A radio station in Richmond started playing Christmas music last October around middle of the month, and it didn’t stop until March. Probably just stunting though, as they had a format change or something.
Cool page with plot comparing ENSO and NAO combinations.
https://www.weather.gov/lwx/ENSONAO_vs_Local_Winter_Snowfall
Edit: I’ll add these ones too which only use ENSO, even if it’s a bit behind.
El Niño : https://www.weather.gov/lwx/research_dcbalt_elnino
La Niña:
https://www.weather.gov/lwx/research_dcbalt_lanina
Only a little drizzle here today.
Richmond though, it needs a break. I think this is the third day where a storm has just parked over the city dumping rain. Flooding yesterday was bad from what I saw.
Scariest thing I’ve done was drive a tiny little boat for about 5-10 minutes while watching giant lightning strikes in the direction I’m going. Hope to never do that again.
Does anyone think these storms make it to the coast? I could use a cool off here, only had a small rumble tease of something that went to the North yesterday.
Wanted to ask, do any other locations have a spreadsheet that is updated like this
https://www.weather.gov/media/akq/climateRECORDS/RIC_Climate_Records.pdf
That was the biggest surprise for me. It was funny watching the TV stations continue to bump up the totals. Then I woke up to 10.8ish inches on the ground. The NAM wasn’t necessarily wrong with the numbers, but we all know how the NAM is.