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2025-2026 ENSO


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17 hours ago, michsnowfreak said:

Yeah that makes sense. Not terribly different from my avg temps. But yet another example of how snowfall is localized and very subject to other things than just the avg temp.

I wonder what a REASONABLE line or latitude is to draw a line and assume below that line is where you really need seasonable to colder than avg temps to get snow.

Based on a quick calculation, I get your DJF avg high/low as 38/20. Mine is 34/21.

Probably about 41 N. 

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49 minutes ago, michsnowfreak said:

Interesting! Our lows are a bit more elevated due to lots of overcast nights, though we still drop below zero several days annually. 

Our lows are pretty cold because I’m in a deep, high valley (3800 feet, surrounded by 5500-6000 foot high mountains). On upslope snow days our temps get very cold also.

The flora on my property is pretty similar I’d imagine to your area. A lot of Beech, Yellow Birch, Sugar Maple and Basswood.

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5 hours ago, snowman19 said:

This drought situation is actually worse than last year at this time. We have been completely devoid of widespread heavy rains in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic since late July. October looks dry as far as the eye can see
 

* Ahem* don't mind the record rainfall that Albany and southern NY received the day after this data in this map was valid 

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This article is pretty consistent with my thinking on how to model winter precipitation patterns in the US. It's strongly supportive of a wetter winter nationally than last year, despite what the models show.

https://opensnow.com/news/post/how-atlantic-ocean-temps-could-impact-la-nina-2024-2025-winter-forecast

Recent seasons on the Canadian have been depicted in an MJO pattern of 4-5 for winter. The models are showing 6-7 for this winter. That's very different from recent winters, look at the depicted east African precip pattern at the equator. Look at Brazil shown wet v dry in phase five. It's not 5 like in recent years. It looks like 6-7 to me, not perfect but better than the others. We had 4-5-6 for precip nationally last winter, but made drier by the Atlantic features.

Again - this match holds up for a lot of my methods, although it isn't quite what I expect. But it did have 106 ACE as an example which still feels about right.

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-24-11-PM.pngScreenshot-2025-10-01-10-12-53-PM.png

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-09-33-PM.png

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-13-43-PM.png

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-15-16-PM.png

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5 hours ago, raindancewx said:

This article is pretty consistent with my thinking on how to model winter precipitation patterns in the US. It's strongly supportive of a wetter winter nationally than last year, despite what the models show.

https://opensnow.com/news/post/how-atlantic-ocean-temps-could-impact-la-nina-2024-2025-winter-forecast

Recent seasons on the Canadian have been depicted in an MJO pattern of 4-5 for winter. The models are showing 6-7 for this winter. That's very different from recent winters, look at the depicted east African precip pattern at the equator. Look at Brazil shown wet v dry in phase five. It's not 5 like in recent years. It looks like 6-7 to me, not perfect but better than the others. We had 4-5-6 for precip nationally last winter, but made drier by the Atlantic features.

Again - this match holds up for a lot of my methods, although it isn't quite what I expect. But it did have 106 ACE as an example which still feels about right.

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-24-11-PM.pngScreenshot-2025-10-01-10-12-53-PM.png

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-09-33-PM.png

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-13-43-PM.png

Screenshot-2025-10-01-10-15-16-PM.png

It also looks like some phase 5 forcing on the CANSIPS anomaly maps. But yea, 5-6-7 look dominant verbatim

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16 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

Same page as raindance....when I see phase 7 December composite all I can think of is Dec 2007, although that month didn't spend much time in that phase in a literal sense.

image.png.0be60a6ef3fd9e01bcb0e35a0da746ff.pngimage.png.4f0d7a38c9ff8087944bf2a3c18c38bb.png

07-08 was a shit show south of New England

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9 minutes ago, snowman19 said:

07-08 was a shit show south of New England

I'm as shocked that you chose to point that out as I'm sure everyone else is...

I do foresee a gradient aspect to this season... maybe it's a bit further north than that year owed to CC....just gonna have to see. I think it's a pretty decent west Pacific analog in that it was more neutral than the majority of the past decade, albeit not outright negative like 2021-2022. I think the mid atlantic will have a better shot later in the season than earlier....just my early thoughts.

I don't see this season as a KU cookbook, though we will have a window or two. With cold in SE Canada and systems trying to cut west/moisture trying to overrun antecedent cold, you will probably want latitude.

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5 minutes ago, snowman19 said:

07-08 was a shit show south of New England

That is one that didn't really follow the early season la nina rule. We got the snowstorm on Dec 5, which would have normally meant a great snow year, but the season fell apart instead.

The rest of the winter had very little snow, aside from the Feb 22 event, with January-April slightly above average temperature.

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