Rjay Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago 1 hour ago, liwxfan said: Not even close to 2013 in north central suffolk. Thought this had a chance but fell pretty short. This was a great storm tho. North shore was a little rough in central Suffolk Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dmillz25 Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 21.1” total. 45.8” season to date. A- winter for me 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rjay Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago 26 minutes ago, jm1220 said: The last time I was in a 20”+ snowstorm at my house was probably PDII 2003. Boxing Day 2010 was close, may have been 20” in Long Beach but I think the local observer had 18”. Where I live now generally does well in the winter and gets the higher end but never jackpots in a big storm. Being in Texas for 2016 sucks but at least you know for sure there will be a big one in 2036. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthShoreWx Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 6 minutes ago, jm1220 said: Long Beach by the photos got 20” easy today and had heavy echos lingering around there for hours. Unfortunately the sound enhancement favored just the south shore today like Jan 2022. I'm not sure it was sound enhancement. It had the appearance of the opposite. Bands came down through CT, vaporized over the sound and regenerated within spitting distance south of here, as if we had a dome overhead. I suspect the meteorological explanation for this would be fascinating. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
allgame830 Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago Damn did 4 houses today with my son! Hard labor! 3 more tomorrow! Big money to be made out there with these storms! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rjay Posted 8 hours ago Author Share Posted 8 hours ago 23 minutes ago, NorthShoreWx said: This! The only 20 inchers since I've been here (since 1995) are 1/1996 (22") and 2/2013 (27"). A bunch of near misses though, including today. Boxing day was 12" here, PDII was 19". Funny thing about '96 is I don't think I had 20" with that one while almost everyone else did. I was a young teen and it was my largest snowstorm at the time. My area never jackpotted anything. So naturally I moved to the place that had 13" of rain in 3 hours and that gets hit hard by every CCB. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jm1220 Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 16 minutes ago, Rjay said: Being in Texas for 2016 sucks but at least you know for sure there will be a big one in 2036. Yep. I’ll set my alarm for it. Seriously, missing this sucked but 17” IMBY isn’t historic. That’s about what I got on 2/1/21, another storm where I did well but not the jackpot. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jm1220 Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 14 minutes ago, Rjay said: Funny thing about '96 is I don't think I had 20" with that one while almost everyone else did. I was a young teen and it was my largest snowstorm at the time. My area never jackpotted anything. So naturally I moved to the place that had 13" of rain in 3 hours and that gets hit hard by every CCB. When I lived in Austin it was the rain jackpot. May 2015 was the most rain I’ve ever seen in a 30 day period in my life. October 2015 from the Patricia remnants most I saw in a day. And the severe weather was bad. I was in Austin on Memorial Day weekend and JUST missed a massive hailstorm that hit the east side of town-2 foot hail drifts. I flew out 3 hours before it hit. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dmillz25 Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago Just saw that Fall River, MA got 41” ?! Wow 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nibor Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 2 minutes ago, dmillz25 said: Just saw that Fall River, MA got 41” ?! Wow I believe it. Southeast mass just been getting brutalized by this storm. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nibor Posted 6 hours ago Share Posted 6 hours ago Full storm radar 7 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
psv88 Posted 6 hours ago Share Posted 6 hours ago Sucks I missed this one. Going with local reports of 24” in Commack, so 56.8” of snow on the season. Not bad! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jm1220 Posted 5 hours ago Share Posted 5 hours ago 9 minutes ago, psv88 said: Sucks I missed this one. Going with local reports of 24” in Commack, so 56.8” of snow on the season. Not bad! Argh. Can’t be 17” that I missed here vs 24” you missed there. I’ll take the conservative I guess. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
psv88 Posted 5 hours ago Share Posted 5 hours ago 6 minutes ago, jm1220 said: Argh. Can’t be 17” that I missed here vs 24” you missed there. I’ll take the conservative I guess. Tight gradient in western Suffolk. Babylon got 28-30”. I’m confident Commack was 24” range based on reports from Nws, friends, family. Those snow bands hugged the LIE and maybe 2 miles north of there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roger Smith Posted 5 hours ago Share Posted 5 hours ago Daily climate reports are out now, no changes in earlier (in some cases questioned) totals except that annoyingly EWR is up by 0.1" (17.1" 23rd now for 25.2" storm). This means several minutes of needless work over in the contest thread. I don't know what to say about NYC staying at 19.7" unless it's some voodoo logic like we cleared the board at 4 p.m., measured, and then by 7 p.m. there was nothing on the board that we could see from a distance. Any kind of logic would tell you the earlier 10.9 daily (+8.8 22nd) should be raised towards 12" and a 20.8" storm total. But whatever, it is what it is (not). 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roger Smith Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago I have just seen the new CF6 tables through Feb 23 and no changes were evident, totals are still NYC 19.7, LGA 22.5, ISP 29.1, JFK 20.1, EWR 25.2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Volcanic Winter Posted 44 minutes ago Share Posted 44 minutes ago 8 hours ago, MJO812 said: This was 0z gfs on Tuesday. Insane how it kept the same solution or tweaked it . The GFS was lights out on this storm and it’s amazing to me. It was at best frustrating throughout the rest of winter but it saw this storm and never lost it, never compromised the outcome and just kept full steam ahead with NAM 2016 energy. Taking this with the usual AI grain of salt but GPT-5 explained it that the Euro’s verification scores have the most to do with H5 synoptic performance and that sometimes the GFS is better able to resolve northeast coastal systems at lead. Good but, it’s not like the GFS did great to my memory with the other systems this winter, it was all over the place IIRC. Seems like it’s becoming more difficult to parse which model has the best read for any one event. Edit: Here’s my Garmin Instinct 3 barometer log throughout the storm just for fun Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted 41 minutes ago Share Posted 41 minutes ago This was one of the better measured snowfalls considering all the drifting. It also highlights how these narrow deformation bands can cause significant variation over a very small distance. You can see the spread between the airport at Newark and the Harrison coop. Central Park was nearly identical to the Greenwich Village measurement After looking at our snowfall over the years some things stand out. Most snowstorms drop the heaviest snow either just west of the NYC-LGA-JFK corridor or to the east across Long Island. 2016 and 2006 were the rare times the heaviest snow was centered at one of these stations. My guess is that the northwest wall of the Gulf Stream to our east provides the natural focus for the very deep lows that track near the benchmark. Terrain interaction with the coastal fronts also lead to a snowfall secondary snowfall maxima somewhere over NNJ into Orange, Rockland, or Westchester. Weaker storms with marginal temperatures often favor areas to the west of NYC. So this has lead to mostly Islip and secondarily Newark for the snowfall leaders among the major observation sites. Greenwich Village 20.4 in 0230 PM 02/23 Public Central Park 19.7 in 0100 PM 02/23 Official NWS Obs Newark Airport 27.2 in 0200 PM 02/23 Official NWS Obs Harrison 18.0 in 0445 PM 02/23 CO-OP Observer 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
suzook Posted 18 minutes ago Share Posted 18 minutes ago 5 hours ago, psv88 said: Tight gradient in western Suffolk. Babylon got 28-30”. I’m confident Commack was 24” range based on reports from Nws, friends, family. Those snow bands hugged the LIE and maybe 2 miles north of there. Ironically friends I have in lower Stony Brook off 347 got 26 inches, while 2 miles north by rt 25 got 19. Crazy. I remember the storm in 2013 I think it was, rt347 was the jackpot zone with 33 to 37 inches while 2 miles in either direction had more than a foot less. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted 6 minutes ago Share Posted 6 minutes ago 31 minutes ago, Volcanic Winter said: The GFS was lights out on this storm and it’s amazing to me. It was at best frustrating throughout the rest of winter but it saw this storm and never lost it, never compromised the outcome and just kept full steam ahead with NAM 2016 energy. Taking this with the usual AI grain of salt but GPT-5 explained it that the Euro’s verification scores have the most to do with H5 synoptic performance and that sometimes the GFS is better able to resolve northeast coastal systems at lead. Good but, it’s not like the GFS did great to my memory with the other systems this winter, it was all over the place IIRC. Seems like it’s becoming more difficult to parse which model has the best read for any one event. Edit: Here’s my Garmin Instinct 3 barometer log throughout the storm just for fun Yeah, the GFS was #1 back to last weekend with the longer range forecasts and the AIFS was #2. In the shorter range it was the SPC HREF that did the best. For consistency across the entire season the best scoring models have been the AIFS and EPS AIFS. So it’s good to see the AIFS not having the suppression bias of the OP Euro and EPS with East Coast storms. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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