Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,509
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    joxey
    Newest Member
    joxey
    Joined

November 2022 OBS/DISC


Baroclinic Zone
 Share

Recommended Posts

40 minutes ago, Sey-Mour Snow said:

Better blocking in long range on ensembles overnight. Also still a solid storm signal continuing around Thanksgiving. 

Yeah that 0Z oper GFS goes seemingly historic with EPO in the deep range.

I mentioned this yesterday… Seems to be a hemispheric war going on/reflected in the models, between the will of the polar indices vs the will of the ENSO.  They are in a bit of a diametric states. 

I’m just kind of musing with that… But sometimes -ENSO winters do represent early before getting sucky later on so it could just be part of all that too

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

here were some thoughts I posted in the MA subforum, they're applicable here too. the blocking showing up looks legit and Dec 2010 is looking like a better and better analog recently

5 minutes ago, brooklynwx99 said:

it's also quite easy to see how we get from the pattern at the end of the EPS to a pattern like December 2010. yes, I know there was bad luck for you guys down here, but I would take that pattern in the MA every single time

ecmwf-ensemble-avg-nhemi-z500_anom_5day-9766400.thumb.png.d040d2a9499425a7eb1850d037e53786.png

295409859_unnamed(2).png.44c481658ddb01ed647d8af1b3512e19.pngunknown.png.d8881c9f56d890b504cb21699371ada2.png

all that's really needed is for the blocking to mature and retrograde, which is something that blocking from Scandinavian ridging often does over the course of a few weeks. it takes some time, but it happens more often than not. yes, the Pacific looks "bad" with the -PNA, but it doesn't matter with a west-based -NAO and cross-polar flow established by the poleward Aleutian ridge

so, not to hype things up too much, but the chance for a Dec 2010-like pattern is becoming a bit higher looking at the general pattern progression

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, brooklynwx99 said:

here were some thoughts I posted in the MA subforum, they're applicable here too. the blocking showing up looks legit and Dec 2010 is looking like a better and better analog recently

Yeah it’s close. But definitely don’t want to see that trough over the west coast of Canada get stronger. Let’s shift that blocking in Greenland further southwest. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Great Snow 1717 said:

Wow!!....that is far too warm for my liking.  I like my home to be cool during the fall/winter.

last night the wood stove was cooking, hit 82° in the living room....I did not add another log after 10 pm and it was still 66° when I woke up this morning. Not too bad despite the 18.9° temp this morning

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I’m probably in the minority but as a winter storm enthusiast I’m not too keen on blocking over Greenland punching southwest into the Maritimes like that…

But I guess we can get into relative weighting and so forth to really qualify that - in other words …yeah, it depends on what’s going on all around it.  It doesn’t mean it’s automatically terrible or bad, I just would rather not

The hangup I’m having with it is that we go from the storm track redirect to a storm track suppression scenario with very narrow window.

It’s probably why studies like H.A. from way way back in the day demoed that index modality is when the systems happen …less during stable index modes… But that gets into a tl;dr… I mean the entire study is really intuitive: if a given system is in stasis (mode) no storms; disrupt that mode (modality) …storm

I kind a like middling height +hgt anomalies that take place NE-E of James Bay … more indirectly footed in blocking over Greenland but not the boulder itself.  You see field swell and recede over the course of 300 hrs … perhaps a couple of times in the mid/upper atmosphere.  The occurrence of that is probably more a reflection of the non-linear wave response off the Pacific but that’s really getting complex  … Anyway, when that happens more modestly like that we tend/allow more dynamic stream interplay in the Ohio valley-MA-NE sandbox … better storm production that way.  

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

I’m probably in the minority but as a winter storm enthusiast I’m not too keen on blocking over Greenland punching southwest into the Maritimes like that…

But I guess we can get into relative weighting and so forth to really qualify that - in other words …yeah, it depends on what’s going on all around it.  It doesn’t mean it’s automatically terrible or bad, I just would rather not

The hangup I’m having with it is that we go from the storm track redirect to a storm track suppression scenario with very narrow window.

It’s probably why studies like H.A. from way way back in the day demoed that index modality is when the systems happen …less during stable index modes… But that gets into a tl;dr… I mean the entire study is really intuitive: if a given system is in stasis (mode) no storms; disrupt that mode (modality) …storm

I kind a like middling height +hgt anomalies that take place NE-E of James Bay … more indirectly footed in blocking over Greenland but not the boulder itself.  You see field swell and recede over the course of 300 hrs … perhaps a couple of times in the mid/upper atmosphere.  The occurrence of that is probably more a reflection of the non-linear wave response off the Pacific but that’s really getting complex  … Anyway, when that happens more modestly like that we tend/allow more dynamic stream interplay in the Ohio valley-MA-NE sandbox … better storm production that way.  

The problem is the Pacific starts to get a little unfavorable. So we'll need that to help nose in some colder air. I don't think that would suppress as it stands given the lower heights near BC. Probably more of some overrunning deals..maybe a clipper or even miller B if timed well. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

The problem is the Pacific starts to get a little unfavorable. So we'll need that to help nose in some colder air. I don't think that would suppress as it stands given the lower heights near BC. Probably more of some overrunning deals..maybe a clipper or even miller B if timed well. 

I was thinking that too..one offsets the other in that case. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

58 minutes ago, CoastalWx said:

The problem is the Pacific starts to get a little unfavorable. So we'll need that to help nose in some colder air. I don't think that would suppress as it stands given the lower heights near BC. Probably more of some overrunning deals..maybe a clipper or even miller B if timed well. 

Oh I agree lol I just meant that I get a little bit nervous paranoia when I see the retrograde starting to happen.

Like I said “doesn’t mean it’s automatically terrible or bad” and it depends also what’s going on all around. 

…having said that… My experience over the years is that we’re better off with the description I provided before, rather than just getting a big block parked like an elephant‘s ass east of James Bay. Not that anyone in present company is thinking so… but feel that there is that misconception, perhaps a vestige of those 1990s hoopla surrounding the NAO when it first busted press and became the whole popular meme of the day 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...