-
Posts
7,917 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Blogs
Forums
American Weather
Media Demo
Store
Gallery
Everything posted by EastonSN+
-
See THIS is how I view climate change. A 1.6 snowfall differential from 25 years ago.
-
It has more to do with a negative five standard deviation AO than the pack. If we had a weaker AO and the same pack the storm would have gained latitude and we would have had a decent event. The fast pack would have hindered the epic slow moving bombs, however we would have had a good four to eight six to twelve event with the same pack and a week or AO.
-
This is the block right now see how far north and east it is. If this were further west and further south we would have had snow. This will be the block Thursday. See how far south it is and how strong it is. If this were a little weaker or a little further north we would have had snow. You could see the kicker storm on this depiction too. So yes it's too strong and negative 5 and too far south. Weaker or little North with this strength and we would have snowed.
-
We've entered a new regime from 2000 to 2018 which mirrored 1955 through 1969. The regime will likely match 1970 through 1999. It will be a couple degrees warmer, which may actually help us in the snowfall department as it'll be more moisture and stronger storms if the water temperature theory holds. Remember five above average snowfall seasons in 30 years. Central Park's average in that time was a little over 20 inches. We had cutter suppressed cutter suppressed which we had this year. Not sure anyone can say definitively if global warming has turned a switch and it can never go back or if this is a warmer version of exactly what happened in the past. For posters have only seen 2000 through 2018 yes this looks like Armageddon. However those of us who lived through 1970 through 1999 or at least a portion of that period this is not shocking at all.
-
Yeah my recollection starts around 1983 I was extremely small but I remember the snow piles being massive.
-
We have time for it to turn around and nobody knows the future, however, taking the seasonal trend into consideration which I know every event is its own entity and the past doesn't necessarily guarantee the future, however, the storm track has favored the Delmarva all season. Basically if I were a gambling Man I would put the over-under for Central Park at 4 inches for this event. I would bet the under.
-
Yeah it is mind-boggling to think Central Park had five above average snowfall seasons in 30 years. Imagine what this board is going to do 10 years from now when we've had only one above every snowfall season in that time frame lol. To me it's just reliving my childhood.
-
I tend to disagree here. I'm tracking the snowfall average for Central Park for 1970 through 1999 and we are about 5 and 1/2 in inches below that 30-year average, however we have seen this year that we are nowhere close to being too warm to snow. Could we be two to three inches less than that 30 year average sure, however we are still seeing the same cutter suppressed pattern of that time period with cold air. Heck we just saw 2000 through 2018 mirror 1955 through 1969. We shall see I'll keep tracking.
-
Yeah I'm at 15.55 for the year (probably where it's going to end) but it felt more wintry than I could imagine that's snow total could bring. Including the October storm for the epic mild winter of 11/12 I ended up with 11.5, only 4 inches difference then this year yet it's night and day in wintery appeal.
-
Agreed I'm just looking at 1970 through 1999 for a blueprint of what we're going through now where the winters were much more tame. I can't expect 2000 through 2018 whether to come to the door at this point.
-
Even back here if I could lock in a 4 inch snow storm I would be happy.
-
I did not mind this winter, we had great snow cover the entire winter in numerous events to track. Even though this upcoming event will likely be a disappointment it will probably give a light snowfall of wonderful inches which is on par for the rest of the year and yet another storm which whitens the ground. Personally at 50% leverage. Central Park is 50% of the 30-year 1970 through 1999 average. We keep talking about extinct clippers coastal huggers of years ago, now extinct benchmark tracks, it was good to see our first 1980s cold season suppressed cutter track we thought was extinct and took 40 plus years to come back LOL. Also was refreshing to see that New Orleans and Florida can still get historic snowfalls in the warming climate.
-
I am ready for spring. Disappointing that the storm this week is not looking as good as it did, would have been nice to end the winter with a large storm.