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February to Forget Volume 2 - 2020


TalcottWx
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6 minutes ago, RUNNAWAYICEBERG said:

Tried to tell em but they refuse, stuck in the same mud the pig dug up for them. 

Yup..a couple days ago I posted about the  Day 14-15 GEFS/GEPS showing signs of a shakeup..but it got a few snowflakes riled up. Lets see if we can get a reasonable March pattern in place for the last few weeks of winter. 

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6 minutes ago, SouthCoastMA said:

Yup..a couple days ago I posted about the  Day 14-15 GEFS/GEPS showing signs of a shakeup..but it got a few snowflakes riled up. Lets see if we can get a reasonable March pattern in place for the last few weeks of winter. 

We could still get shafted from individual events which all most care about but from a science perspective, it makes sense and we like what we see for month end. 

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The abstract message in my opinion from mother nature is that when March does come people who are still hoping for that pattern change are going to be disappointed when if there is any cold air it goes rate back into the west and that winter lovers are still going to be frustrated for at least the first half of the month as the subjective message to our subjective feelings is that

"I am not letting you out, and you need to learn lessons that you cannot expect to receive what you want and nor do I care how you feel."

Even the long term CFS charts which are often probabilities that change on a whim everyday seem to be backing off the cold and moving towards a lesser warm but relatively ridged continuation of a variety of a negative pna.

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1 hour ago, powderfreak said:

What’s really interesting is how massive the variance looks on there the past 2-3 decades.  

Some huge winters and some huge ratters.  A lot more spread recently it seems.  Going back to the 90s that looks like 6 winters above 75” and 6 winters below 25”?

Have to account for different measuring procedures too. Snowfall can be deceiving 

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Just now, Ginx snewx said:

Have to account for different measuring procedures too. Snowfall can be deceiving 

Yeah it probably enhances the variance a little bit. But overall it’s def been more variant than the prior 60-80 years. 

Like I don’t think measuring technique would change Boston’s top 3 winter rankings. 

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Suggestion in the deep field that the hemisphere's getting ready for spring slosh back and that will likely mean substantive blocking ... probably/more likely in the NAO or overlap regions of the adjacent AO ..along with some flow relaxation and more increase r-wave numbers yielding a pretty definitively different circulation bias comparing the predominately longitude/speed shear we've seen everywhere.  

Leaning toward March ..mainly the first the first half, as being a bootleg savior for seasonal totals per an active pattern that is more meridianal in structure which connotes cyclogen regions activate.  I also wouldn't be suprised if the east Pac finally juts a ridge node into western Canada, too.  These are not unprecedented season ending regimes after fast flows, and in fact...fast flows tend to decompose into blocking intervals when they break down anyway, but we'll be superimposing the seasonal temporality on top of that so the two may constructively interfere.

It's a three week ...maybe four squeezed in of vulnerability when the sun actually eases the gradient, while still having enough cold in the hemispheric bank -

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