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2025 ENSO/Winter Speculation


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5 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

It depends what is meant by the bold ( for me - )

Snow advances ... that's just seasonally unavoidable.  But, not all years observe this normalcy the same way.  They all tend ( or used to before perhaps 25 years ago), end up around the same cryospheric state by mid Februaries ... but the autumnal d(cryo)/dt (speed of recovery) I have found is more correlated to ensuing winter temperature biases over Canada ( and by circumstance of proximity ... affecting the U.S.)

Faster tended to be colder Mt-WI-NY-NS

Slower tended to be more variable .. ( don't wanna say "warm" here because that word is very relative circa Jan 25th at Tower Minnesota)

So stating the obvious... cold is intrinsic to snow.  Gee ya think-

But what's interesting about this is that the correlation has been not as good over the last decade ... It's complex, but I suspect the warming polar summer states are setting favorable frameworks abrupt behavior in recovery times - so it's artificially ( so to speak...) lending to impressive d(cryo)/dt.  

... Like everything being effected by the CC one-eyed monster, the predictability of any domain in question tends to be the first aspects to get f'ed.

So the simplest version of all this, yes the d(cryo)/dt is impressive, this year, but - for me - it could be construed as more impressive in say, 1995 than it really is in 2025.

*But* ( ... to add even more to this "popcycle" headache - ), it's not just the land snow.  I noticed, back mid to late August that that he rate of sea-ice loss was slower than the last several years...  That was unexpected, particularly when we just came off the 2023 piss in the oceanic jacuzzi historic globally historic year so recently.  Interesting...  Anyway, the seasonal nadir appeared to also happen about 10 days to 2 weeks earlier than the last several years ( using Climate Reanalyzer), and has shown also that seasonal recovery behaves to do so more meaningfully, sooner and perhaps faster.   This below is an example of how the scalar value, still being low, belies the character/behavior of the system, which is perhaps better exposed by evaluating the deltas

image.png.0dfd2b56f08f9f56735fb5c00aecb1cd.png

What adds more interest to this IMO is it seems a lot of "correlations" we had been very familiar with have diminished over the past decade-plus as well. Now, the easy answer here is that is just a product of increasing our sample size (data set). This is likely certainly a factor, but how strong of a factor? But I suspect something else is going on too...and the way to come to that conclusion is when you break everything down into how we understand things and basic principles and you're getting results that don't make sense. 

also, if I understand correctly, the correlation is geared more towards the evolution of the AO? Lots of influences on the state and evolution of the AO, especially stratospheric processes. 

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2 hours ago, MJO812 said:

There are so many contradicting forecasts going on this year. Of course, I would like the one that shows us getting a better winter this year, but there are some that show below average. Was very confusing. Is that these forecasts are by meteorologists and some of them are calling for dryer and less snow for the Northeast and some are calling for above normal for the Northeast. Just like every year ( in regards to the last 5 to 7 at least ), it feels like a crap shoot.

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58 minutes ago, Snowcrazed71 said:

There are so many contradicting forecasts going on this year. Of course, I would like the one that shows us getting a better winter this year, but there are some that show below average. Was very confusing. Is that these forecasts are by meteorologists and some of them are calling for dryer and less snow for the Northeast and some are calling for above normal for the Northeast. Just like every year ( in regards to the last 5 to 7 at least ), it feels like a crap shoot.

Winter outlooks this far out are crapshoots.

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2 hours ago, Snowcrazed71 said:

https://x.com/WeatherNut27/status/1979519862406893835?t=55aZXekPcWl4KPXZd3eBZA&s=19

Is it me or does NOAA always tend to have a warm bias on their winter forecasts? 

I’m not sure it’s a true warm bias as much as there have been some absolute blowtorches in parts of the CONUS the last decade or so, and those are hard to pin down when ENSO seems to have a more muted impact?

That said, the easiest call in wx seems to be winter warmth. I mean based on that graphic the last “cool” winter prior to last season was 2014-15. Ugly. 

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Yeeeeah, put another way even simpler… As long as the climate curve is pointed up that intrinsically favors warmer than normal at all times. And so without any contravening indicator that are sufficiently loud even reasonable… they’re probably just gonna operate on that former basis

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1 hour ago, Typhoon Tip said:

Yeeeeah, put another way even simpler… As long as the climate curve is pointed up that intrinsically favors warmer than normal at all times. And so without any contravening indicator that are sufficiently loud even reasonable… they’re probably just gonna operate on that former basis

IOW, "persistence forecasting"?

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56 minutes ago, Met1985 said:

So seems like we are canceling winter before it starts? Glad I don't have to wait on heartbreak later on but can just get it out of the way.

I don’t track winter particularly closely until I need to but I’m actually cautiously optimistic. Just not sure it’s another cool one—though things look pretty similar to last year at this time. 

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2 hours ago, MJO812 said:

Who is ? Its only October . No one can get anything accurate this far out.

 

1 hour ago, SJonesWX said:

Beer?

No I've just seen several posters in and around the forum say that this winter is looking bleak because of the ENSO, the record water temperature of the coast of China, and global warming.  

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http://AO PV Blog

Summary

  • The Arctic Oscillation (AO) is currently negative to near neutral and is predicted to oscillate around neutral and possibly go negative again the next two weeks as pressure/geopotential height anomalies across the Arctic are currently mostly mixed and are predicted to remain mostly mixed to mostly positive the next two weeks. The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is currently negative as positive pressure/geopotential height anomalies dominate across Greenland, and the NAO is predicted to oscillate around neutral the next two weeks as pressure/geopotential height anomalies are predicted to mostly mixed to positive across Greenland.
  • The next two weeks, weak ridging/positive geopotential height anomalies across Greenland will support transient troughing/negative geopotential height anomalies downstream across much of Europe. The progressive flow pattern will support normal to above normal temperatures across Europe including the United Kingdom (UK) with a brief flip to normal to below normal temperatures first across much of Europe including the UK next week.
  • Ridging/positive geopotential height anomalies are predicted to dominate Asia with the exception of troughing/negative geopotential height anomalies across Eastern Asia the next two weeks. This pattern favors normal to above normal temperatures across most of Asia with the exception of normal to below normal temperatures regionally across Eastern Asia the next two weeks.
  • The general predicted pattern across North America the next two weeks is widespread ridging/positive geopotential height anomalies centered on Eastern Canada with troughing/negative geopotential height anomalies along the west coast of North America and the Eastern United States (US). This patten will favor widespread normal to above normal temperatures across Alaska, much of Canada and the US with the exceptions of normal to below normal temperatures in the Eastern US this week and then next week normal to below normal temperatures will sweep into the West Coasts of Canada and the US and then eventually in the Eastern US.
  • I continue discussing my thoughts about the upcoming pattern across the Northern Hemisphere (NH) and continue with some preliminary predictors for the upcoming winter polar vortex (PV) and weather.

Plain Language Summary

So far for October, it is a tale of two continents, extremely mild in North America and fairly widespread cold across Eurasia, especially in Southeast Asia, Siberia and focused now in Mongolia (see Figure). It has also been chilly in Central Asia and in Europe, especially in Southeast Europe (see Figure). No joke but Mongolia has the most resilient winter weather in the Northern Hemisphere. It has been a forgettable month of October for me here in Boston but at least for me the cold is where it should be in October. And the forecast can be summarized as mild weather reigns supreme (see Figures 3, 6 and 9). Longer term Greenland blocking could become established in early November that could finally bring cooler weather to North America and re-establish some colder weather across northern Eurasia. I am also closely watching the snow cover advance across Siberia this month, a rapid advance suggests a more severe winter and a slower advance a milder winter.

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