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Is we back? February discussion thread


mahk_webstah
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6 minutes ago, WinterWolf said:

But that is why the fast flow narrative is flawed…when it is used to say that’s why no  coastals for SNE.  Because if that was the case, there’d be zero coastals, and there’s a nice one going on tonight.  The reason it’s not getting to us is more than just one single thing. And those things at some point will correct themselves, and put us back in the coastal business. 

 

You’re right, It’s not permanent.  And it’s not the (only) reason why we haven’t had a good coastal. And Of course it’s happened before.  

Again...agreed on the fast flow. Said that a few times....but if you are getting stuck in forcing patterns that destructively interfere with east coast amplification, you have two options:

1 The storms develop and amplify elsewhere....great leakes

2 You get a storm on the southeast coast in a cold pattern that can't amplify enough to clime the coast until it's over Atlantic, and becomes a Maritimes storm.

I agree I don't think it's permanent...Mother Nature will find a way.

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2 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

Again...agreed on the fast flow. Said that a few times....but if you are getting stuck in forcing patterns that destructively interfere with east coast amplification, you have two options:

1 The storms develop and amplify elsewhere....great leakes

2 You get a storm on the southeast coast in a cold pattern that can't amplify enough to clime the coast until it's over Atlantic, and becomes a Maritimes storm.

I agree I don't think it's permanent...Mother Nature will find a way.

March 18 will find a way to happen again. 

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3 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

Again...agreed on the fast flow. Said that a few times....but if you are getting stuck in forcing patterns that destructively interfere with east coast amplification, you have two options:

1 The storms develop and amplify elsewhere....great leakes

2 You get a storm on the southeast coast in a cold pattern that can't amplify enough to clime the coast until it's over Atlantic, and becomes a Maritimes storm.

I agree I don't think it's permanent...Mother Nature will find a way.

Ok, makes sense there. Not arguing that part. The part that doesn’t add up, is the thought(and not from you) that this is some how some sort of new regime, or idea.   It is not. 
 

Kind of like the whole silly idea the past few years that clippers were a thing of the past.  How come no more clippers? Where are the clippers?    Well, now they’re back and in abundance once again.  
 

Whatever is causing the coastals to not get up here..or amplify close enough to the coast lately(forcing,flow etc etc), for SNE Will at some point change and that will be that.  And I Appreciate your insight Ray on these ideas. 

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1 hour ago, SnoSki14 said:

Bad luck doesn't cause the coastal track to go dormant for years. Definitely the forcing though with those record ssts over the west Pacific 

There is no luck in weather. Fast flow, driven by record warm SSTs, year after year in the North Pacific, is causing an active northern stream to outpace a southern stream. Couple that with 2 La Nina’s in a row where the  STJ is inactive; and you get cold and dry. But even in a El Niño, where STJ is more active, northern stream continues to outpace and doesn’t amplify along the coast. And 2023 and 2024 were like blowtorch winters anyway in the east, so even when there was amplification, you had benchmark rainstorms. A pattern like this one in the 2010s or 2000s would have had us buried in snow. 

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1 hour ago, WinterWolf said:

Yup. It always has to be a CC attribution with some of these people…what a dam joke. 

I mean, there’s no doubt CC is a factor. But it’s a factor among several others. When you combine CC, poor background phases, and bad luck, this is what you get.

Ray is right though, our big storm last week had virtually nothing to do with east coast phasing/storminess

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