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March Madness


Prismshine Productions
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That's like a 'rubber band' pattern at the end of that GFS. 

Basically ... the model loses the forcing that driving the predominating signal earlier in the run's time spans.  Pulls away leaving default huge instability - bounces back and overcompensates.   

That's likely all manufactured by normal accumulation of a randomness over time finally buckling the scaffold of the total synopsis and then that emerges, equally as a result of randomness. 

In other words, there's pretty much 0 practical usefulness of that storm/chart.    

Having said that...yeah, in principle, the warm pattern is not likely to last indefinitely ... even though I want it to. HAHAHA.  Personal druthers aside, I wouldn't be shocked if the warm pattern begins to progress off and the emergence of a western limb -NAO burst happens.  It's in the latter sequence of events that here may be a last hurrah winter expression ...be it temperatures and annoyance or perhaps an actual event.   

Boinnnng or not, the GFS also looks like what it does every year's first 2nd or third warm up - I know...because I whine about it ...every year at this time.  It washes out warm signal prematurely and then resets the basal pattern back to Feb 1.   Not sure why it predictably does this, but that pattern at the end of the run with those long wave spaces and deep heights over Canada strikes me as suspiciously the same thing it does ever early to mid spring.  

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1 minute ago, Typhoon Tip said:

That's like 'rubber band' pattern at the end of that GFS. 

Basically ... the model loses the forcing that driving the predominating signal, earlier in the run's time spans, and there's a kind of emergent 'elasticity' where the physics respond by then default to huge instability ... creating a pattern overcompensation.   

That's likely all manufactured by normal accumulation of a randomness over time finally buckling the scaffold of the total synopsis and then that emerges, equally as a result of randomness. 

In other words, there's pretty much 0 practical usefulness of that storm/chart.    

Having said that...yeah, in principle, the warm pattern is not likely to last indefinitely ... even though I want it to. HAHAHA.  Personal druthers aside, I wouldn't be shocked if the warm pattern begins to progress off and the emergence of a western limb -NAO burst happens.  It's in the latter sequence of events that here may be a last hurrah winter expression ...be it temperatures and annoyance or perhaps an actual event.   

The GFS looks like what it does every year - I know...because I whine about it ...every year at this time.  It washes out warm signal prematurely and then resets the basal pattern back to Feb 1.   Not sure why it predictably does this, but that pattern at the end of the run with those long wave spaces and deep heights over Canada striking me as the exact same thing it does ever early and mid spring.  

Honestly, don’t need warm I will gladly take 45-50F as a cool down 

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18 minutes ago, Modfan2 said:

Honestly, don’t need warm I will gladly take 45-50F as a cool down 

I've been pushing more of a 'melt and mud' season for the time being.   There's a higher ceiling than that.  However, in deference to the fact that every month since last October has successfully target this region of the continent for disproportionate cold relative to the whole hemisphere, it's hard to imagine this warm up performing at the higher end - just based on that unmitigated persistence.   If that 564+ dm thickness surge makes inside of 84 hours on guidance, fine...  

I'll tell yeah  ...wouldn't it be interesting to see a 70s transporting warm front run over this snow pack though?   

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