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December 2025 OBS and Discussion


wdrag
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59 minutes ago, Bxstormwatcher360 said:

Good ole alberta clippers,I remember growing up as a teen in the 90's. They had a clipper coming thru every 3 to 5 days it seems. The 90's was an epic time for winter weather also tbh. :lol:

AI Overview
 
 
 
image.png.a9e6298ad9d4cdf9b5931bf40d8aca8d.png
Clipper weather refers to fast-moving winter storms, primarily the Alberta Clipper, which originate near Alberta, Canada, bringing rapid swings from cold to colder, light snow (1-3 inches), strong winds (30-50 mph), and biting wind chills as they sweep southeast across the U.S. Northern Plains and Great Lakes. While usually light, they can cause bigger snowfalls with lake-effect enhancement or if they intensify, sometimes becoming Saskatchewan Screamers or Manitoba Maulers (stronger variants). 
 
Key Types & Characteristics
  • Alberta Clipper: The classic type, forming near Alberta, moving fast, bringing cold, wind, and light snow.
  • Saskatchewan Screamer / Manitoba Mauler: More intense versions of clippers, often with more snow and stronger winds, developing over Saskatchewan or Manitoba. 
 
What They Bring
  • Snow: Typically 1-3 inches, but can be 3-6+ inches, especially near the Great Lakes (lake-effect snow).
  • Wind: Strong, gusty winds (35-50 mph) are common, leading to severe wind chills.
  • Temperature: A noticeable and sharp drop in temperatures.
  • Speed: Very fast-moving, often crossing regions in a day or two. 
 
How They Differ from Other Storms
  • Colorado Low: Slower-moving systems that form in Colorado, often bringing much heavier, longer-lasting snow and blizzard conditions.
  • Miller A/B Storms: Coastal storms that develop off the Southeast coast (Miller A) or the Gulf (Miller B), drawing significant moisture and potentially causing major Nor'easters, unlike drier clippers. 
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14 minutes ago, NEG NAO said:
AI Overview
 
 
 
image.png.a9e6298ad9d4cdf9b5931bf40d8aca8d.png
Clipper weather refers to fast-moving winter storms, primarily the Alberta Clipper, which originate near Alberta, Canada, bringing rapid swings from cold to colder, light snow (1-3 inches), strong winds (30-50 mph), and biting wind chills as they sweep southeast across the U.S. Northern Plains and Great Lakes. While usually light, they can cause bigger snowfalls with lake-effect enhancement or if they intensify, sometimes becoming Saskatchewan Screamers or Manitoba Maulers (stronger variants). 
 
Key Types & Characteristics
  • Alberta Clipper: The classic type, forming near Alberta, moving fast, bringing cold, wind, and light snow.
  • Saskatchewan Screamer / Manitoba Mauler: More intense versions of clippers, often with more snow and stronger winds, developing over Saskatchewan or Manitoba. 
 
What They Bring
  • Snow: Typically 1-3 inches, but can be 3-6+ inches, especially near the Great Lakes (lake-effect snow).
  • Wind: Strong, gusty winds (35-50 mph) are common, leading to severe wind chills.
  • Temperature: A noticeable and sharp drop in temperatures.
  • Speed: Very fast-moving, often crossing regions in a day or two. 
 
How They Differ from Other Storms
  • Colorado Low: Slower-moving systems that form in Colorado, often bringing much heavier, longer-lasting snow and blizzard conditions.
  • Miller A/B Storms: Coastal storms that develop off the Southeast coast (Miller A) or the Gulf (Miller B), drawing significant moisture and potentially causing major Nor'easters, unlike drier clippers. 

This was great - thanks for sharing.

Folks were mentioning Alberta Clippers in the 90s, but honestly I remember them as a staple of the 80s.

Those were always fun to track (and as a kid in the 80s, 'track' meant looking out for an updated 'A Look Ahead' on TWC, and tuning into the local mets at 45 past the hour.)

They might miss to the south, and they might not have big potential, but at least rain was never in the equation.  Plus, whatever did fall often stuck around awhile.

Back then - this is prior to the spoils of 2000-2018 -  a clipper whose potential was bumped up from 1-3 to 2-4 was enough to get us amped up as kids.  3-6?  Amazing.

 

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