snowman19 Posted September 29 Share Posted September 29 2 minutes ago, so_whats_happening said: As for Tropical activity there may be two systems in the next week, the wave in the Atlantic looks really nice right now which should be the main show. Still early overall but it looks like a recurve as of now is the likely and at least a Hurricane. Most models have some type of recurve and moderate strength. Then another little system in the gulf may develop into a named system probably wont get much past that. Of course looking forward it looks as though the Atlantic will be weakly open for business if a nice wave can come off the African coast but Caribbean and Gulf may be shut off for a bit. We get a push back into weak 4/5/6 probably close to mid month as we go into null by next weekend with the easterlies picking up and a little VP push. I mean it really sucks to see runs like the 00z Euro North America view and we are only in October. It gives me hope but feel I need to dial that back in a bit unfortunately. Agree. Once the MJO pushes into the Maritime Continent again (albeit weakly into phases 4-6), we very likely see another lull in the Atlantic with compensatory sinking air over the basin. By then we will be into mid-late October, so starting to get very late for any hyperactivity at that point in time as we get closer to November Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted September 29 Share Posted September 29 5 hours ago, so_whats_happening said: This storm was very much how Michael developed 6 years ago and had such a better opportunity to go all out then Debby did due to track, If Debby had a little less land interaction initially like Helene did it could have done similar. Not sure about that since the overall conditions back in early August weren’t nearly as favorable for tropical development as we saw this week. This was the first time since 1952 that we had 3 named storms form from 9-24 to 9-27. The favorable MJO window in early August was still meeting resistance from the unfavorable atmospheric conditions which were in place before they dramatically improved this week. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PhiEaglesfan712 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 I don't think 20-21 is that bad of an analog. It's probably the best MEI/RONI match after 07-08. Things going against it are solar min (but so was 07-08) and that it was a hyperactive hurricane season. It isn't the top analog (07-08 is), but it's certainly in the next best ones along with 16-17 (great ONI/RONI match) and 98-99. I'd go 07-08, 16-17, and 20-21 as best analog years. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 On 9/29/2024 at 4:22 AM, snowman19 said: One thing is for sure, this La Niña definitely looks like a central-based/CP event now. The only cold subsurface water left is in region 3.4 @40/70 Benchmark Amazing how fast the subsurface warmed and went to a purely CP signature. There’s actually +5 anomalies just below the eastern ENSO regions now…. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mitchnick Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 21 minutes ago, snowman19 said: Amazing how fast the subsurface warmed and went to a purely CP signature. There’s actually +5 anomalies just below the eastern ENSO regions now…. I think you're looking at last year's map. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 6 minutes ago, mitchnick said: I think you're looking at last year's map. Oh jeez you’re right. Must be a glitch this morning, the bottom one is up to date. Still a very CP signature Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 Seems like the -PDO background 500mb and Pacific Jet pattern is continuing to be more impressive than the La Niña with a 600dm ridge east of Japan and 6 sigma jet max north of the Aleutians. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 On 9/28/2024 at 8:12 AM, PhiEaglesfan712 said: 07-08 is probably the top analog right now. That year, we had just the 2 big storms (Dean and Felix) like we do this year (Beryl and Helene). Also, the la nina development took off right about this time in 2007, and though we will likely not reach the ONI strength of that year, the MEI/RONI are a near perfect match. Not to mention, 07-08 was a central based, modoki la nina. Only thing really going against it was that 07-08 was near a solar minimum, while we are currently near a solar maximum. 22-23 was a dissipating la nina, which is opposite of what we have this year. 2007 is a good analog save for the solar, as you said....but you can probably find faults with most of the ideal solar analogs, as well. I expect the RONI to end up a bit weaker than 2007. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jm1220 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 45 minutes ago, bluewave said: Seems like the -PDO background 500mb and Pacific Jet pattern is continuing to be more impressive than the La Niña with a 600dm ridge east of Japan and 6 sigma jet max north of the Aleutians. And another huge ridge building right where we don’t want it. Sigh Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mitchnick Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 1 minute ago, jm1220 said: And another huge ridge building right where we don’t want it. Sigh Don't think we should take too much away for winter from progged weather on 10/3. 1 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 1 hour ago, 40/70 Benchmark said: 2007 is a good analog save for the solar, as you said....but you can probably find faults with most of the ideal solar analogs, as well. I expect the RONI to end up a bit weaker than 2007. 2007 is way better than some of the other ones floating around social media (83-84, 95-96, 10-11, 13-14, 17-18, 20-21) 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 1 hour ago, mitchnick said: Don't think we should take too much away for winter from progged weather on 10/3. Well, when its been the most prominent feature for half of a decade, I think its a more viable indicator than the average bear. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 6 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said: Well, when its been the most prominent feature for half of a decade, I think its a more viable indicator than the average bear. If @bluewave indicators hold, it definitely doesn’t look promising. Weak CP La Niña and the progged weak MJO 4-6 forcing starting around mid-October….. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 4 minutes ago, snowman19 said: If @bluewave indicators hold, it definitely doesn’t look promising. Weak CP La Niña and the progged weak MJO 4-6 forcing starting around mid-October….. La Nina in and of itself isn't a big issue given in its meager intensity, but the larger issue is that persistent background state. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 2 hours ago, bluewave said: Seems like the -PDO background 500mb and Pacific Jet pattern is continuing to be more impressive than the La Niña with a 600dm ridge east of Japan and 6 sigma jet max north of the Aleutians. Just now, 40/70 Benchmark said: La Nina in and of itself isn't a big issue given in its meager intensity, but the larger issue is that persistent background state. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 4 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said: La Nina in and of itself isn't a big issue given in its meager intensity, but the larger issue is that persistent background state. Correct. Weak Niña aside, @bluewave found a pretty strong correlation to weak MJO forcing in phases 4-6 in October. As of now, that is what the models are showing happening. Of course, that can change though Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Terpeast Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 Worth noting most models take the MJO into 4-6 for October, but differ in strength. GFS ens goes record strong especially in the second half of the month, while Euro ens keeps it weak or COD. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jm1220 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 4 minutes ago, Terpeast said: Worth noting most models take the MJO into 4-6 for October, but differ in strength. GFS ens goes record strong especially in the second half of the month, while Euro ens keeps it weak or COD. Maybe the record strong if it happens would be the one decent indicator I see for winter, since Bluewave showed how stronger 4-6 in Oct has preceded the better La Niña winter outcomes further south in the East in the last decade. I see nothing else promising-our ACE card looks like it’ll be a cackling Joker, another huge ridge popping east of Japan where we want something, anything to reduce those boiling SSTs, weak central based Nina, on and on. Maybe we can get something to reduce the massive SE ridge but if the PNA is that badly negative it’ll reinforce the big SE ridge. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 2 hours ago, jm1220 said: And another huge ridge building right where we don’t want it. Sigh That Aleutian Ridge from east of Japan to south of the Aleutians has been the most dominant 500mb height anomaly in the Northern Hemisphere since January. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mitchnick Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 32 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said: Well, when its been the most prominent feature for half of a decade, I think its a more viable indicator than the average bear. I agree of it's prominence thanks to the -PDO, but the degree of the ridge breaks down in a couple of days and much can change during the winter months some 3-6 months later imho. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Terpeast Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 28 minutes ago, jm1220 said: Maybe the record strong if it happens would be the one decent indicator I see for winter, since Bluewave showed how stronger 4-6 in Oct has preceded the better La Niña winter outcomes further south in the East in the last decade. I see nothing else promising-our ACE card looks like it’ll be a cackling Joker, another huge ridge popping east of Japan where we want something, anything to reduce those boiling SSTs, weak central based Nina, on and on. Maybe we can get something to reduce the massive SE ridge but if the PNA is that badly negative it’ll reinforce the big SE ridge. Yeah, we basically have nothing else going for us (anyone south of 40n east of the apps). If the MJO flops this month like the euro is saying, we have a fairly high probability of looking at another stinker of a winter like 2022-23 barring a rogue fluke. If the MJO pops OTOH, it’ll be a good test of the relationship that bluewave has sniffed out and hopefully we’ll get at least a few weeks of a decent wintry period. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michsnowfreak Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 1 hour ago, 40/70 Benchmark said: Well, when its been the most prominent feature for half of a decade, I think its a more viable indicator than the average bear. I may be misreading or you may be posting in jest, but the recent years Oct/Nov weather has in no way been an indicator of the coming winter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 40 minutes ago, michsnowfreak said: I may be misreading or you may be posting in jest, but the recent years Oct/Nov weather has in no way been an indicator of the coming winter. The point that it hasn't been relegated to October. Its been omnipresent. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BlizzardWx Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 At least in terms of observed weather this fall. It's interesting how dry it's been down here. 8th driest September on record at TUL and looks quite dry into at least mid October. Some areas down here have had more rain than the airport, but it was a dry month for sure. Looking at past years with similar levels of dryness, most of them were ENSO neutral years for whatever that is worth. I am unsure how this comparison would hold up over a broader area. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mitchnick Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 Updated Cansips is out later today or this evening. Let's see if it gives any support to the Cfs2, which continues to keep MW & East north of Virginia with average temps and precip for Dec-Feb. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PhiEaglesfan712 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 1 hour ago, michsnowfreak said: I may be misreading or you may be posting in jest, but the recent years Oct/Nov weather has in no way been an indicator of the coming winter. Oddly enough, since 2009-10, the September temperature has been an indicator of whether the upcoming February will be warmer than average, at least here at PHL. Sep 2009 - 68.0 Feb 2010 - 31.8 Sep 2010 - 72.9 Feb 2011 - 37.2 Sep 2011 - 71.1 Feb 2012 - 40.9Sep 2012 - 70.3 Feb 2013 - 35.1 Sep 2013 - 67.9 Feb 2014 - 32.1 Sep 2014 - 70.5 Feb 2015 - 25.8 Sep 2015 - 74.5 Feb 2016 - 38.6 Sep 2016 - 73.5 Feb 2017 - 44.2 Sep 2017 - 71.4 Feb 2018 - 41.9 Sep 2018 - 72.5 Feb 2019 - 37.1 Sep 2019 - 72.5 Feb 2020 - 40.8Sep 2020 - 69.4 Feb 2021 - 34.2 Sep 2021 - 71.6 Feb 2022 - 39.7 Sep 2022 - 72.1 Feb 2023 - 42.7 Sep 2023 - 71.4 Feb 2024 - 40.1 All the sub-71 Septembers (in bold) have produced a below average February. September 2024 is going to end below 71. If the trend continues, February 2025 temperature is going to be below average at PHL. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michsnowfreak Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 35 minutes ago, PhiEaglesfan712 said: Oddly enough, since 2009-10, the September temperature has been an indicator of whether the upcoming February will be warmer than average, at least here at PHL. Sep 2009 - 68.0 Feb 2010 - 31.8 Sep 2010 - 72.9 Feb 2011 - 37.2 Sep 2011 - 71.1 Feb 2012 - 40.9Sep 2012 - 70.3 Feb 2013 - 35.1 Sep 2013 - 67.9 Feb 2014 - 32.1 Sep 2014 - 70.5 Feb 2015 - 25.8 Sep 2015 - 74.5 Feb 2016 - 38.6 Sep 2016 - 73.5 Feb 2017 - 44.2 Sep 2017 - 71.4 Feb 2018 - 41.9 Sep 2018 - 72.5 Feb 2019 - 37.1 Sep 2019 - 72.5 Feb 2020 - 40.8Sep 2020 - 69.4 Feb 2021 - 34.2 Sep 2021 - 71.6 Feb 2022 - 39.7 Sep 2022 - 72.1 Feb 2023 - 42.7 Sep 2023 - 71.4 Feb 2024 - 40.1 All the sub-71 Septembers (in bold) have produced a below average February. September 2024 is going to end below 71. If the trend continues, February 2025 temperature is going to be below average at PHL. Very interesting. I wonder if it's a fluke though? I'd have to look into my data further. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Terpeast Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 1 hour ago, PhiEaglesfan712 said: Oddly enough, since 2009-10, the September temperature has been an indicator of whether the upcoming February will be warmer than average, at least here at PHL. Sep 2009 - 68.0 Feb 2010 - 31.8 Sep 2010 - 72.9 Feb 2011 - 37.2 Sep 2011 - 71.1 Feb 2012 - 40.9Sep 2012 - 70.3 Feb 2013 - 35.1 Sep 2013 - 67.9 Feb 2014 - 32.1 Sep 2014 - 70.5 Feb 2015 - 25.8 Sep 2015 - 74.5 Feb 2016 - 38.6 Sep 2016 - 73.5 Feb 2017 - 44.2 Sep 2017 - 71.4 Feb 2018 - 41.9 Sep 2018 - 72.5 Feb 2019 - 37.1 Sep 2019 - 72.5 Feb 2020 - 40.8Sep 2020 - 69.4 Feb 2021 - 34.2 Sep 2021 - 71.6 Feb 2022 - 39.7 Sep 2022 - 72.1 Feb 2023 - 42.7 Sep 2023 - 71.4 Feb 2024 - 40.1 All the sub-71 Septembers (in bold) have produced a below average February. September 2024 is going to end below 71. If the trend continues, February 2025 temperature is going to be below average at PHL. Notice it happened more frequently before the monster -pdo/-enso background state after 2015. Since that year, it only happened once. So i’m not sure if this pattern will hold this time. If it does, I think its random chance, like flipping a coin and getting tails 5x in a row and then getting heads on the 6th try. But if we DO get a cold February, I’m willing to eat my words and concede that you’re onto something. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brooklynwx99 Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 2020-21 and 2010-11 are pretty good analogs... you don't have to think the winter will be as cold/snowy as those years for them to be viable they both match up well with ONI, they both have a more hybrid/basin-wide orientation rather than a EP or Modoki event, the PDO was negative (strongly so in 2010-11), and the QBO is a good match as well. solar isn't a good match, but it's not an end-all-be-all for analogs. I feel like it gets overstated a bit, if anything they have enough similarities to what we'll be seeing for them to be included. those years get evened out when you have winters like 1999-00 and 2022-23 being weighed heavily 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BlizzardWx Posted September 30 Share Posted September 30 One thing I've had on my mind lately is that it would do all of us well to get the bigger picture of "analogs" and not get bogged down in extraneous details. I think seasonal forecasting skill would increase if we could do more to tie the specific anomalous features of a year to the type and magnitude of forcing they will produce. As a hypothetical example, "If la nina focuses at 150W it would favor a standing ridge at x longitude. But because of the west Pacific Warm pool it may be shifted further west...etc" That at least ties real features to real background forcing, which IMO is all we can really do at a seasonal level. I think if we can consider each individual feature, like throwing pebbles in a pond and seeing where the waves go or intersect, we might get a better idea of how things will constructively or destructively interfere, which forcing will dominate if they are competing, and so on. In borderline snow climates all we can really do is try to figure out if the background state will be reasonably supportive for winter weather or not. And to be clear, I do see some of you doing what I am saying we should do. I think my broader point is that it's very unlikely you will ever have a truly good analog year, and so although analogs can be useful with context, I think we'd be better off looking at specific pieces of analog years instead of the years as a whole. Anyway, that's my opinion. If I am wrong, that's ok too 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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