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December 2019


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With the 0.7 inches of snow in Central Park yesterday, NYC only needs 15.2 inches of snow between now and Dec 31 2020 for the new 30 year averages calculated in January 2021 to be 30 inches per season.

One MECS away, or several nickel and dime events, like for example this December in the city.

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25 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

With the 0.7 inches of snow in Central Park yesterday, NYC only needs 15.2 inches of snow between now and Dec 31 2020 for the new 30 year averages calculated in January 2021 to be 30 inches per season.

One MECS away, or several nickel and dime events, like for example this December in the city.

NYC also has a shot at March surpassing December for average snowfall. 
 

1991-2019 NYC average monthly snowfall.

December.....4.9

March............5.1

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1 hour ago, bluewave said:

That’s definitely a wait and see type forecast. Phases 6 and 7 can be a borderline between mild and cold this time of year. A slight shift in the WP forcing can make a big difference.

A86B0D7D-C7BA-4291-9E34-2219E745AD72.png.6d9a252566355dfb90ec588d522d6761.png

9AE4C212-6DC0-4612-80EA-F7E76C9C74FD.png.de04b517c60b24b5417b10df5690bb13.png

 

 

BlueWave I am not sure if you want to  or if someone else can but speaking for myself ( and I am sure many others lurking have the same questions) but can someone explain the 500 hpa geographical heights that  I / we are looking at ? I get the MJO index and can follow what you guys are talking about with that but when you guys post the above I get lost as I do not know what exactly you guys are showing me / us novices ? Can someone explain it simply if thats possible ? Thanks in advance

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57 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

With the 0.7 inches of snow in Central Park yesterday, NYC only needs 15.2 inches of snow between now and Dec 31 2020 for the new 30 year averages calculated in January 2021 to be 30 inches per season.

One MECS away, or several nickel and dime events, like for example this December in the city.

 

32 minutes ago, bluewave said:

NYC also has a shot at March surpassing December for average snowfall. 
 

1991-2019 NYC average monthly snowfall.

December.....4.9

March............5.1

Excellent point and driven in most part by the last 5  seasons where March has seen 51.2 inches of snow in Central Park, and December a paltry 11.9 inches.

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21 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

 

Excellent point and driven in most part by the last 5  seasons where March has seen 51.2 inches of snow in Central Park, and December a paltry 11.9 inches.

Yeah, 4 out of the last 5 years with March being the snowiest month was more like the Rockies and Plains. Welcome to the 2010’s.;)

Monthly Total Snowfall for NY CITY CENTRAL PARK, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Year
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
Season
2014-2015 0.0 0.2 1.0 16.9 13.6 18.6 0.0 50.3
2015-2016 0.0 0.0 T 27.9 4.0 0.9 T 32.8
2016-2017 0.0 T 3.2 7.9 9.4 9.7 0.0 30.2
2017-2018 0.0 T 7.7 11.2 4.9 11.6 5.5 40.9
2018-2019 0.0 6.4 T 1.1 2.6 10.4 0.0 20.5

 

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53 minutes ago, rgwp96 said:

Yea that’s what I had , thought it would be more since it snowed on and off all night but never added up to  much more than that lol. 

Yeah yesterday was a lot "snowier" than I thought it would be, but not much out of it.  Next week looks to moderate.

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1 hour ago, bluewave said:

Yeah, 4 out of the last 5 years with March being the snowiest month was more like the Rockies and Plains. Welcome to the 2010’s.;)

Monthly Total Snowfall for NY CITY CENTRAL PARK, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Year
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
Season
2014-2015 0.0 0.2 1.0 16.9 13.6 18.6 0.0 50.3
2015-2016 0.0 0.0 T 27.9 4.0 0.9 T 32.8
2016-2017 0.0 T 3.2 7.9 9.4 9.7 0.0 30.2
2017-2018 0.0 T 7.7 11.2 4.9 11.6 5.5 40.9
2018-2019 0.0 6.4 T 1.1 2.6 10.4 0.0 20.5

 

out of all those winters, the only one that was really good was 2014-15

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2 hours ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

With the 0.7 inches of snow in Central Park yesterday, NYC only needs 15.2 inches of snow between now and Dec 31 2020 for the new 30 year averages calculated in January 2021 to be 30 inches per season.

One MECS away, or several nickel and dime events, like for example this December in the city.

this is mostly accounting though, as I would include 2009-10 as part of the current decade.

and I would consider 15.2 inches an HECS lol, MECS is like 8-12 inches.

 

 

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4 hours ago, purduewx80 said:

The 1.0” of snow at EWR yesterday tied the record for the date. lol

Visible satellite is telling this morning. It’ll be interesting to see if the sun melts any of the snow streaks in the region later today. 

That was 7 hours of snow here!  Roads were snow covered, easily my best snow squall event ever!

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19 hours ago, bluewave said:

Similar theme to late last January and early February. Snow squall followed by short Arctic outbreak and temperature rebound. But the squall this time was less intense. The temperatures won’t be as low or high.

Data for NY CITY CENTRAL PARK, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Date
Max Temperature 
Min Temperature
Snowfall
2019-01-30 35 6 0.4
2019-01-31 16 2 0.0
2019-02-01 21 11 0.0
2019-02-02 34 16 0.0
2019-02-03 53 33 0.0
2019-02-04 61 41 0.0
2019-02-05 65 44 0.0

 

I thought this one was a lot stronger, more widespread and definitely lasted MUCH longer.

No surprise- it's December, when the lakes are the warmest.

 

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20 hours ago, LongBeachSurfFreak said:

Nice, looks like more then the uws. About .25-.5” here 

thats what it looked like here, except whenever a new snow squall pushed through those tracks got covered up again.  We had like half a dozen different snow squalls between 4 PM and 11 PM, each lasted about 20-30 minutes with a ton of wind and lots of blowing snow too.

 

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20 minutes ago, LibertyBell said:

last year's was puny here, with this one all the roads were snow covered and it was snowing hard most of the evening!

These snow squalls are very location specific like summer thunderstorms. Last January for me was more extreme with stronger winds and lower visibility. So I guess you were in a better spot for this one than me. But it’s interesting how we got two such potent events this close together in time. Must be a product of the fast Pacific flow and rapid 500 mb wavelength changes. Notice how last year also had short the Arctic outbreak and temperature moderation a few days later. But the lows and highs over the next week will be less extreme. Another version of 2010’s repeating weather patterns.

Data for NY CITY CENTRAL PARK, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Date
Max Temperature 
Min Temperature
Snowfall
2019-01-30 35 6 0.4
2019-01-31 16 2 0.0
2019-02-01 21 11 0.0
2019-02-02 34 16 0.0
2019-02-03 53 33 0.0
2019-02-04 61 41 0.0
2019-02-05 65 44 0.0

 

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59 minutes ago, LibertyBell said:

this is mostly accounting though, as I would include 2009-10 as part of the current decade.

and I would consider 15.2 inches an HECS lol, MECS is like 8-12 inches.

 

 

I would disagree with that.

A 15.2 inch storm would tie for 20th place on NYC's list of greatest snow storms. To me an HECS, with the emphasis on the H for historic,  would have to be a top 5 storm which in NYC's case would be 21.0 or more inches to break the top 5.

But hey to each his own.

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13 minutes ago, CPcantmeasuresnow said:

I would disagree with that.

A 15.2 inch storm would tie for 20th place on NYC's list of greatest snow storms. To me an HECS, with the emphasis on the H for historic,  would have to be a top 5 storm which in NYC's case would be 21.0 or more inches to break the top 5.

But hey to each his own.

ah I understand where you're coming from, but that bar keeps moving because of the overabundance of big storms we've had in the last couple of decades.

The reason why I keep a lower bar for Central Park is because they typically undermeasure in these scenarios- as an example, Feb 1961 was only 15 inches at Central Park, but over 24 inches at JFK.

If you set the bar at 21.0 then Jan 1996 is no longer a HECS and neither is PD2; do you see what I mean?  Not to mention that Feb 1978 and Feb 1983 are also taken off the list.  And so is Boxing Day 2010!

If you want to change it to NYC or one of the local airports hitting 18 inches (including rounding up), that seems more reasonable.

 

 

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