Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    18,341
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    happyclam13
    Newest Member
    happyclam13
    Joined

November 2025 OBS Discussion


wdrag
 Share

Recommended Posts

51 minutes ago, jm1220 said:

Looks like the snow level about 2100 feet here based on the radar beam height where the CC starts to show a mix. Bright banding over the south shore shows way high up it is snowing. Too bad it can’t be a month later. 

Where can you see that on RadarScope? I see Tilt 1 to Tilt 4 and see the height calculator generally online, but i don’t see how you can as accurate as 2100 feet. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, bluewave said:

You are really lucky to be living in such a beautiful region. The stronger winds and lack of ideal radiational cooling there are also a function of the warmer air masses in nearby Canada. Since really cold Arctic air masses usually begin with strong cold air advection followed by a few nights of high pressure and calm clear nights behind  the Arctic fronts leading to the great radiational cooling.

We haven’t been getting this cold pattern in the Northeast with Canada so warm. The Northeast needs good cold pooling near Hudson Bay which has become more rare over time.

The airport station that was established in June 1998. It’s in a uniquely cold area with excellent cold air drainage. So it can be 10 to 15 degrees cooler than the village. But that microclimate is still a good proxy since it is currently experiencing its 2nd longest streak not dropping to -30 or colder. The #1 longest streak was several years ago.

Number of Consecutive Days Min Temperature >= -30 
for SARANAC LAKE ADIRONDACK REGIONAL AP, NY
Click column heading to sort ascending, click again to sort descending.
Period of record: 1998-06-06
1 1103 2019-01-14 through 2022-01-20
2 1018 2023-02-05 through 2025-11-18
3 524 2000-10-31 through 2002-04-07
4 460 2007-03-08 through 2008-06-09
5 399 2011-01-25 through 2012-02-27
6 353 2016-06-30 through 2017-06-17
7 341 2004-02-21 through 2005-01-26
8 329 2012-03-01 through 2013-01-23
9 326 2013-02-21 through 2014-01-12
- 326 2010-01-12 through 2010-12-03

https://www.northcountrypublicradio.org/news/story/21443/20130218/why-lake-clear-is-so-very-cold

Feb 18, 2013 — The village of Saranac Lake has a reputation for cold. During the winter, it's frequently the coldest spot on the North Country weather map, sometimes the coldest in the lower 48 states. Overnight or early morning temperatures in January can hit 20 and sometimes 30 degrees below zero Fahrenheit.

That kind of cold is has brought the community a fair share of publicity over the years, but technically, that publicity should go to another community located about five miles outside of Saranac Lake: the hamlet of Lake Clear.

Watch the nightly forecast from WPTZ weatherman Tom Messner and you'll find Saranac Lake is often the coldest spot on the map. But that's actually not Saranac Lake's temperature.

The reading Messner and other forecasters are giving is recorded at the National Weather Service automated weather station at the Adirondack Regional Airport in Lake Clear. It's typically much colder there than it is in a short distance away in the village of Saranac Lake - sometimes as much as 10 to 15 degrees colder.

 

Sometimes the airport temperature is significantly colder than it is just a mile-and-a-half down the road in the hamlet of Lake Clear, where Bob Callaghan lives.

 

The same morning in mid-January that the airport weather station hit 31 below, Callaghan said he had minus 21 at his house. "The thermometer in the car definitely registers colder when we get in the area of the airport," Callaghan said. "Sometimes it's 10 degrees difference."

Why is it so much colder near the airport? What strange weather phenomenon is at work here?

Dave Werner started asking that question a few years ago. Werner lives in Malone and is a cooperative observer for the National Weather Service.

"Every day I'd compare my readings with all of upstate New York and Vermont," he said. "And it was so interesting to me that Saranac Lake [Lake Clear] was so much colder than every other place."

In 2008, Werner contacted the weather service's Burlington office and got an explanation.

"It's called cold air drainage," Werner said. "The bowl-shaped terrain around the Lake Clear airport is such that cold air settles or drains into the airport area, giving it significantly colder readings than are found in the village of Saranac Lake."

John Goff is a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Burlington. He says Lake Clear is higher up, "and it's an open area, an open kind of clear area at the top of a hill where the cool air can kind of just pool."

For people who live and work in Lake Clear, the bitter cold winter temperatures brought on by this microclimate are just a fact of life.

Deb Gauthier is the Lake Clear postmaster: "It was minus 31 yesterday. When I went out at lunch time it was minus 21. You don't go out with wet hair, and you bundle up. We live with it."

Surprisingly, the arctic temperatures cause few headaches at the airport, according to its manager Corey Hurwitch.

"Just our equipment sometimes starting up is a little more difficult in the morning," he said.

It was finally calm and clear, their low temperature was 2 degrees last night.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Sundog said:

Potential snowstorm day 9 on 6z GFS?

There could be something there, pattern looks good

For the people who are confused or don't know what potential means:

6z GFS:

gfs_mslp_pcpn_frzn_us_38.thumb.png.3073618f81300cf62c2ff8772ff321bd.png

 

0Z Euro:

ecmwf_mslp_pcpn_frzn_us_61.thumb.png.4769b4a12dddb6db7e667722724721f9.png

 

 

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Back to the future:  Ensemble qpf storm track more or less southern Plains to the northeast USA next 16 days.  Ensembles have no snow prior to D10. but between D10-16 all ensembles try to bring snow accumulation down to the coasts (climo influence?). Nov 30th for now is the EPS next target day for a possible wind advisory.  That's D11. Let see if I cant get D1 right... NAEFS has us chilling a bit in early Dec. Have a good day! Thanks for all the overnight reports.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The wave amplified much further west this run, so the low formed farther west and the cold didn't get a chance to dig as south as the earlier run either. 

Like I said, there is a trough in the east and some energy around, maybe something can happen. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I hate being a downer, but I'm not high on snow chances in the mid- or long-range yet. I think there will probably be a cold shot after Thanksgiving, but wintry chances locally will depend on very favorable wave spacing and evolution, which is still too low confidence for me to get excited. The good news to me is that we are transitioning into the season where we can realistically analyze the models for snow threats. The bad news is we are still in a rut where legit chances seem very hard to come by.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, eduggs said:

I hate being a downer, but I'm not high on snow chances in the mid- or long-range yet. I think there will probably be a cold shot after Thanksgiving, but wintry chances locally will depend on very favorable wave spacing and evolution, which is still too low confidence for me to get excited. The good news to me is that we are transitioning into the season where we can realistically analyze the models for snow threats. The bed news is we are still in a rut where legit chances seem very hard to come by.

We have had year after year where models in the medium and long range have had raging SE Ridges and wildly warm anomalies for December. 

I'll take models showing a nice trough in the east with some energy around and take my chances with that any day. 

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, Sundog said:

We have had year after year where models in the medium and long range have had raging SE Ridges and wildly warm anomalies for December. 

I'll take models showing a nice trough in the east with some energy around and take my chances with that any day. 

I remember numerous modeled snowstorms at day 10 over the past few years. Even some as early as late October. Since there are 4 runs per day of each global model that goes out past day 10 (CMC, ECM, GFS), there will always be more modeled snowstorms than real ones in the long range. It doesn't mean much until it's inside day 7 on more than one model. I'd rather see negative height anomalies and deep trofs at day 10 too. But it doesn't mean I'm excited for any particular snow threat and it doesn't mean I think anything looks different this year than last.

What does feel different is that I've already observed falling snow locally on 4 separate occasions and observed accumulations twice. That feels different.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Records:

Highs:

EWR: 70  (1957)
NYC: 72 (1921)
LGA: 70 (1953)
JFK: 64 (1994)


Lows:

EWR: 19 (1936)
NYC: 18 (1936)
LGA: 22 (2014)
JFK: 23 (2014)


Historical:

 

1921 - The Columbia Gorge ice storm finally came to an end. In Oregon, 54 inches of snow, sleet and glaze blocked the Columbia River Highway at the Dalles. Apart from traffic on the river itself, all transportation between Walla Walla WA and Portland OR came to a halt. Nine trains were stopped as railroads were blocked for several days. (David Ludlum)

 

1930: A rare, estimated F4 tornado struck the town of Bethany, Oklahoma. Between 9:30 am and 9:58 am CST, it moved north-northeast from 3 miles west of the Oklahoma City limits, and hit the eastern part of Bethany. About 110 homes and 700 other buildings, or about a fourth of the town, were damaged or destroyed. Near the end of the damage path, 3.5 miles northeast of Wiley Post Airfield, the tornado hit the Camel Creek School. Buildings blew apart just as the students were falling to the floor and looking for shelter, and five students and a teacher were killed. A total of 23 people were killed and another 150 injured, with 77 being seriously injured. Damage estimates were listed at $500,000. 

1957 - Nineteen inches of snow covered the ground at Cresco, IA, a record November snow depth for the state. (The Weather Channel)

1981 - An unusually early snowstorm struck the Twin Cities of Minnesota, with as much as a foot of snow reported. The weight of the heavy snow caused the newly inflated fabric dome of the Hubert Humphrey Metrodome in downtown Minneapolis to collapse and rip. (The Weather Channel)

1987 - A sharp cold front pushed across the Great Lakes Region and the Mississippi Valley. Northwest winds gusting to 50 mph in Iowa caused some property damage around Ottumwa, and wind chill readings reached 16 degrees below zero at Hibbing MN. Showers and thunder- storms over Florida produced 5.80 inches of rain in six hours at Cocoa Beach. (The National Weather Summary)

1988 - Strong thunderstorms developed during the mid morning hours and produced severe weather across eastern Texas and the Lower Mississippi Valley into the wee hours of the night. Thunderstorms spawned twenty-one tornadoes, including thirteen in Mississippi. One tornado killed two persons and injured eleven others at Nettleton MS, and another tornado injured eight persons at Tuscaloosa AL. Thunderstorms produced baseball size hail in east Texas and northern Louisiana, and Summit MS was deluged with six inches of rain in four hours. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)

1989 - Gale force winds continued to produce squalls in the Lower Great Lakes Region early in the day. Snowfall totals in western New York State reached 24 inches in southern Lewis County, with 21 inches reported at Highmarket. Unseasonably warm weather prevailed across the Northern and Central Plains Region. Eight cities reported record high temperatures for the date, including Denver CO with a reading of 79 degrees. (Storm Data) (The National Weather Summary)

2003 - Flooding affected the central Appalachians and Eastern Seaboard, with some isolated 8-inch rainfall totals across mountainous areas. There were 11 deaths caused by flooding in the region (Associated Press).

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...