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Typhoon Tip

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  1. Looks like there's a secondary cold front according to WPC's most recent surface analysis. Some of this might be a response to that pressure perturbation coming thru. But it is on the move... looping vis it probably doesn't last the whole daylight. Along this end of Rt 2 we're holding out with sun for the moment. Yeah, you'll get 15 minutes before sunset hahaha.
  2. mm... N-E of an approximate Albany - Boston line did not register "widespread 80s and 90s" last week. Along that line did observe a couple of afternoons where it crept in but it would shunt... collapsing back into CT. By and large it was short of widespread for a large chunk of the Northeast US. Heh, I realize there is no world NE of the Tristate to Philli region, but just in deference to envious eyes made to watch warm air from their cold predicament, widespread 80s and 90s in the Northeast US is a just a wee bit of a spin.
  3. Nice to be contending with this while relative to date and history we are presently "enjoying" the 2nd or 3rd warmest Earth since the invention of thermometers ...
  4. Not a bad bounce back here this monring.. 44 sucks, but it was 28 at dawn. Helluva lot better. I'm sure we're hitting the bounce ceiling soon... Suppose we can keep the wind from kissing napes too much, the power of that sun, Aug 20 equiv for shits and gigs ... 101 in window shut parked car, 46 outside the window? Just imagine asking any given August 20 to be held < 50. We may start destructing by diurnal cu, too
  5. After today and tomorrow the patterning looks like 10 days ( to start ...) of persistent nondescript neutral Ts... with 'tendencies' along the way for BN. It's just that typical model regression in mid spring tends to oversell cold looks in the mids and extended ranges. Then combining that bias with "some kinda" coefficient CC forcing from the background state, together probably helps to suspend closer to neutral. It's just harder to sustain below normal then it used to be decades ago. The -NAO is looking pretty weak in the operational runs... tending to limit the physical manifestation of that index state by being both inconsistent with the magnitude of actual ridging up there, but also ranging placement between the western and eastern limb. Which matters... east would allow warmer hgts to creep farther N over the mid latitude continent. I.e., maybe not as bad for warm enthusiasts here after all. West variant, however, during a flaccid slackening gradient would probably cut off lows near Cape Cod and really ratchet up the Count Rugen torture. That said, there's still something of it there. Because the behavior of transits; having trouble getting N of our latitude is -NAO suggestive. Some amount of suppression is modeled nonetheless.
  6. probably trying to resolve the anachronistic circumstance of nearing solar max blazar energy dumping into meta-physically imposed January cold hell
  7. well, I might otherwise be taken aback by the fact that we're going below freezing tomorrow night under a full on January thermal sounding structure ... buuuut, welcome to the biggest piece of shit geographical spring region on planet Earth - i.e., not surprising
  8. And we should probably reflect in awe that a woman was involved -
  9. We’ll probably put up a +2 or 3 April … completely somehow masking what a drab cold shit show it feels like
  10. It seems like relative to every pattern ... results are + Whether it is .001 of a single degree F, or +10 Fs, +'s are sort of a baked in ( no pun intended ) consequence of being in a +d(C) where C denotes climate. But it's not just temperature? seriously...I see something subtle in the circumstances, too. Today is a perfect example. Right now, it is 69 F here... we are about to go above 70 F. Yet, looking at the satellite and WPC's surface synopsis, this appears to be a backside cyclone scenario. The strata entrails and scuddies are moving NE-SW... and there's regions of pancaking coming d-slope and evaporating as they come. Meanwhile, the main/real polar boundary is situated up in S Canada. I don't recall ever seeing cyclone mechanics closed off like this, INSIDE a warm sector. Much less... in April These are odd circumstances. These kind of idiosyncratic things... I just have an Aspergery kind of memory about weather situations since I was apparently designated by birth to waste a life with a Meteorological talent that will provide nothing for anyone ha ( I'm like the Michigan Jay Frog of weather minutia ). Anyway, I keep having to step back over this shit and go, "what in the f is happening here". Things are just behaving differently ...whether it shows up in the thermometers or not. And they're just under the radar oddities, too subtle for most to even be aware... Besides, who the fuck is complaining or getting spooked by 70 on April 17 in a "cold sector" behind a cyclone inside a warm sector ... Too nice to care. It's just unknowable to them.
  11. It's like Quantum Mechanics sent particles back in time to excoriate you for your arrogant pop off, "we're going to be saying a lot of GWDLs next week."
  12. heh... just a general note on the NAO. Taken fwiw but my personal observation with -NAO(+NAO)s that are long lead signals is that they have very poor verification. We already know with safe assumption that in partial (at least) this has gotta be true, because the actual ridge node associated with the physical manifestation of the NAO block itself is being placed in different locations on every other run of the guidance. So off the bat, there's poor deterministic value there. But, even at a more orbital consideration, 'do they even happen?' ... I've come to find that a significant number of occurrences when -NAOs(+NAOs) show up in that D10 to 2-week window, they don't even exist when the whole of it is D4/5/6. They don't survive continuity coming into mid range. Out of all atmospheric indices, the NAO handling is just not well logistically managed by any one or any thing. This -NAO manifested about 5 days ago... about when it was D12. Prior to that... we were going to roll right back into a warm up. But then Monday's sharp trough and attending cold shot showed up, and it seems the models "might" have been getting a bit overzealous in creating positive anomaly NE of it as it turned the corner and rose in latitude through the Maritime of Canada. But two aspects are true and they are sort of competing. The 2nd aspect is also a personal observation, particularly in late winter into springs: when we have a warm anomalous pattern, the breakdown has in the past seemed to segue the -NAO response. It's like the warm anomaly rises in latitude and gets dumped up there...then takes 3-5 days to finally disperse... a time in which we tend to get cold shits down this way. The former aspect is more of an always consideration. The latter is a spring one. I'm trying to assess which is going to be the case. It seems at this moment, while typing, we're getting a hybrid expression between in the guidance complexions.
  13. Do you have the 00z version of this at 186 ?
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