Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,508
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    joxey
    Newest Member
    joxey
    Joined

September 2023 General Discussion


hardypalmguy
 Share

Recommended Posts

7 hours ago, Chambana said:

Little over an inch in the rain gauge, kinda nice to have a true autumn feeling day, love a grey overcast day once in awhile. 
 

Harvest is in full swing, I noticed even beans are in full harvest mode too. Ready for our first wound up October system. 

Meanwhile, just a little bit east of you, a big fat zero in the tippy bucket. Location, location, location. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, hawkeye_wx said:

I picked up a very quick quarter inch midday as a thin line lifted north through the area.  It was the heaviest downpour I've seen in months.  Cyclone, from the same line, got over an inch, so he's really doing well this month.

Yeah it's definitely greening up now.  Today's 1.30" brings us to 4.20" for month. :D

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, hawkeye_wx said:

I picked up a very quick quarter inch midday as a thin line lifted north through the area.  It was the heaviest downpour I've seen in months.  Cyclone, from the same line, got over an inch, so he's really doing well this month.

Looks like the rain shield associated with the vort max slid just NW of you. Ouch. 

Feels like Mother Nature is trolling me, higher probabilities of heavy rain all around but a wedge of 10% right through the metro. 

4ABB770A-CDD1-4AE6-B9FD-1328B1B8571F.jpeg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

IND AFD:
 

.Long Term...(Saturday night through Friday)
Issued at 259 PM EDT Fri Sep 22 2023

A developing tropical low pressure system just southeast of the
Carolinas is forecast to move northward onshore later today. This
system should then slowly slide northward along the Atlantic
seaboard and slow down. As it does so, it will largely prevent
systems to our west from freely advancing eastward. As such,
subsidence between the two will lead to relatively quiet conditions
this weekend.

Surface flow will primarily be influenced by the tropical system
with surface winds out of the east or northeast beginning Saturday.
This should allow for some weak cold air advection leading to a
reduction in high temperatures through the period. Expect highs in
the mid 70s for most locations as opposed to the lower 80s we are
seeing today. Less-than-ideal radiative cooling conditions may help
moderate low temperatures a bit and limit morning fog potential.

Clouds begin to increase late Saturday and into Sunday as a west
coast trough ejects into the Plains. Most guidance stalls and
eventually breaks down the trough before it reaches Indiana.
However, guidance is trending in the direction of a weak cut-off low
developing from the dying trough and drifting eastward. Moisture
appears limited with continued east/northeasterly flow at the
surface, but enough forcing may be present for some isolated showers
or thundershowers. As such, slight chance PoPs are introduced from
Tuesday onward. Ensemble guidance is is better agreement with the
formation of the weak cut-off low than its subsequent evolution.
Forecast uncertainty therefore increases late in the week.

Despite differences in guidance regarding the departure of the
aforementioned upper-low...enough agreement exists for increased
confidence in quieter weather by Friday/next weekend.

Meanwhile, the ILN AFD:
 

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY/...
Complex long-term period as the combination of the low pressure (TC
Ophelia) and weak upper-level disturbances to the west meander over
the Ohio Valley and surrounding regions through the entire period.
Zooming out and examining the longwave pattern over North America
reveals a longwave ridge axis extending well north over Hudson Bay
late this weekend into early next week. This is largely due to a
longwave trough becoming established over the northwest CONUS and
western Canada. While there are uncertainties in the exact location
of the feature, ensemble guidance (WPC clusters) are fairly
confident in a closed or cut-off low becoming established over the
region through midweek, before eventually evolving into a more
classic Rex Block pattern (Ridge to the north with low to the south)
by the end of the week.

Due to the general weakness of the overall pattern described above,
confidence is high that the Ohio Valley region will avoid widespread
hazardous weather through the period. However, it does not appear
the period will be rainfall free as has been the case for much of
September. After the remnants of TC Ophelia dissipates, the
breakdown of the circulation allows for the below normal PWAT
anomalies to be replaced by above normal values. The values are not
significantly high, but it does point to a likely day-to-day weather
change, especially through midweek. Conditions are expected to be
more cloudy, with occasional rain shower chances across the area.
Expect high temperatures to be limited into the 70s due to these
conditions.

The high confidence regarding the overall pattern doesn`t result in
high confidence for the daily rainfall forecast. This will be
largely dependent on the location of the closed/cut-off upper low
that eventually organized. At this time, the best chances are for
Wednesday and Thursday, with ensemble guidance in agreement of a
consolidated upper low in place. Over the next few days, the
evolution of the pattern will continue, with chance of rainfall
fluctuating up and down throughout much of next week.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Fog yesterday burned off midday then came back in the eve. Showers started then too. Off, n on showers have produced approx 3/4" so far. Looking at the first + anoms in precip since early Spring. Roommate took his girlfriend up the shore this week. Maples are starting to peak right now. Maple ridges looking very nice.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Epic bust.  

For two weeks models locked in on this weekend for potential widespread, good rain.  Only a few days ago the Euro had 2-3+ inches falling across all of Iowa and surrounding areas.  The GFS was similar.  Even as they backed off, they still showed scattered showers and storms moving into eastern Iowa Saturday night.  Instead, there wasn't even anything in central Iowa and now a backdoor front has swept dry air into eastern Iowa, effectively ending any rain chance.

Cedar Rapids has officially received 0.00" from this system.  I got 0.23" Friday.

The only hope remaining is the upper low as it drifts southeast across the region Monday night into Tuesday.  Most models have been keeping most of the rain northeast of here, from se MN to northern IL.  A few models are tracking the upper low a bit farther sw and tease some decent rain here, so there is still a chance to salvage something out of this.

  • Sad 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, hardypalmguy said:

I was down there taking pics.  3 miles from my house.  If this isn't a STRONG sign of climate change, what will the deniers need to see it?

I figured in your case it’s a strip tease. Get them to your house and then you got a real slice of Florida in Wisconsin :guitar:

but that’s crazy they made their way to this latitude 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, michsnowfreak said:

Its a sign that they got caught in the winds of Hurricane Idalia. Make sure to let us know how they are doing when its 0F out.

If you believe the BS concocted story of a hurricane over a month ago blowing them up here, I have a bridge to sell you.  They are up here because the planet is warming.

  • Haha 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...