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23 hours ago, eduggs said:

Maybe.

I was just trying to point out the difference between atmospheric scientists, climatologists, hydrologists with graduate degrees, PhDs etc who do research vs. "weather forecasters" who tend not to utilize the scientific method as readily. Certainly there is overlap, but in a general sense there is a divide between the types who study meteorology in college vs. physics or chemistry.

I thought meteorology was physics, chemistry and mathematics?  I must have taken the wrong program...

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fwiw... if the ULL tracks east, probably no go for us n of I80 but if the ULL tracks 1 or 2 degs further N, then I think the I84 corridor has a good chance of deformation zone snow (4") in n-nw edge of 7H LOW where FGEN-convergence occurs.  I'll be watching trends in the modeled 7H-5H lows the next several days.  In the meantime, 12z op model heights at 500MB are generally 30-60M higher than the 12z EC op. That makes a significant difference in ptype nw edge. 

Thermal profile are marginal but I'm pretty sure if models reverse the se trend in today's models, that we'll see a pretty decent amount of snow in the Pocs-I84 corridor.  This still has a chance to edge a little further north than recently modeled. It's not an overwhelming amount of cooling in the column that is needed, in my opinion. It's latitude of the 7H-5H low that I think is important fgen significant snow N of I80.

 

For reference check some Novak, Grumm, Bosart, Evans etc on banding, 

 

 

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48 minutes ago, bluewave said:

Only 3 seasons in the last 30 years with a seasonal snowfall in the 20s vs 12 for previous 30. The the mid-range has been missing as the high and low extremes increase. So you have a high success rate if your seasonal forecasts avoid a seasonal forecast in the 20s. But the trick is knowing ahead of time if it’s under 20” or over 30”. We’ll know before this decade is out if the warming of the climate and La Niña WPAC warm pool results in under 20” or even 10” some years becoming the new normal.

 

Time Series Summary for JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, NY - Oct through Sep
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Rank
Season
Total Snowfall 
Missing Count
1 2022-2023 0.2 235
2 2021-2022 21.7 0
3 2020-2021 34.5 0
4 2019-2020 3.8 0
5 2018-2019 14.7 0
6 2017-2018 35.5 0
7 2016-2017 30.9 0
8 2015-2016 41.4 0
9 2014-2015 44.2 0
10 2013-2014 45.6 0
11 2012-2013 17.6 0
12 2011-2012 3.7 0
13 2010-2011 42.0 0
14 2009-2010 47.2 0
15 2008-2009 22.3 0
16 2007-2008 11.7 0
17 2006-2007 8.5 0
18 2005-2006 25.4 0
19 2004-2005 36.8 0
20 2003-2004 37.6 0
21 2002-2003 56.2 0
22 2001-2002 4.5 0
23 2000-2001 33.8 0
24 1999-2000 14.1 0
25 1998-1999 12.3 0
26 1997-1998 3.6 0
27 1996-1997 9.8 0
28 1995-1996 69.0 0
29 1994-1995 7.9 0
30 1993-1994 45.2 0


 

Time Series Summary for JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, NY - Oct through Sep
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Season
Total Snowfall 
Missing Count
1992-1993 20.0 0
1991-1992 10.5 0
1990-1991 20.4 0
1989-1990 9.6 0
1988-1989 8.2 0
1987-1988 19.7 0
1986-1987 23.1 0
1985-1986 19.3 0
1984-1985 27.3 0
1983-1984 22.0 0
1982-1983 32.1 0
1981-1982 24.9 0
1980-1981 16.5 0
1979-1980 11.0 0
1978-1979 27.2 0
1977-1978 48.5 0
1976-1977 22.7 0
1975-1976 20.7 0
1974-1975 10.5 0
1973-1974 21.8 0
1972-1973 1.6 0
1971-1972 14.9 0
1970-1971 20.1 0
1969-1970 19.5 0
1968-1969 30.8 0
1967-1968 17.4 0
1966-1967 47.0 0
1965-1966 15.6 0
1964-1965 29.5 0
1963-1964 34.4 1

JFK will probably be the first in our local area to approach 10" =\  Chris is this the entire snowfall record from JFK? They didn't have anything from the great winter of 1960-61 or before that?  I remember 25.0" of snow at JFK from the great February 1961 blizzard.

 

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27 minutes ago, LibertyBell said:

JFK will probably be the first in our local area to approach 10" =\  Chris is this the entire snowfall record from JFK? They didn't have anything from the great winter of 1960-61 or before that?  I remember 25.0" of snow at JFK from the great February 1961 blizzard.

 

Most of the snowfall is missing before 1960.

 

Time Series Summary for JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, NY - Oct through Sep
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Season
Total Snowfall 
Missing Count
1947-1948 0.0 290
1948-1949 44.5 0
1949-1950 12.5 122
1950-1951 M 365
1951-1952 M 366
1952-1953 M 365
1953-1954 M 365
1954-1955 M 365
1955-1956 M 366
1956-1957 M 365
1957-1958 M 365
1958-1959 8.3 123
1959-1960 34.2 3
1960-1961 58.5 1
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1 minute ago, bluewave said:

Most of the snowfall is missing before 1960.

 

Time Series Summary for JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, NY - Oct through Sep
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Season
Total Snowfall 
Missing Count
1947-1948 0.0 290
1948-1949 44.5 0
1949-1950 12.5 122
1950-1951 M 365
1951-1952 M 366
1952-1953 M 365
1953-1954 M 365
1954-1955 M 365
1955-1956 M 366
1956-1957 M 365
1957-1958 M 365
1958-1959 8.3 123
1959-1960 34.2 3
1960-1961 58.5 1

wow 1947-48 was probably the snowiest before 1960-61

 

1948-49 was the first one with the one big storm but mild winter.... but having that right after 1947-48 must have been something.

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5 hours ago, wdrag said:

fwiw... if the ULL tracks east, probably no go for us n of I80 but if the ULL tracks 1 or 2 degs further N, then I think the I84 corridor has a good chance of deformation zone snow (4") in n-nw edge of 7H LOW where FGEN-convergence occurs.  I'll be watching trends in the modeled 7H-5H lows the next several days.  In the meantime, 12z op model heights at 500MB are generally 30-60M higher than the 12z EC op. That makes a significant difference in ptype nw edge. 

Thermal profile are marginal but I'm pretty sure if models reverse the se trend in today's models, that we'll see a pretty decent amount of snow in the Pocs-I84 corridor.  This still has a chance to edge a little further north than recently modeled. It's not an overwhelming amount of cooling in the column that is needed, in my opinion. It's latitude of the 7H-5H low that I think is important fgen significant snow N of I80.

 

For reference check some Novak, Grumm, Bosart, Evans etc on banding, 

 

 

The 0z UKMET gets the ULL pretty far north. Would probably be some decent deform snow NEPA - I-84 corridor. The soundings that I can see - GFS - are really warm above the deck. Wish I could see some of the others. I think you're right that localized banding would cool the column - probably deep layer isothermal result.

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Morning thoughts…

Today will be mostly cloudy and mild. A few locations could see a shower. High temperatures will reach the upper 40s and lower 50s in most areas. Southern New Jersey and southeastern Pennsylvania could see the mercury reach or exceed 60°. Likely high temperatures around the region include:

New York City (Central Park): 53°

Newark: 56°

Philadelphia: 61°

It will be unseasonably mild through Friday.

Normals:

New York City: 30-Year: 41.0°; 15-Year: 41.1°

Newark: 30-Year: 41.7°; 15-Year: 41.9°

Philadelphia: 30-Year: 43.0°; 15-Year: 42.9°

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6 hours ago, eduggs said:

The 0z UKMET gets the ULL pretty far north. Would probably be some decent deform snow NEPA - I-84 corridor. The soundings that I can see - GFS - are really warm above the deck. Wish I could see some of the others. I think you're right that localized banding would cool the column - probably deep layer isothermal result.

I haven't seen anything that discards the potential. Have informed my FB friends.. possibly 1" snow ATL Sunday morning, altering travel into western NC and western VA mountains Sunday with potential for widespread mountain power outages due to ice-wet snow accums,  and potential slippery mixed mess for a few hours interior suburbs BWI-BOS Sunday night, presuming it precipitates up here.

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19 minutes ago, donsutherland1 said:

Morning thoughts…

Today will be mostly cloudy and mild. A few locations could see a shower. High temperatures will reach the upper 40s and lower 50s in most areas. Southern New Jersey and southeastern Pennsylvania could see the mercury reach or exceed 60°. Likely high temperatures around the region include:

New York City (Central Park): 53°

Newark: 56°

Philadelphia: 61°

It will be unseasonably mild through Friday.

Normals:

New York City: 30-Year: 41.0°; 15-Year: 41.1°

Newark: 30-Year: 41.7°; 15-Year: 41.9°

Philadelphia: 30-Year: 43.0°; 15-Year: 42.9°

Beautiful sunrise coming up Don, all the colors are out this morning!

 

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13 hours ago, LibertyBell said:

That's still a science degree though, there's a difference between that and some 19 yr old on Twitter....

 

Granted. But as I've pointed out in the past, meteorology is not a licensed field, so in fact anyone can say they are a weather forecaster, and some over the years have been good at it. 

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The next 8 days are averaging     44degs.(39/50) or +8.

Month to date is     33.5[-0.6].         Should be       38.8[+3.4] by the 17th.

Reached 57 here yesterday at 4pm.

No Cool  Down on the Ens.      Op is much better late.

1675922400-t73hfneFuPs.png

0% till the 21st. and not much better thereafter:

1677304800-UfdHYLwIn6U.png

43*(63%RH) here at 6am.        45* at 8am.        47* at 9am.      50* at 11am.       49* at Noon.       50* at 3pm.        48* at6pm.

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58 minutes ago, weatherpruf said:

Granted. But as I've pointed out in the past, meteorology is not a licensed field, so in fact anyone can say they are a weather forecaster, and some over the years have been good at it. 

"Doctor" Bob Harris was purdy good...

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2 hours ago, donsutherland1 said:

New York City's snow season futility rankings through February 8th:

image.png.56a5d98ed0c205f41340809c45b13e65.png

I remember 97/98 being extremely rainy with a lot of perfect benchmark track rainstorms. 

That was an El Nino, which are typically cooler than la Ninas like this year. That being said, I wonder if 97/98 would have been warmer than this year to date if we had more clear day. This year we have had cold air closer by in the Canadian region.

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15 hours ago, bluewave said:

13.7”

 

Monthly Total Snowfall for JFK INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Year
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
Season
1991-1992 0.0 T 0.9 1.9 0.8 6.9 T 10.5
1990-1991 0.0 0.0 6.1 5.7 7.9 0.7 0.0 20.4
1989-1990 0.0 3.7 0.8 1.4 1.3 1.9 0.5 9.6
1988-1989 0.0 0.0 0.7 4.7 0.1 2.7 0.0 8.2
1987-1988 0.0 0.4 3.0 15.7 0.5 0.1 0.0 19.7

 

 

An interesting comparison IMO would be a 6 year comparison of the following:

96/97 through 01/02

17/18 through this year to date

Outside of 00/01, that stretch was the worst in my lifetime.

If next year is a super Nino, the 6 year period of 18/19 through next year could compare.

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Winter 2022-2023 has been exceptionally warm and remarkably snow-free in the northern Middle Atlantic region. Through February 8th, New York City has seen its lowest seasonal snowfall on record and Philadelphia has seen its second lowest figure.

The current "normal" values are:

New York City: DJF mean temperature: 36.2°; mean seasonal snowfall: 29.8"
Philadelphia: DJF mean temperature: 36.1°; mean seasonal snowfall: 23.2"

This raises a question. What will seasonal snowfall look like in the warmer winters to come over the next two decades?

The winters in the lower Middle Atlantic region provide some insight. Therefore, I created a dataset comprised of all the winters in Norfolk, Raleigh, and Richmond. The dataset was comprised of 30-season mean winter (December-February) temperatures and 30-season mean snowfall (July 1-June 30). All of those winters had 30-season mean winter temperature averages of 37.0° or above. Washington, DC had also seen its 30-season mean winter temperatures reach and exceed 37.0°. All 30-season mean winter temperatures of 37.0° or above and the corresponding mean seasonal snowfall were added to the dataset. The sample size was 319.

The next step involved creating a regression equation from the dataset. Once that was done, seasonal snowfall ranges based on 95% confidence intervals were constructed. The coefficient of determination was 0.836.

image.png.8a1df5892ec47156d5f9f2dc6f158b81.png

At least two caveats apply:

1. The regional climate (precipitation, proximity to the Atlantic Ocean, etc..) differ somewhat in the northern Mid-Atlantic region from the area from which the dataset was constructed.

2. The northern Mid-Atlantic region has closer proximity to Canada and, even warm winters, could see stronger pushes of cold air.

Finally, to see how things might be playing out relative to the expectations from the regression equation, I examined winters with mean temperatures of 37.0° or above and 40.0° or above in New York City and Philadelphia. These are individual winters and are not equivalent to 30-season averages. They also fall into colder regimes, which could skew seasonal snowfall higher. Sample size issues, especially with the warmest (40.0° or warmer) winters arise e.g., Winter 2015-2016, which saw a historic snowstorm, skews the mean figure for the small sample sizes.

For Winters with a Mean Temperature of 37.0° or Above:

New York City: Mean Temperature: 38..4°; Mean Snowfall: 18.1"
Philadelphia: Mean Temperature: 38.9°; Mean Snowfall: 13.0"

For Winters with a Mean Temperature of 40.0° or Above:

New York City: Mean Temperature: 40.8°; Mean Snowfall: 12.3"
Philadelphia: Mean Temperature: 41.2°; Mean Snowfall: 11.1"

 

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1 hour ago, EastonSN+ said:

Speaking of heat island effect, I wonder what the 100 year temperature change is for say Larchmont as compared to Central Park. 

We use CPK as our overall benchmark, however most live outside of Manhattan.

Unfortunately, many of these communities outside of NYC don’t have climate data.

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1 hour ago, donsutherland1 said:

Unfortunately, many of these communities outside of NYC don’t have climate data.

I saw a couple snowfall maps in the MA forum in the past where a little snow deficit "hole" surrounded DC almost perfectly. Snowfall accums we're east west south and north.

I feel that NYC will see a drop off in snowfall much much quicker than all surrounding areas in a similar manner. Where say Larchmont will remain average in snowfall for years to come while CPK will see a dramatic drop in average snowfall.

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16 hours ago, wdrag said:

fwiw... if the ULL tracks east, probably no go for us n of I80 but if the ULL tracks 1 or 2 degs further N, then I think the I84 corridor has a good chance of deformation zone snow (4") in n-nw edge of 7H LOW where FGEN-convergence occurs.  I'll be watching trends in the modeled 7H-5H lows the next several days.  In the meantime, 12z op model heights at 500MB are generally 30-60M higher than the 12z EC op. That makes a significant difference in ptype nw edge. 

Thermal profile are marginal but I'm pretty sure if models reverse the se trend in today's models, that we'll see a pretty decent amount of snow in the Pocs-I84 corridor.  This still has a chance to edge a little further north than recently modeled. It's not an overwhelming amount of cooling in the column that is needed, in my opinion. It's latitude of the 7H-5H low that I think is important fgen significant snow N of I80.

 

For reference check some Novak, Grumm, Bosart, Evans etc on banding, 

 

 

At this point I'm rooting for it to stay south and avoid rain but I could see up around I84 where you'd want a north trend. The 12z CMC isn't actually that far off from probably being a little interesting north of NYC/SNE if it bombed out a bit sooner.  The air mass is pretty horrendous though even for places North and West. 

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