 ~-2C

    IMG_0623.png.dd067145ee116fc27b1b275a46c047cc.png

    1980 3rd coldest for June 9-13 ~-1.3C

    IMG_0668.png.20f8f996f679627ee89bab971cedd20d.png

     

     

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  15. 37 minutes ago, mitchnick said:

    It was last year at this time when the PDO started its dump. Interesting to see if we repeat. I know Larry uses Ncep(?) numbers, but I  think they pretty much followed the same trend as this graph. Feel fee to correct me Larry. 

    pdo (10).png

     Mitch, the -0.75 to -1 is/was a general guide based on several years of data. However, I just did a new compare as it appears that ncep may have raised some of their months since I last looked closely and perhaps their methodology recently changed??:

    7/25: ~-0.6

    8/25: ~0

    9/25: ~0

    10/25: ~-0.3

    11/25: ~0

    12/25: ~+0.35

    1/26: ~0

    2/26:~-0.5

    3/26: ~-0.6

    4/26: ~-0.6

    5/26: ~-0.7

     So range for 7/25-5/26 was -0.7 to +0.35! Avg ~-0.3.

     

     

     

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  16. 1 minute ago, mitchnick said:

    It was last year at this time when the PDO took its dump. Interesting to see if we repeat. I know Larry uses Ncep(?) numbers, but I  think they pretty much followed the same trend as this graph. Feel fee to correct me Larry. 

    pdo (10).png

    Yes, ncep ~-0.75 to -1 vs WCS

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  17. 2 minutes ago, roardog said:

    Does it look like the extreme -SOI will continue? It'll be interesting to see how low the 30 day average will go?

     Models are suggesting -SOI will lessen. There’s chance -SOI will end 6/16. If so, could be 6 days of +SOI before goes back -.

     Guessing per models

    6/14: -15 to -20

    6/15: -6 to -13

    6/16: +5 to -6

    6/17: +8 to -5

    6/18: +16 to +1

    6/19: +21 to +4 (the high point)

    6/20-4 should drop back down and get back to negative by 6/21-2

     

     

     

     

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