Jump to content

Stormchaserchuck1

NO ACCESS TO PR/OT
  • Posts

    4,495
  • Joined

  • Last visited

2 Followers

About Stormchaserchuck1

Profile Information

  • Location:
    Fallston, MD

Recent Profile Visitors

26,017 profile views
  1. Higher than average probability is yes. March SSWs haven't been leading to -NAO as much the last few Winters so we'll see
  2. Typical -NAO correlation lag at that time of year is +15 days
  3. Euro seasonal model too strong SE ridge DJF two Winters in a row. Seasonal models seem to have heavy ENSO bias, even when Weak like they are grasping for any forecasting accuracy lol
  4. So much for warm ENSO subsurface effecting pattern right now.. Feb-March La Nina state in Hadley Cell 2018-2026 has been incredible Bright sun in late Winter really correlating with +NPH (North Pacific High)
  5. 12z GEFS very warm March 7-11. DCA could make a run at 70s.
  6. It's a pretty warm 500mb pattern coming up - Models have been too aggressive on the pattern this Winter, so we'll see how it pans out, but some areas in the Midwest may get very warm in early March
  7. Here comes the warmer subsurface (20c Isotherm Depth), leading the surface by several months, like usual
  8. Definitely not complaining. I was in Manassas, VA Friday and it was 60 degrees there, so hot in the sun. Glad this could happen right after!
  9. In 3 days we lose this current polar-tilting ridge across Alaska (-EPO) to a Polar Vortex placement over northern Greenland and Alaska (+NAO/+EPO). That warms the CONUS pattern very quickly. A ridge starts building in the Mid Atlantic the last day of February and the GEFS has that persisting really through the 2nd week of March. Seasonal trend has been to cool the Northeast, US, so maybe the warm temps will be confined to the Southeast and Midwest, but it's not really a cold pattern that we need at this time of the year for snow.. Best case scenario is something like today again.
×
×
  • Create New...