Jebman Posted yesterday at 01:09 AM Share Posted yesterday at 01:09 AM On 7/7/2026 at 6:49 PM, frd said: We will be tired of the blizzards. I might have to stop by for a few days and watch all that snow pile up. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Weather Will Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago Early winter analog ideas from WB's D'Aleo: surprised by both maps actually...temps are cold and precip. is just normal. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CAPE Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago Latest CFS runs still going Giga for late winter. Typically when we have the highest probability of a major east coast winter storm during a Nino. 7 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
frd Posted 13 hours ago Share Posted 13 hours ago 1 hour ago, Weather Will said: Early winter analog ideas from WB's D'Aleo: surprised by both maps actually...temps are cold and precip. is just normal. The East based Nino folks are not going to agree. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted 13 hours ago Share Posted 13 hours ago CFSv2 latest 10 day mean of JFM 2m anomalies is beautiful fwiw: Same for precip: Whereas this looks great and I’d love for it to verify closely, it’s important to keep in mind the following for the NE US regarding 15 years of mid-July CFSv2 JFM prog verifications (2012-26): -Too cold 6 yrs/40% (including 4 much too cold): ‘24, ‘23, ‘21, ‘20, ‘17, ‘12 -Too warm 4 yrs/27% (including one much too warm): ‘26, ‘22, ‘15, ‘14 -Close 5 yrs/33%: ‘25, ‘19, ‘18, ‘16, ‘13 Overall averages a cold bias in the NE, especially since 4 much too cold and only one much too warm. OTOH, only 6 of 15 (40%) were too cold…so not a strong cold bias and thus there’s still a reasonable level of hope that it could verify well. —————————— The cold bias in the SE is even stronger: -Too cold 8 years/53% (including 4 much too cold): ‘24, ‘23, ‘21, ‘20, ‘19, ‘17, ‘16, ‘12 -Too warm 5 years/33% (but none much too warm): ‘26, ‘25, ‘22, ‘15, ‘14 -Close 2 years/13%: ‘18 and ‘13 ————————— Interestingly, this cold JFM 2027 CFSv2 forecast isn’t a whole lot colder than the following one also made in mid-July for JFM 2016 (which similarly followed a super Nino peak) as it has a fairly similar pattern (just not as cold): This is what verified: so, CFSv2 was close in NE but too cold in the S 1/2 of US: 3 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Benjamn3 Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago 13 hours ago, CAPE said: Latest CFS runs still going Giga for late winter. Typically when we have the highest probability of a major east coast winter storm during a Nino. Us in S.W V.A looking at that like 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Terpeast Posted 1 hour ago Share Posted 1 hour ago 14 hours ago, CAPE said: Latest CFS runs still going Giga for late winter. Typically when we have the highest probability of a major east coast winter storm during a Nino. Not to toss a wet blanket on this - I love this look, and while it points to a relatively stormy winter for is - I think the ridges will verify stronger and troughs weaker. The more important interpretation of this map is the placement of the troughs and ridges. The trough placement for us is perfect (TN), western ridge axis over Idaho. The E Canada ridge may verify in the same place, but would be more extreme - double digit warm anomalies with blocking that may give us some interesting storm tracks. Please, please just have it cold enough for us. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CAPE Posted 47 minutes ago Share Posted 47 minutes ago 5 minutes ago, Terpeast said: Not to toss a wet blanket on this - I love this look, and while it points to a relatively stormy winter for is - I think the ridges will verify stronger and troughs weaker. The more important interpretation of this map is the placement of the troughs and ridges. The trough placement for us is perfect (TN), western ridge axis over Idaho. The E Canada ridge may verify in the same place, but would be more extreme - double digit warm anomalies with blocking that may give us some interesting storm tracks. Please, please just have it cold enough for us. The CanSIPS advertised h5 pattern for latter part of winter certainly implies cold enough at times. Love the look out west with the Aleutian low placement and the amped EPO ridge. Has the TPV in a favorable spot and suggests a -NAO. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
yoda Posted 39 minutes ago Share Posted 39 minutes ago 18 minutes ago, Terpeast said: Not to toss a wet blanket on this - I love this look, and while it points to a relatively stormy winter for is - I think the ridges will verify stronger and troughs weaker. The more important interpretation of this map is the placement of the troughs and ridges. The trough placement for us is perfect (TN), western ridge axis over Idaho. The E Canada ridge may verify in the same place, but would be more extreme - double digit warm anomalies with blocking that may give us some interesting storm tracks. Please, please just have it cold enough for us. I agree. I think we will be also having a lot more "mixed" or snow to rain events east of the i81 corridor/mountain regions this winter. I'd like to think if we can time it right with the cold air - as I believe we will see numerous moisture laden SLPs - we could luck our way into a decent winter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Benjamn3 Posted 38 minutes ago Share Posted 38 minutes ago Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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