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It was a Flop... February 2024 Disco. Thread


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19 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

This was a winter for Alaska . They have crushed it since late October. Almost nonstop. When they get winter .. the northeast typically doesn’t . It’s been unrelenting up there 

I took a trip up there last September (early September) and it was already snowing up in Healy! I didn't want to come back lmao I should have spent this winter up there.

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6 minutes ago, ChangeofSeasonsWX said:

I took a trip up there last September (early September) and it was already snowing up in Healy! I didn't want to come back lmao I should have spent this winter up there.

They’ve had some very mild and not much snow winters while we got crushed. It’s rare that both regions share deep winter . When you see that kind of cold up there, you don’t plan on too much deep winter in the East 

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7 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

They’ve had some very mild and not much snow winters while we got crushed. It’s rare that both regions share deep winter . When you see that kind of cold up there, you don’t plan on too much deep winter in the East 

I think 1968-1969 pulled it off for us and AK.

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For any newcomers looking for great summaries of climate data including monthly / seasonal snowfall:

http://climod2.nrcc.cornell.edu/

Quick eyeball: 1957-58 had one of the best turnaround of snowfalls for KBOS: 6.7" Nov-Jan, then 38" Feb-April. I'm curious what teleconnectors were at play in the switch if anyone knows.

Also, not a formal statistical analysis, but the most prominent trend is just all the higher maxima beginning 1992-93 (incidentally, the year I arrived in Boston, skewing my expectations forever ;)):

Seasonal snowfall for KBOS:

image.thumb.png.2612b082fe931d00a5e55d7889cac5a5.png

 

 

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1 minute ago, wxsniss said:

For those looking for great summaries of climate data including monthly / seasonal snowfall:

http://climod2.nrcc.cornell.edu/

Quick eyeball: 1957-58 had one of the best turnaround of snowfalls for KBOS: 6.7" Nov-Jan, then 38" Feb-April. I'm curious what teleconnectors were at play in the switch if anyone knows.

Also, not a formal statistical analysis, but the most prominent trend is just all the higher maxima beginning 1992-93 (incidentally, the year I arrived in Boston, skewing my expectations forever ;)):

Seasonal snowfall for KBOS:

image.thumb.png.2612b082fe931d00a5e55d7889cac5a5.png

 

 

Higher maxes and more mins too. Look how volatile the graph gets as time goes on. 

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6 minutes ago, wxsniss said:

For any newcomers looking for great summaries of climate data including monthly / seasonal snowfall:

http://climod2.nrcc.cornell.edu/

Quick eyeball: 1957-58 had one of the best turnaround of snowfalls for KBOS: 6.7" Nov-Jan, then 38" Feb-April. I'm curious what teleconnectors were at play in the switch if anyone knows.

Also, not a formal statistical analysis, but the most prominent trend is just all the higher maxima beginning 1992-93 (incidentally, the year I arrived in Boston, skewing my expectations forever ;)):

Seasonal snowfall for KBOS:

image.thumb.png.2612b082fe931d00a5e55d7889cac5a5.png

 

 

That period from late 50s to 1970 was so consistent compared to the chaos now.

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16 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

I think 1968-1969 pulled it off for us and AK.

2012-13 as well. I think there’s plenty of examples since the correlation is prob something like a few tenths. 

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21 minutes ago, powderfreak said:

Very much all or nothing.

It actually looks like the late 50s to early 1970a are the outlier. Very consistent AN snowfall. I’ve mentioned it before but that was 17 consecutive seasons of normal or AN snowfall at ORH. Completely abnormal for the climate record going back to late 19th century. But since so many datasets like to start in the 1950 time range and the older generations grew up in that era, many falsely think that was “normal” baseline climate. It wasn’t. 
 

edit: scott beat me to it, lol

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Non Sequitur /Just for fun, comparing accumulated snowfall from 9/30 to 1/29,  accumulated snowfall from 9/30 to 4/30, and December 31st snow cover extent, for the seasons of '08 thru '23 (apologies for the resolution, was trying to fit the size limits :lol:). Then below that this seasons accumulated snowfall from 9/30/23 to 1/29/24

GIF-240129_173359.gif.c45a3a2033cab7134cbbe145674cb3d2.gif

GIF-240129_133045.gif.af8be7c0b16199a6675063603c58b3f6.gif

GIF-240129_182217.gif.09f47e486976afd49920c1d244ea4fc0.gif

sfav2_CONUS_2023093012_to_2024012912.thumb.png.0a8d544a8ab414c8302bdf276c4bb29b.png

Eyeballing it; '11-'12 and '15-'16 were the worst for accumulation in New England region-wide. While on the flip side in recent years ('18-'19 onwards) NNE and the mountains seem to have had some decent seasons while the coastal plain has been way BN.

There's definitely some seasons in there that had hefty amounts of snow after Jan, but in the AN seasons there was already considerably more snow on the ground at the end of January than we have currently.

Also found it interesting to look at the snow cover at the end of December, it varies widely, and the '23 extent was shockingly low.  While it seemed possible to eek out a marginally decent season on the coastal plain in '21-'22 with a low snow cover December, for the most part, lower December snow cover seems to coincide with BN seasons on the coastal plain in general.

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29 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

It actually looks like the late 50s to early 1970a are the outlier. Very consistent AN snowfall. I’ve mentioned it before but that was 17 consecutive seasons of normal or AN snowfall at ORH. Completely abnormal for the climate record going back to late 19th century. But since so many datasets like to start in the 1950 time range and the older generations grew up in that era, many falsely think that was “normal” baseline climate. It wasn’t. 
 

edit: scott beat me to it, lol

Thank you for putting this into perspective.  

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27 minutes ago, HiDefinitionNucleicAcid said:

Non Sequitur /Just for fun, comparing accumulated snowfall from 9/30 to 1/29,  accumulated snowfall from 9/30 to 4/30, and December 31st snow cover extent, for the seasons of '08 thru '23 (apologies for the resolution, was trying to fit the size limits :lol:). Then below that this seasons accumulated snowfall from 9/30/23 to 1/29/24

GIF-240129_173359.gif.c45a3a2033cab7134cbbe145674cb3d2.gif

GIF-240129_133045.gif.af8be7c0b16199a6675063603c58b3f6.gif

GIF-240129_182217.gif.09f47e486976afd49920c1d244ea4fc0.gif

sfav2_CONUS_2023093012_to_2024012912.thumb.png.0a8d544a8ab414c8302bdf276c4bb29b.png

Eyeballing it; '11-'12 and '15-'16 were the worst for accumulation in New England region-wide. While on the flip side in recent years ('18-'19 onwards) NNE and the mountains seem to have had some decent seasons while the coastal plain has been way BN.

There's definitely some seasons in there that had hefty amounts of snow after Jan, but in the AN seasons there was already considerably more snow on the ground at the end of January than we have currently.

Also found it interesting to look at the snow cover at the end of December, it varies widely, and the '23 extent was shockingly low.  While it seemed possible to eek out a marginally decent season on the coastal plain in '21-'22 with a low snow cover December, for the most part, lower December snow cover seems to coincide with BN seasons on the coastal plain in general.

Yup.. generally , December holds the key to SNE winter 

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27 minutes ago, HiDefinitionNucleicAcid said:

Non Sequitur /Just for fun, comparing accumulated snowfall from 9/30 to 1/29,  accumulated snowfall from 9/30 to 4/30, and December 31st snow cover extent, for the seasons of '08 thru '23 (apologies for the resolution, was trying to fit the size limits :lol:). Then below that this seasons accumulated snowfall from 9/30/23 to 1/29/24

GIF-240129_173359.gif.c45a3a2033cab7134cbbe145674cb3d2.gif

GIF-240129_133045.gif.af8be7c0b16199a6675063603c58b3f6.gif

GIF-240129_182217.gif.09f47e486976afd49920c1d244ea4fc0.gif

sfav2_CONUS_2023093012_to_2024012912.thumb.png.0a8d544a8ab414c8302bdf276c4bb29b.png

Eyeballing it; '11-'12 and '15-'16 were the worst for accumulation in New England region-wide. While on the flip side in recent years ('18-'19 onwards) NNE and the mountains seem to have had some decent seasons while the coastal plain has been way BN.

There's definitely some seasons in there that had hefty amounts of snow after Jan, but in the AN seasons there was already considerably more snow on the ground at the end of January than we have currently.

Also found it interesting to look at the snow cover at the end of December, it varies widely, and the '23 extent was shockingly low.  While it seemed possible to eek out a marginally decent season on the coastal plain in '21-'22 with a low snow cover December, for the most part, lower December snow cover seems to coincide with BN seasons on the coastal plain in general.

I was just looking through some of this data too, I didn't realize how crappy it's been around MSP this year. Only 7.3" ytd, and +12,+4 for Dec/Jan. 

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1 minute ago, WinterWolf said:

This is “generally” not a fact.  Sometimes it can. Sometimes it means nothing.  If we capitalized on the good patten of late, it wouldn’t mean jack shit. 

December means more where higher snowfall averages are. For a place like ORH, if you essentially punt December, it’s hard to recover though not impossible. El Niño years are the best way to do it…Ala 1957-58, 1965-66, and even 1982-83 (finished near average that year). 
 

Fo even snowier to a place like Maine where Tamarack is, essentially punting November/December (let’s call it less than 5” of snow) is going to be even harder to come back from. It can still happen but not as easily as a place that might only average 7-10” in Nov/Dec combined. 

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26 minutes ago, WinterWolf said:

This is “generally” not a fact.  Sometimes it can. Sometimes it means nothing.  If we capitalized on the good patten of late, it wouldn’t mean jack shit. 

You are incorrect, I avg 60” a year here. If I get 0 in Nov/ Dec.. how many years am I going to get 60” in Jan and Feb.. I’ll even include Morch .. very few. 

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21 minutes ago, ORH_wxman said:

December means more where higher snowfall averages are. For a place like ORH, if you essentially punt December, it’s hard to recover though not impossible. El Niño years are the best way to do it…Ala 1957-58, 1965-66, and even 1982-83 (finished near average that year). 
 

Fo even snowier to a place like Maine where Tamarack is, essentially punting November/December (let’s call it less than 5” of snow) is going to be even harder to come back from. It can still happen but not as easily as a place that might only average 7-10” in Nov/Dec combined. 

I was talking about SNE only. 

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2 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

You are incorrect, I avg 60” a year here. If I get 0 in Nov/ Dec.. how many years am I going to get 60” in Jan and Feb.. I’ll even include Morch .. very few. 

No I’m not Kevin. I average about 50”…and I’ve done it before. Nobody is saying it’s easy, but it’s not impossible, there’s proof that it’s happened.  It sucks, and it ain’t fun, but we’ve recovered from no snow in December before.  So that’s all I’m gonna say on this.  


And lol about November snow too….the average for most of SNE in November is pathetically low. 

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2 hours ago, Damage In Tolland said:

This was a winter for Alaska . They have crushed it since late October. Almost nonstop. When they get winter .. the northeast typically doesn’t . It’s been unrelenting up there 

Pretty much how it works up there, And its 7 day lag for here, So if they furnace you can expect a cold shot here generally a week later.

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