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Typhoon Tip

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  1. Interesting... I woulda thunk you'd be SE and putting a sweater on by this hour. Holding in at S wind tho
  2. I frankly would prefer that to being submerged in death by the N. Atlantic. Just by personal preference, but nothing is worse - to me - than Labrador stealing time from spring and/or summer. Either way, I'm willing to bet, the 95/72 circumstance is rarer than you having the back of your balls caressed by glacial remains
  3. My sympathies... yeah I'm sure as this sun continues to lase the environment we're eventually flipping the boundary layer and that'll transport momentum...ie, increase wind, and ruin it. SSE flow seems to be the layout ... rotating slowing into a SW and then WSW tomorrow. During this SSE earlier phases of that ... the cold slab of polar ocean air might meld in and force the vectors to temporarily turn back W.
  4. Still light ... Now 53, with high sun. Affect achieved.
  5. classic April temperature recovery ... DP ? 1 4 ...whilst it climbs toward 60 (probably). So, in fairness, splendor out of doors, considering what this loathsome time of year is capable of doing. If the wind remains light and doesn't get too wafty, then we get our 56 MOS + the typical 2 tick bust ... it will seem like a guilty bargain out there. Take this and run
  6. This has been an interesting first three months of 2026. So far ( date provided by Copernicus) : January 2026 was the fifth-warmest January globally. February 2025 was the fifth-warmest January globally. Notables so far were the variations in temperature across N/A and parts of Europe. These regions hosted the lion's share of what negative anomaly contribution there was that went into the total state of the planetary system. The graphic below illustrates these idiosyncrasies. ( I corroborated the above with NASA's releases and they conform ) March is not yet available at either Copernicus or NASA's monthly releases. NASA typically releases their finding s around the 10th of each month so we expect those soon. We know already that March 2026 was the warmest March on record across N/A mid latitude ( conterminous US), per more sources than need to really list here. Go take a look. However, again, both in data, as well as "sensibly" experienced, this was not as readily observed for the eastern mid latitude continent. Nevertheless, these eastern geographies accumulated +2 to +3 positive anomaly for the month - so ours was likely still negative relative to the whole continent, which can be ratified soon enough. This may or may not be reflected in the total graphics including the Mid Atlantic and eastern Ohio Valley and some parts of the SE. Personally, given a-priori awareness of the global circulation modes for the past 7 months and the persistence thereof, .. I suspect we'll see a repeat of relative offsets over eastern N/A and N-W Europe, while the rest of the world observes a ranking somewhere in the 3rd to 6th place for March. The beat goes on...
  7. Rather than painstakingly line-itemizing everything that's taken place ... will defer to https://climate.copernicus.eu/sites/default/files/custom-uploads/GCH-2025/GCH2025-full-report.pdf ... to elucidate notables and various drill-downs. 2025 was the 3rd warmest year in general. Starting the thread for 2026 -->
  8. 44 .. up from 23 Probably heading for MOS+routine bust ticks. Little or no wind and now late summer solar rad will certainly max out the nape factor. Psycho babble this will put mindsets and posting vibe some distance from this morning's disgruntling bite. I'm not sure it's the last of the freeze chances (season) though, due to further below... But yeah, the models do shows some elevating thickness out there. It's just that the ambient polar boundary is still gradient packed and that's not a good look. Pattern is trying, but it is as though the models in an internal war to prevent seasonal change. That's that tongue-in-cheek vibe in the current modeling cinemas. The problem is ... it wouldn't look that way if we could just at last remove that 90/60 PV. 00z ensembles re-invigorated it, after a couple cycles whence it finally looked - after 7 months of it no less... - like it was going away. Until that succeeds, we'll keep seeing these wild temperature ranges, S-N, at mid latitude continent. We'll also suffer greater than normal BD in the means... I just recall at least 3 Mays since 2019 whence there were flurries at mid day with blown out virga cu passages, and I don't recall those years having this PV plague. Case in point, this next Wednesday. Seems with the above concepts in mind, then combining with base-line climo, there's a pretty good gamble that frontal arm ends up down near DCA with NE drill. Right now, the models are tussling with a boundary, selling a precariously float near Brain or myself latitudes. But 1030 mb and +PP N of that boundary like that? feels like a 10 year old wondering if Dad'll be mad when he gets home from work to find out he was playing with old man's gun
  9. More reliance on interpretive automation technologies.
  10. I like that phrase turn there ... I'd go so far as to call it Industrial tabloidism. I've mused in the past, the moment in history when greed figured out how to turn channel changing, mouse clicking, and eventually ...thumb swiping into money, that was the moment in history that civility was doomed.
  11. In the midwest it's known as 'Farmer's Gold' .... late nitrogen fixing for agrarian vitality and stuff.
  12. about a 10/10 nape factor. 43 F with 0 wind and high sun. Very dichotomous sensations going on...
  13. you can see the snow coverage pretty fantastically here... https://weather.cod.edu/satrad/?parms=subregional-New_England-02-24-1-100-1&checked=map&colorbar=undefined
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