Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    18,626
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    masonj4
    Newest Member
    masonj4
    Joined

2025-2026 ENSO


Recommended Posts

1 minute ago, so_whats_happening said:

Pretty solid depiction

nina_7_gen_ok.png

nina_8_gen_ok.png

Phase 8 in February starts to get ok but phase 1 in February in Nina is a large warm up. If we have more of a neutral state rather than La Nina by then with a passage through phase 1 in February it is a bit more muted of a warm up. Looks fun though coming up for at least the next maybe 10 days.

https://www.meteonetwork.it/models/mjo/

  • Like 3
  • 100% 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Through January 22nd, Phoenix is experiencing its warmest winter on record. However, numerous locations in the Great Lakes and East, along with Alaska, are seeing their coldest winter in at least several years. For Alaska, it's been the coldest winter to date in decades.

Select mean temperatures for December 1-January 22:

Albany: 26.5° (coldest since 2017-18)
Anchorage: 12.2° (coldest since 1981-82)
Boston: 31.8° (coldest since 2017-18)
Burlington: 24.0° (coldest since 2018-19)
Caribou: 14.9° (coldest since 2018-19)
Concord: 24.1° (coldest since 2017-18)
Detroit: 26.9° (coldest since 2017-18)
Fairbanks: -20.8° (coldest since 1968-69)
Juneau: 22.2° (coldest since 1981-82)
Milwaukee: 24.6° (coldest since 2017-18)
Minneapolis: 19.0° (coldest since 2021-22)
New York City: 34.5° (coldest since 2017-18)
Portland, ME: 25.2° (coldest since 2017-18)
Washington, DC: 37.7° (coldest since 2017-18)

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, donsutherland1 said:

Through January 22nd, Phoenix is experiencing its warmest winter on record. However, numerous locations in the Great Lakes and East, along with Alaska, are seeing their coldest winter in at least several years. For Alaska, it's been the coldest winter to date in decades.

Select mean temperatures for December 1-January 22:

Albany: 26.5° (coldest since 2017-18)
Anchorage: 12.2° (coldest since 1981-82)
Boston: 31.8° (coldest since 2017-18)
Burlington: 24.0° (coldest since 2018-19)
Caribou: 14.9° (coldest since 2018-19)
Concord: 24.1° (coldest since 2017-18)
Detroit: 26.9° (coldest since 2017-18)
Fairbanks: -20.8° (coldest since 1968-69)
Juneau: 22.2° (coldest since 1981-82)
Milwaukee: 24.6° (coldest since 2017-18)
Minneapolis: 19.0° (coldest since 2021-22)
New York City: 34.5° (coldest since 2017-18)
Portland, ME: 25.2° (coldest since 2017-18)
Washington, DC: 37.7° (coldest since 2017-18)

Cold anamolies will continue to grow. Its like the tundra outside.

FB_IMG_1769209317182.thumb.jpg.0aa414fa1a4218d929eecec2f11826e3.jpg

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Warmest area of the country remains Plains/Northwest this month, with Montana running +10 in many spots. Locally we're down to +6F or so, but should drop closer to normal starting tommorow. Cold has reasserted itself over the East & Plains, and I still expect gradual retrogression to the West as we approach March. I thought January would be pretty cold in a lot of the East. No longer looks like a terrible call as cold continues to dump into the US.

Screenshot-2026-01-23-5-59-36-PM.pngScreenshot-2026-01-23-5-59-25-PM.png

Notice any resemblance to the last week? Like I say, I'm annoyed it took a week longer than I expected, but hey we got there.

Screenshot 2026 01 23 6 02 55 PM

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 hours ago, so_whats_happening said:

Phase 8 in February starts to get ok but phase 1 in February in Nina is a large warm up. If we have more of a neutral state rather than La Nina by then with a passage through phase 1 in February it is a bit more muted of a warm up. Looks fun though coming up for at least the next maybe 10 days.

https://www.meteonetwork.it/models/mjo/

@so_whats_happening What are your thoughts on the possible SSW/SPV split next month? Do you think we see a 2018 response or something more muted/different? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, snowman19 said:

@so_whats_happening What are your thoughts on the possible SSW/SPV split next month? Do you think we see a 2018 response or something more muted/different? 

Probably more muted. I highly doubt we see a record February warm, then a record snowy March, like we did in 2018. Both months will probably be much closer to normal, and I wouldn't be surprised if one actually had a +5 departure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, snowman19 said:

@so_whats_happening What are your thoughts on the possible SSW/SPV split next month? Do you think we see a 2018 response or something more muted/different? 

It does have flares of 2018 progression via breaking down the SPV but no two years tend to be alike as for surface/500mb progression. Should have a better idea as we close out the month how things should translate in the mean time we have some fun patterns evolving that need to be watched. If I had to take an early guess I would say we run the risk of continuation of the current pattern as the the downwelling, were it to occur, would just enhance the already lower atmosphere -AO pattern. 

That early wave 1 warming did quite a bit to help as bluewave pointed out while it would be nice to extend this cold/snow pattern i'm fine with winter breaking down around presidents day. lol

After tomorrows snow (8-14" looks to be the range for us) we should be less than 10" away from hitting average with some solid potential trying to show up. Let's see what happens as the cold starts to relax a bit.

  • Like 1
  • 100% 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Surface reflection of the Nina is starting to dwindle a bit more quickly so I would assume the idea is the influence as we get into February will be more muted in time. I would like to see just how much of the waters with depth east of Japan have been chewed up this year still have and will probably continue to have the -PDO tongue for quite some time. 

https://psl.noaa.gov/map/clim/sst.anom.anim.week.html

ssta_animation_30day_large.gif

  • Like 1
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

×
×
  • Create New...