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May 2026 Obs/Discussion


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Shouldn't we have a separate thread for this upcoming storm now?  It certainly warrants one IMHO!

Give the super snow weenies on this board, I expect at least one to travel to the mountains of ME/NH just to experience a truly rare event.  We need in situ snowfall obs as well!  :D

 

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9 hours ago, vortex95 said:

Shouldn't we have a separate thread for this upcoming storm now?  It certainly warrants one IMHO!

Give the super snow weenies on this board, I expect at least one to travel to the mountains of ME/NH just to experience a truly rare event.  We need in situ snowfall obs as well!  :D

 

Perhaps you and @CoastalWxcan rent a cabin together in the wilderness of Maine?

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1 hour ago, dendrite said:

Yeah the day is shot. If it’s 40 and rain versus a wild hour or two of 33.5 and snow just give me the flakes. Really wish it was June though. lol

I'm more intrigued by the near or at lowest possible qualitative ranking day on the proverbial misery scale, immediately turning around to a top 10 qualifier on Sunday.  24 hours

That's a (probable) under the radar consideration?    Like going from 0 to 10 in 24 hours does not typically happen. 

In the more objective sense, this really is a rare phenomenon, whether it snows or not.  Those snow mongers with hardons on May 30th are kind of eye-rolling to be honest.  It's like they have no built in limitations or cold/snot bullshit filters in their every day interpretation of reality.  Could be July and they be posting "we watch" with thumb up emojis on autopilot.    This has looked suspiciously like it could be grapple and probably flip to big aggies in the 1500+ range for awhile. I've heard of snow in the higher hills and mountains pretty late before.   Someone should bother to look up occurrence of snow at 2,000 feet+ for all months, and see what the return rate really is.   To me this looks like it's enabling some cold :damage: cism. 

But 2 aspects are true.  It is a both a cold anomaly, while doing so in a highly unusual way. I think folks are too hung up on getting the cold itself to happen, without noticing that there is a 24 hour pass through a -2 or even -3 SD cold event where both the event entry and exit are extraordinarily steep - big deltas.  For me anywho ... that's the fantastic.  

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1 minute ago, Typhoon Tip said:

I'm more intrigued by the near or at lowest possible qualitative ranking day on the proverbial misery scale, immediately turning around to a top 10 qualifier on Sunday.

That's a (probable) under the radar consideration?    Like going from 0 to 10 in 24 hours. 

At least this storm is interesting.  Better than 48 hours of drizzle and fog.  Of course worse than a 75/55 and sunny Saturday.

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As an aside ... to help (maybe) elucidate some of the scale of this anomaly, did you know that there is a teleconnector where eastern mid latitude N/A tends to trough/ridge at the same time as western Europe? 

It's just an aspect we covered in FAST II back in school.  There are a few of these around the world.  All they really are, are just arguments surrounding standard wave spacing in the L/W distribution - the stable #s tending to be the return state, is physically and also statistically (both) confirming these quasi-relationships. 

That said, ... a +3 SD or greater NW-W European ordeal, with its 95 to 100 F whopper pre June heatwave days over end is a circumstance that DEFINITELY is incongruous with the former inference.  We should be hot too.

But here's the thing ... this event is sub-index scaled. It's small. Too small really to be 'detected' numerically by the teleonnection inference.   It's like reaching into an ice chest, balling up a snow ball, and throwing at us.  It's moving S parabolically within a L/W axis, but it's anomalous relative to the L/W itself. 

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7 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said:

As an aside ... to help (maybe) elucidate some of the scale of this anomaly, did you know that there is a teleconnector where eastern mid latitude N/A tends to trough/ridge at the same time as western Europe? 

It's just an aspect we covered in FAST II back in school.  There are a few of these around the world.  All they really are, are just arguments surrounding standard wave spacing in the L/W distribution - the stable #s tending to be the return state, is physically and also statistically (both) confirming these quasi-relationships. 

That said, ... a +3 or greater NW-W European ordeal, with its 95 to 100 F whopper pre June heatwave days over end is a circumstance that DEFINITELY is incongruous with the former inference.  We should be hot too.

But here's the thing ... this even is sub-index scaled. It's small. Too small really to be 'detected' numerically by the teleonnection inference.   It's like reaching into an ice chest, balling up a snow ball, and throwing at us.  It's moving S parabolically within a L/W axis, but it's anomalous relative to the L/W itself. 

Just to make sure you just weren't making up s***. 

 

 

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