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Typhoon Tip

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  1. Roger Smith died Really? What happened?
  2. Kevin’s trying to create his own dopa hit
  3. Gotta love it when the Antarctic's climo curve enters it's steepest perennial decline, yet the actual temperature's wondering off into free space ...
  4. I was clear that March is a transitional month. By definition, that is not winter. It possesses qualities of both warm and cool seasons. The reasoning I gave is clad.
  5. Yeah, I've never heard of March 1st climate boundaries March 21 is an 'event horizon' - impetus being, you notice nothing crossing that date. At our latitude and other geographic constraints, notwithstanding, ... March 21 doesn't mean anything to the progression of spring. You cross the equator with direct sun? jack shit. You may as well delineate the .3deg of latitude shy of the Equator that happens on the 20th and galloot about that then. If you look at our climate, March shows a defined and most obvious total -differential in both cold and snow, and.... much to the amazement of denialims, that's starting work backward into Februaries. In fact, the first day of spring should philosophically begin on Feb 10, the date the celestial mechanics imposes the escape from the solar minum into what is called the solar transition season. Yeah, March 21 ...
  6. March 21 mean jack shit That date means nothing to physics and celestial mechanics.
  7. Warm fronts do this ... WPC evaluates and it seems they maybe just pick a mean position, because there's like these multiple gradient axis ... One extends along the Pike up here... It's 30s and low 40s N of that, and 50s below with more regions S obs in the wind field. Fine... but go down into the Mid Atl and there's another one, where it bounces into the mid 60s. It's like there's multiple warm boundaries in a diffused tapestry and WPC just has a snake there in the midst of it all.
  8. yeah, perhaps but ... the convection in S CT seemed coincident.
  9. Change in climate by raw numbers since 1980 implies that in nominal forcing, March in New England ( regional variance notwithstanding) is ~ +1F for 1980 thru 2010. Hint, it hasn't gone down since, either. If one were back in early February and said a warmer than normal March, that's not a bad gamble.
  10. So is that thunder coming on board in S CT? Looks like it's warm frontal thrust/lifting edge
  11. yeah, today had a downer murk look for a week's worth of guidance approaching. the high pressure is retreating due E keeps the SEsties in a moist/saturated flow. The warm front comes through later.
  12. I feel like every year on March 15th we go through this same stench of denial over the seasonal termination timing. I think people need to adopt the following notion at a spiritual level; a perpetually constraining limitation on their expectations: Winter ends after March 7. Springs sometimes host snow as a very valid part of Spring in New England's climate. If/when snow becomes a prevalent outlook event in Spring, it is normal Spring weather... and does not reflect winter as still existing. Also - while not (yet) a prerequisite for getting a 100 on that mental acuity test, anyone include CC disruption gets extra credit.
  13. Something else that's under everyone's radar ( no wonder considering - ), is that there were occasional model cycles building warm anomaly heights over the eastern continent, replete with over-governing circulation modes back then too. It's just that there wasn't any consistency; save for the heat we did get last week, but that was outside the outlook. We were looking at mid month, i.e., now. Anyway, there did turn out to be a big heat anomaly. It packed back SW and is setting off headlines alerts. I've been noticing this over the last several summers actually, that type of correction vectoring. We'd see a big warm up/ridge type -PNAP emerge in the outer temporal horizon of the models, and then it would retrograde through the charts as time went by to just go ahead and end on up right back in the SW frying eggs on High School parking lot science experiments in PHX. I've mused to self that one of these global synergistic heat burst phenomenon might one day visit the NE U.S., should one of those evolve opposite of that persistent correction vectoring - but it's never seemingly capable of doing that since I started noticing that specific behavior. Then, in the winters... we are consummately getting this weird local cold node where despite the background CC evidence, we are - quite convenient and enabling ... - persistently colder than everyone else. I'm not convinced correcting west warmth in the summers, and consummate cold enabling verification in the winters, is entirely unrelated. Yet ... we are supposedly warming fast than anywhere on the planet in the era of accelerating CC? interesting
  14. Will and I called that... Or actually, it's better to say that the modeling complexion, indices to performance tenors et al, looked like a no win scenario for mid March+, two weeks ago. We commiserated a back and forth about it. Those indicators were ugly. Not sufficient to offset normal seasonal climb out (the haunting abstraction of CC not helping -). Yet, the pattern still looked like it was going to try and fight the sun. The residue of that leaves us with no fun for late winter enthusiasts, and no fun for spring and warmth. No one wins. It seems the ambit of prognostic technology's nailing this purgatory.
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