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GaWx

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Posts posted by GaWx

  1. One TS from a broken line just brought me approaching 1/2” over the last ~30 minutes with it lightening up now. This is the first measurable rain so far this month for where I live as the big Tybee TS that I experienced late Sunday afternoon missed my home to the E. Yesterday, it appeared I was going to get decent rain but it fell apart before I could get anything more than a T.

    • Like 1
  2. 16 minutes ago, PhiEaglesfan712 said:

    1982-83 was a classical backloaded winter in the mid-Atlantic. In addition to the February blizzard, there was a snow/freeze event on April 19-20. Places as far south as North Carolina got a hard freeze.

    Regarding super strength El Niño seasons, 1957-8, 1972-3 and 1982-3 were all fantastic to historic in the SE overall relative to climo in terms of wintry precip. Also, Feb of 1889 had a major snow in the SE. 1965-6 had historic cold in late Jan. In addition, Jan and especially Feb of 1958 were quite cold! Most importantly, they are usually wet, which we so desperately need to relieve the drought!

    • Like 4
  3. 6 minutes ago, LakePaste25 said:

    yeah they’re not “cooling” by a full 2.05C from Dec to March. the seasonal climatological mean is also increasing. 

    Anomalies cool by 2.05C Dec to Mar as that post was specifically addressing anomalies. That would be a record rate of the cooling of the anomalies Dec to Mar vs the current record being in 72-73 (1.87C).

  4. 1 hour ago, snowman19 said:


    This is the latest RAOB update, the +QBO is still descending, now down to 40mb

    be1111bf531bb9e3f0bdaf86f3b7cd09.jpg

    In other news, the +IOD gets going soon
     
     

     

     


    And the ++PMM continues
    oisst_ssta_epac.png

    @Gawx Has there ever been an El Niño event that saw the 30C isotherm end up east of the dateline? I know 1972, 1982, 1997 and 2015 didn’t do it….

     

     

     

     

     

    Adam, the monthly ERSST for Nino 4, which is from 150W to 160E, was warmest on record in these months:

    30.21: Nov. ‘23

    30.19: Jun ‘26

    30.13: Nov ‘15

    30.04: Dec ‘23

    30.00: May ‘26

     With the midpoint of Nino 4 being E of dateline (175W), the odds are very high that 30C made it E of the dateline prior to ‘26, especially in late ‘23 and late ‘15. However, it very likely didn’t happen in summer of ‘23 although it very well could have also in spring-fall ‘15 based on Nino 4 being 28.8 to 28.9 then.

     

     

    https://www.cpc.ncep.noa

    • Thanks 1
  5.  The latest CFS (10 days of runs ens. mean) is at the highest of any I’ve saved with relative peaks way up at ~3.4 (Nov) and nearly 3.25 (SON and OND)! The record highest since 1950 are well below these:

    1 month: 2.69 (Jan 1983), 2.56 (Dec 1982), 2.48 (Nov 2015), 2.44 (Oct 1997), and 2.43 (Nov 1997) 

    3 month: 2.52 (NDJ 1982-3), 2.49 (DJF 1982-3), 2.43 (OND 1982), 2.38 (SON 1997), and 2.37 (NDJ 2015-6)

     The most rapid monthly rates of warming of the mean is from July’s ~1.46 to Aug’s ~2.30, a warming of ~0.84, followed by a warming of ~0.70 from Aug’s ~2.30 to Sep’s ~3.00. So, the progged CFS rate of warming from July to Sep of ~1.54 will be the key period to see if the progged peak is actually going to verify closely. The record fastest 2 month warming is only ~1.3 (Nov 1954-Jan 1955 and Aug-Oct 1982).

    ————————

     Note that they still show near record breaking rates of cooling Dec-Mar after these record shattering peaks with a mean plunge from Dec’s ~2.95 to Jan’s ~2.16 to Feb’s ~1.6 to Mar’s ~0.9. That 3 month progged cooling of ~2.05 Dec to Mar would be similar to the record rate of cooling for Dec to Mar of 1972-3, which was 1.87.

    • Thanks 1
  6. 11 hours ago, bluewave said:

    Just remember that with our last super El Niño which was much weaker than this one, the seasonal forecasts including the ECWMF were significantly too cool for what verified from the long range forecasts. 

    Forecast from August 2023

    IMG_6704.thumb.png.c6af97bc94f896138cc121c7c76d00b1.png

    Verification

     

    IMG_6879.png.6064005b8de5896b0b1ceac8973bc088.png

     

     

    10 hours ago, mitchnick said:

    And don't forget that the last 2 winters the Euro seasonal was too warm in the NE. And since it is impossible to have statistical data that supports the notion that the current Euro seasonal is inherently biased too cool for Niños in its current upgraded version (and I don't see that being possible since there have been upgrades since the 2023 season), I honestly don't see the relevance of prior year forecasts. All we can take away, imho, is that the Euro seasonal has been inaccurate with its winter temp forecasts in the NE 3 out of the last 3 years, twice being too warm and once being too cool.

    Edit: And let's not forget this month's forecast looks very similar to other seasonal modeling.

     


    The NDJ Euro fcast made July 2023 was actually pretty close in most of the U.S. as per this post I made (see link below) with a good portion within 1F. Only the N tier was several degrees too cold:

     

     In addition as I said in the same post, the Euro July NDJ of both ‘25 and ‘24 were significantly too warm in the E US. 

    -‘23: I could call it either close overall or net slightly too cold due to the N tier

     -‘22 was a bit too cold in most of the E US, but that’s the only one like that since 2017! 

    -‘21 was slightly too warm in the E US

    -‘20 and ‘19 were pretty close in the E US

    -‘18 was a bit too warm NE US and close in the MidAtlantic/SE

    -’17 was too warm in the E US

     So for E US in their July NDJ forecasts, the tally is 5 too warm (‘25, ‘24, ‘21, ‘18, ‘17) and only 2 too cold even if I count ‘23 (‘23 and ‘22) as too cold. That in no way suggests the likelihood that the ‘26 NDJ just issued will verify too cold (sample size of 9 is decent).

     

    • Thanks 1
  7. 11 minutes ago, snowman19 said:

    New July BOM model run for region 3.4 and region 3

    19546da1fede1048ecc96f6bfde3f6e1.jpg

    90b8687635a922380e23dac817f91022.jpg


    Week midpoint…1+2…..…3….…..3.4……....4

    29APR2026         0.6        0.4        0.4        0.5
     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         2.0        0.9        0.7        0.7
     10JUN2026         2.1        1.0        0.9        0.8
     17JUN2026         2.4        1.3        1.1        0.8
     24JUN2026         2.5        1.5        1.2        0.6
     01JUL2026           2.7          1.5          1.2        0.5

  8. I’m here at Tybee Island with some friends in a severe thunderstorm that we just experienced! It was something else! We were inside and I watched it closely!

     Edit: However, nothing measurable fell at my home well to the W.

    • Like 1
  9. 46 minutes ago, mitchnick said:

    Couldn't agree more. It tells me that the other seasonal models aren't far off with their progs of a winter offering legit chances for snow and cold, obviously interspersed with AN periods that will push the mean to only a little AN. Of course, without seeing the monthly maps, there's a but of speculation on my part.

    For the US averaged out, this is the coldest NDJ on any Euro July forecast back to 2019. Not only that but keep in mind they’ve averaged out too warm since 2017 (significant warm bias as more have verified too warm than too cold):

    ‘26:

    IMG_1055.png.3b47674cdb284c602f74df602bc134e3.png


    ‘25: sig. too warm E US

    IMG_1056.png.76133d2828162a95d780725e48e16af3.png


    ‘24: significantly too warm most of lower 48

    IMG_1057.png.0b6c657b5dfe624d2f0710733696e673.png


    ‘23: close
    IMG_1058.png.751c4fc902e2590cc8904c7f7a0192f5.png

     

    ‘22: a bit too cold E US/significantly too warm W US

    IMG_1059.png.05b9f68cf3617e31cfe80f092a42a756.png


    ‘21: slightly too warm E US/close W US

    IMG_1060.png.a1a4f02bbf56a7029b93ef57931ef115.png

     

    ‘20: pretty close E US; too warm W US

    IMG_1061.png.1642f7e08830c5e7a39645e75db20514.png

     

    ‘19: close

    IMG_1062.png.5943cc9eb719aaa9a15070898f92f36c.png
     

    -July ‘18 forecast for NDJ was a bit too warm C US to NE and close Mid Atlantic/SE US; was close in W US

    -July ‘17 fcast for NDJ: too warm E US, too cold W US


    **Edit:
    So, for E US, the July Euro NDJ forecast the last nine years averaged too warm in the E US 5 times, close 3 times, and too cold only once. When combined with the July forecast for NDJ being the coldest of the last 9 years, there’s little reason to favor a warm E US NDJ overall at this point based on the Euro.

    @snowman19

    • Like 5
  10. 31 minutes ago, mitchnick said:

    Euro seasonal temps and precip thru January don't look bad to me in the east. Very wet with surface temps dropping as we head into winter. I bet February would look great, but the free maps stop at January. H5 looks reasonably tasty too imho. Naysayers, have at it. Lol

    Link to a  free parameters. 

    https://charts.ecmwf.int/?facets={"Product type"%3A["Experimental%3A AIFS"]%2C"Parameters"%3A[]%2C"Type"%3A[]%2C"Range"%3A["Seasonal"]}

    This (NDJ) looks good to me with no suggestion of a warm NDJ in most of the U.S. Actually, H5/2m in a good portion of the E US is near the lowest in the NH! This looks fairly typical of El Niño with the coldest/warmest US anoms in the South/North:

    IMG_1055.png.ab813cac3958afcde0147033575c937b.png

    IMG_1054.png.f8fe9a03aad9800e39564b351c85c0a2.png
     

    Prospects remain excellent to relieve the E US drought, which is typical of strong+ El Niño:

    IMG_1053.png.285946f81ccc6c90a21f770393ce5ce4.png

    • Like 2
  11. 23 hours ago, GaWx said:

    As of July 2nd per the DMI data, the mean Arctic temperature based on 80N+ has still not quite reached freezing although it was only barely below it yesterday. Going back to 1958, the latest day it first hit freezing before 2026 was way back on June 20th (2013)!

    Daily Mean Arctic temp. in degrees Kelvin:  freezing is at 273.15 (July 2nd was 0.1C below freezing):


    0260618 169 272.561676
    20260619 170 272.634399
    20260620 171 272.647522
    20260621 172 272.469360
    20260622 173 272.153870
    20260623 174 271.679565
    20260624 175 271.918213
    20260625 176 272.421326
    20260626 177 272.655334
    20260627 178 272.803802
    20260628 179 272.680786
    20260629 180 272.732056
    20260630 181 272.903717
    20260701 182 272.963715
    20260702 183 273.045624

    https://download.dmi.dk/pub/plus80N_temperatureindex/meanT2026_running.txt

    July 3rd cooled back very slightly. So, the DMI 80N+ mean Arctic temp still hasn’t reached 0C! The old record latest was 6/20/2013.

  12. At 1:40 told me that she was in one of the worst popup thunderstorms she’s ever experienced while driving with high winds, very heavy rain, and small hail in Buckhead near Roswell Rd! Temps suddenly plunged from a sunny 90s to 72 on her car therm! It ended about as fast as it started.

  13. 29 minutes ago, michsnowfreak said:

    Most expansive heatwave in history? Lmao. I guess the 1930s-50s just removed themselves from history. Not to mention 1988, 1995, 2012, etc

    Very intense? Absolutely! One of the most expansive? No way! That along with trying to connect the developing super-Nino with summer heat made his post bad to me.

     But then Chris Martz had a terrible reply, himself, when he downplayed the U.S. and European heatwaves by saying “It’s called ‘summer’”. Also, he criticized Jeff’s use of the term “heat dome” for the heatwaves even though it has been used frequently in the pro-met community for decades!

     So, both of them, who are looking at this from opposing standpoints more or less, looked bad here imho.

  14. As of July 2nd per the DMI data, the mean Arctic temperature based on 80N+ has still not quite reached freezing although it was only barely below it yesterday. Going back to 1958, the latest day it first hit freezing before 2026 was way back on June 20th (2013)!

    Daily Mean Arctic temp. in degrees Kelvin:  freezing is at 273.15 (July 2nd was 0.1C below freezing):


    0260618 169 272.561676
    20260619 170 272.634399
    20260620 171 272.647522
    20260621 172 272.469360
    20260622 173 272.153870
    20260623 174 271.679565
    20260624 175 271.918213
    20260625 176 272.421326
    20260626 177 272.655334
    20260627 178 272.803802
    20260628 179 272.680786
    20260629 180 272.732056
    20260630 181 272.903717
    20260701 182 272.963715
    20260702 183 273.045624

    https://download.dmi.dk/pub/plus80N_temperatureindex/meanT2026_running.txt

    • Like 1
  15. 18 minutes ago, NorthHillsWx said:

    I stand corrected. 104+ anywhere up there is insane 

     Indeed! I’m not at all trying to minimize the heatwave in the NYC area. There has been some talk about Central Park running a couple of degrees cooler for highs than in the past due to increased foliage (showing the cooling power of foliage). Even so, 100F with increased foliage is obviously still very intense. Also, C Park had a low of only a ridiculous 82 yesterday!

     At C Park, the lowest so far today is 84. IF that were to hold up through 11:59PM, it would tie the all time highest low there, which goes way back to 1869! 

     

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