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January 2023 Medium/Long Range Pattern Discussion Thread


Carvers Gap
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11 minutes ago, Holston_River_Rambler said:

I think Polarwx is his personal website. 

Right but i wonder if this site is having the same issues,it dont really show any spike in temps until maybe today or tomorrow?Seems like the maps of what JMA shows we've already seen the winds decelerate last few days,not trying to nit-pick anything

StratObserve-Ensemble-Time-Series.png

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2 hours ago, Silas Lang said:

Ah, forget about snow days, schools will be getting some flood days instead. Reminds me of February a few years ago, forget which one, but it was rain, rain, rain. 

We were having that discussion today coming out of church.  LOL.  I think they better hold-on to those days, especially in NE TN.  It doesn't take long to burn through them. 

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2 hours ago, Holston_River_Rambler said:

I think it is definitely decelerating and weakening and looks to weaken quite a bit more:

giphy.gif?cid=790b76111121880ee60a06258f

I guess though instead of splitting it as waves break, those waves that bring the warming are being reflected back down across the north pole into Canada. I really wish there was some 3D way to visualize not just the SPV but how a wave would attack the SPV and then be shunted back down to drive the pattern over N America. 

 

That will work right there.  

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Meanwhile, WWAs have been posted for the E TN mountains and far eastern mountains of SW VA.

URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
National Weather Service Morristown TN
313 PM EST Sun Jan 22 2023

VAZ001-002-006-230400-
/O.NEW.KMRX.WW.Y.0002.230123T0500Z-230123T2100Z/
Lee-Wise-Russell-
Including the cities of Rose Hill, Big Stone Gap, Norton, Wise,
Coeburn, Appalachia, Pardee, Hansonville, Lebanon, Dye,
Castlewood, Honaker, and Rosedale
313 PM EST Sun Jan 22 2023

...WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM MIDNIGHT TONIGHT TO
4 PM EST MONDAY...

* WHAT...Snow expected. Total snow accumulations of up to three
  inches, mainly at elevations above 2500 feet. Locally higher
  amounts possible over the highest peaks.

* WHERE...Lee, Wise and Russell Counties.

* WHEN...From midnight tonight to 4 PM EST Monday.

* IMPACTS...Plan on slippery road conditions. The hazardous
  conditions could impact the morning commute.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

Slow down and use caution while traveling.

The latest road conditions for the state you are calling from can
be obtained by calling 5 1 1.

 

And....

URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
National Weather Service Morristown TN
313 PM EST Sun Jan 22 2023

TNZ018-041-043-045-047-072-074-230400-
/O.UPG.KMRX.WS.A.0002.230123T0600Z-230124T0000Z/
/O.NEW.KMRX.WW.Y.0002.230123T0500Z-230123T2100Z/
Johnson-Cocke Smoky Mountains-Southeast Greene-Unicoi-
Southeast Carter-Blount Smoky Mountains-Sevier Smoky Mountains-
Including the cities of Doeville, Mountain City, Neva,
Shady Valley, Trade, Laurel Bloomery, Hartford, Cedar Creek,
Erwin, Unicoi, Limestone Cove, Hampton, Cades Cove, Elkmont,
and Gatlinburg
313 PM EST Sun Jan 22 2023

...WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY IN EFFECT FROM MIDNIGHT TONIGHT TO
4 PM EST MONDAY...

* WHAT...Snow expected. Total snow accumulations of 1 to 5 inches mainly
  at elevations of 2500 feet or higher. Locally higher amounts
  possible over the highest peaks.

* WHERE...The mountains of east Tennessee.

* WHEN...From midnight tonight to 4 PM EST Monday.

* IMPACTS...Plan on slippery road conditions. The hazardous
  conditions could impact the morning or evening commute.

 

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The 18z GFS is picking-up on some light snow TR/F after the system on the 25th passes - Plateau, TRI, SE KY, SW VA, Apps.  It is the GFS, so who knows if it is right but the CMC had something similar but slightly lighter.  Another lighter event(NE TN; SW VA) ensues Saturday per the 18z GFS.  That shouldn't be included in those totals.

Screen_Shot_2023-01-22_at_5.08.43_PM.png

 

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Couple of snippets from the MRX afternoon disco:

Colder air will be pushing in tonight behind the exiting cold front
as the axis of the upper trough to our west shifts east.  As the
trough swings across our area some short wave energy will be
rounding the base of the trough which will help to enhance lift
later tonight/early Monday morning. We will see an increase in
showers this afternoon/evening ahead of the main trough axis/short
wave, and as the freezing level lowers we will see a transition to
snow starting first over the highest peaks by around midnight and
then lowering overnight. With the upslope flow/cold advection
continuing into Monday, snow showers will linger especially over the
normal upslope terrain areas and these locations will likely see
significant snow accumulations. Right now it looks like the highest
peaks of the E TN mountains will see 5 or 6 inches over an 15-18
hour period, but the snow accumulation is expected to be highly
elevation dependent so these amounts will drop off quickly the lower
down one gets. Will issue a winter weather advisory for snow for the
E TN mountains as well as Lee, Wise and Russell counties in SW VA.
The precipitation will diminish in the afternoon and with maybe just
a few flurries over the terrain by the end of the day, and clearing
will begin working in from the south.

and this....(mountain wave??? and more elevation dependent snow)

Tuesday will be dry with near normal temps. Tuesday night a Gulf Low
will move quickly up the Mississippi Valley with the help of a
strong shortwave. Rain chances will increase after midnight with a
rain/snow mix possible in colder locations such as SW Virginia and
the higher elevations of the East Tennessee Mountains. Little to no
snow accumulation is expected Tuesday night through Wednesday
afternoon with strong WAA with this system. The low will move
through the Ohio Valley Wednesday morning. Conditions will be ideal
for mountain wave/downslope wind enhancement with a 65 knot low
level jet to our west. If the forecast holds, it looks like 60 to 70
mph wind gusts will be possible in the East Tennessee Mountains and
adjacent foothills. In the Tennessee Valley, 30 to 40 mph gusts seem
reasonable. Timing of the winds will be late Tuesday night through
Wednesday. Heavy rain at times may lead to minor flooding issues
late Tuesday night through Wednesday morning/early afternoon. The
highest rain totals will be in the southernmost counties and the
higher elevations of the East Tennessee Mountains. Storm total QPF
is one half inch to 1.25 inches for most locations.

Wednesday night and Thursday, a changeover to light snow is expected
in SW Virginia and the East Tennessee Mountains as northwesterly
upper level flow moves into the region along with colder air near
the surface. The northwesterly flow may continue through Saturday
morning as the trough sits over the Eastern U.S. The best window for
snowfall in the higher elevations of the East Tennessee Mountains
and SW Virginia will be Wednesday night through Thursday as wrap
around moisture lingers behind the low. Thursday night through
Saturday morning may see some flurries or light snow at times but
moisture will be lacking by that time and accumulation is less
likely.

 

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The 18z GFS was not warm end-to-end.  The first 1-9 days is seasonal to BN(edit...had to go check).  The issue is the MJO.  Take a look at those forecasts on the CPC website and that will explain the understandable waffling at this range.  FTR, my seasonal forecast has Feb as much above normal....as I basically just used the past two years of Nina winters to create it.  As noted in the Feb thread, part of Feb is likely to be VERY warm before cooling back down.  I think our window holds util Feb 5th, then warm for ~10 days, then cold again.  Then with shortening wavelengths, something could pop within a 3-4 day window.  

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2 hours ago, Carvers Gap said:

Day 1-10 GFS deterministic run....that gets us through the end of this month.  As noted, the last third of this month would see a pattern change.  There it is.  Now, we will see if it verifies. 

Screen_Shot_2023-01-22_at_7.19.22_PM.png

 

  On 1/21/2023 at 12:02 PM, Carvers Gap said:

That might be a response to the SSW....it is a bit quick, but nature doesn’t follow my rules!  LOL.  That is how it looks.

And sadly, that is a very minimal drop in temperatures.

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3 hours ago, Carvers Gap said:

Ensembles, ensembles, ensembles when talking February.   The GFS deterministic run at this range is like a single member of the GEFS at this range.  It may show us certain trends, but might want to take a look at the ensembles before being swayed.  

So true! Ensembles have been generally cooler than the deterministic. Can't live run to run on deterministics alone. 

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3 hours ago, Carvers Gap said:

Ensembles, ensembles, ensembles when talking February.   The GFS deterministic run at this range is like a single member of the GEFS at this range.  It may show us certain trends, but might want to take a look at the ensembles before being swayed.  

Oh I totally agree on that. 

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Ah, forget about snow days, schools will be getting some flood days instead. Reminds me of February a few years ago, forget which one, but it was rain, rain, rain. 

We actually had back to back February floods. 2018 and 19. In 18’ I had around 13” of rain in 3 days. 19’ I had 14” but it was over 5-6 days. In 18 I actually packed a bag for me and my son and was ready to go when it finally stopped. Water was coming up and over my only exit out of my subdivision.


.
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3 minutes ago, Daniel Boone said:

A dusting here this morning with steady light snow. just 200 yards to my east and onward it is pouring. apparently projectory upslope. Cams in Big stone gap and Norton show what looks like 1-2 inches and snow rather heavy.

Here's a link. scroll down to cams.

Tri-Cities Cameras | News, Weather, Sports, Breaking News | WCYB

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