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Winter 2020-21 Discussion


CAPE
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2 hours ago, CAPE said:

Gotta be careful with that "we" thing!

Again, the 2 most recent Ninas both produced big snow events in early Jan(of '17 and '18) for eastern areas, with a pretty crappy look up top. Just saying, it can happen.

In general, yes, we need a decent HL look(AO/NAO) for significant snow down here in a Nina, but the same can be said in most cases even in a Nino, and especially for the lowlands. 

 

I just figure when most people outside our region want a quick snapshot they are focused on the urban corridor from DC-Baltimore. You and I are not really in the mainstream here. 2000 wasn’t that good up here (but I would take it) since it’s a lot harder to fluke to avg with a couple storms up here. But the “we” was for the main cohort in this forum. You can get clipped by late developing miller bs and coastal scrapers much easier and in a Nina that advantaged your area over DC sometimes.  

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2 hours ago, Daniel Boone said:

Regarding the forecasted mild, fluke cold Winter of 2010-11, this area in the far Southwestern part of the Forum wound up with an above average Snow Season. Dec. and January was well above , Feb. Avg. Temps were well below. 

Only pulled a 19.5 here, and 12.6 of that fell in December. Then we nickel and dimed our way to the finish line.

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7 hours ago, psuhoffman said:

I just figure when most people outside our region want a quick snapshot they are focused on the urban corridor from DC-Baltimore. You and I are not really in the mainstream here. 2000 wasn’t that good up here (but I would take it) since it’s a lot harder to fluke to avg with a couple storms up here. But the “we” was for the main cohort in this forum. You can get clipped by late developing miller bs and coastal scrapers much easier and in a Nina that advantaged your area over DC sometimes.  

I get that. Just playing devil's advocate a bit. We always want HL blocking, regardless of ENSO state. It greatly increases the odds of significant snow events for this area. A favorable EPO is probably second after a -AO/NAO, as we get big cold air delivery and even without much help in the NA, we can snow.

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1 hour ago, Vice-Regent said:

I strongly doubt it man. They will just end up stuck in Greenland with a raging positive NAO. Nothing kills winter faster than cold Octobers.

Haven't we not had a colder than average October in around a decade, with the last one being October 2009? Not trying to throw out outliers like that, but it's hard to assume something like that when the sample size in recent memory is rather limited. 

But yes I agree with the sentiment surrounding what the colors will look like come December. 

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6 hours ago, CAPE said:

I get that. Just playing devil's advocate a bit. We always want HL blocking, regardless of ENSO state. It greatly increases the odds of significant snow events for this area. A favorable EPO is probably second after a -AO/NAO, as we get big cold air delivery and even without much help in the NA, we can snow.

Agree with all this. But what I found (and most know) is in a Nina it’s even harder to luck our way to a significant snow without any HL blocking.  A lot of that is due to a less potent stj. Without blocking in any regime our best shot is to luck into a juiced up but progressive wave. Those are really unlikely without any stj help. But that is especially pertinent to DC. They are too far west to benefit from waves that develop late as they infuse Atlantic moisture. DC needs the gulf as it’s main moisture source. Only exception is a slow moving amplified bomb. But we need blocking for that so again catch 22!  So it’s REALLY difficult for DC to get a significant snow in a +NAO Nina regime. Even more so than in other enso states. 

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Simon just added this to his cool reference site. 

 

 

 

GEFS: 35-day 10 hPa 60°N 

The new GEFSv12 now features a 35-day run every day at 00Z. Shown here is the output from the previous day’s run, due to the time taken for the data to appear on NOMADS.

Note that, because of the length of the forecast, systematic model biases are more likely to impact the output. These are not accounted for here.

Ensemble plume

 

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4 hours ago, Cobalt said:

Haven't we not had a colder than average October in around a decade, with the last one being October 2009? Not trying to throw out outliers like that, but it's hard to assume something like that when the sample size in recent memory is rather limited. 

But yes I agree with the sentiment surrounding what the colors will look like come December. 

Our last October trace on snow was 2011-2012.  Cold Octobers are bad for our winter.

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53 minutes ago, BTRWx's Thanks Giving said:

Our last October trace on snow was 2011-2012.  Cold Octobers are bad for our winter.

October snow is way too small a sample size to draw firm conclusions 

Thats like if some minor league player got called up for one game and hit 1/3 thinking they will bat .333 for their career! 

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28 minutes ago, WxUSAF said:

@griteater with a great thread that seems fairly encouraging to me

https://twitter.com/griteater/status/1309524598480949250?s=21

And the  latest CFS runs look like this for November. Matches his composite for November preceding those winters pretty well. Who knows if it has a clue- but it has been pretty persistent in hinting at HL +heights for Fall lately.

cfs-mon_01_z500a_namer_2.png

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29 minutes ago, WxUSAF said:

@griteater with a great thread that seems fairly encouraging to me

https://twitter.com/griteater/status/1309524598480949250?s=21

I agree there is still hope this year ends up in the  “better” Nina category.  When I examined past Nina archetypes I found it very difficult to determine reliable predictive characteristics we could use ahead of time. The one would be extremely cold north Pac SST (Which almost always was a kiss of death) but we don’t have that.  Unfortunately some still ended up crap anyways. But there is hope!  However...notice most of even the “better” colder Nina Years were still more frustrating than not. 1996 aside the rest still ended up below avg in DC. But they did get closer to median and at least had chances in the area and legit threats to track and some places in our region did better in some of those years. So they are “better”. But it’s wise to set the bar pretty low in a Nina. Even a “good” Nina is simply getting anywhere close to avg.  A median snowfall winter is a huge win in any Nina imo. If we get super lucky and 1996 decides to repeat itself great. But I’ll save my sanity not counting on that. 

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13 minutes ago, CAPE said:

And the  latest CFS runs look like this for November. Matches his composite for November preceding those winters pretty well. Who knows if it has a clue- but it has been pretty persistent in hinting at HL +heights for Fall lately.

cfs-mon_01_z500a_namer_2.png

Where’s our “persistence” crew???  I’m not saying I buy that. I don’t. But...I find it funny that our resident persistence worshipers that like to tell us the crap pattern will continue because....persistence...are suddenly saying “but it won’t last” when the pattern is good. 

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1 minute ago, psuhoffman said:

I agree there is still hope this year ends up in the  “better” Nina category.  When I examined past Nina archetypes I found it very difficult to determine reliable predictive characteristics we could use ahead of time. The one would be extremely cold north Pac SST (Which almost always was a kiss of death) but we don’t have that.  Unfortunately some still ended up crap anyways. But there is hope!  However...notice most of even the “better” colder Nina Years were still more frustrating than not. 1996 aside the rest still ended up below avg in DC. But they did get closer to median and at least had chances in the area and legit threats to track and some places in our region did better in some of those years. So they are “better”. But it’s wise to set the bar pretty low in a Nina. Even a “good” Nina is simply getting anywhere close to avg.  A median snowfall winter is a huge win in any Nina imo. If we get super lucky and 1996 decides to repeat itself great. But I’ll save my sanity not counting on that. 

Aside from abundant blocking, was there any reason that it seems like that's been the only Nina in recent memory that produced those sorts of results? Seems like that winter also had some some characteristics that were unlike a Nina too so I guess that could be why just about any blocking we've had in recent Ninas has fallen short.

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Just now, psuhoffman said:

Where’s our “persistence” crew???  I’m not saying I buy that. I don’t. But...I find it funny that our resident persistence worshipers that like to tell us the crap pattern will continue because....persistence...are suddenly saying “but it won’t last” when the pattern is good. 

Yeah, well proceed with caution lol. We have seen plenty of advertised good looks up top in the LR in recent winters and outside of something transient/bootleg, it never materializes. But given we are just about to October, and we are seeing some 'decent' signs, there is time for a bit of optimism before all hopes and dreams get crushed. And ofc there is the WDI. Oh and solar min. And smoke/ash!

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26 minutes ago, Cobalt said:

Aside from abundant blocking, was there any reason that it seems like that's been the only Nina in recent memory that produced those sorts of results? Seems like that winter also had some some characteristics that were unlike a Nina too so I guess that could be why just about any blocking we've had in recent Ninas has fallen short.

But 1996 would be an aberration in any enso. How rare is that outcome just in general?  I think when you get that kind of blocking all bets are off on everything else. Look at 2018. We got that kind of blocking in March and April and had several legit threats!  One legit hit and a few others that would have been if it was January not March plus one storm suppressed south of us even!!!  If we could get that kind of Uber blocking Dec-Feb even in a Nina we would probably do good. 2010/11 spooks some people but it still took a pretty fluky weird course of events to miss that Boxing Day storm then we did get one good storm in January. But the blocking broke down and the rest of winter sucked. If the blocking had persisted another few weeks or had been centered mid winter vs so early when our climo is rough that year probably would have been better.  Anytime we get that kind of blocking it can overcome other negative factors. 

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22 minutes ago, CAPE said:

Yeah, well proceed with caution lol. We have seen plenty of advertised good looks up top in the LR in recent winters and outside of something transient/bootleg, it never materializes. But given we are just about to October, and we are seeing some 'decent' signs, there is time for a bit of optimism before all hopes and dreams get crushed. And ofc there is the WDI. Oh and solar min. And smoke/ash!

I don’t disagree just saying it’s not because of persistence. My point is many of the persistence crew isn’t really about persistence they are just about pessimism. 

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38 minutes ago, BTRWx's Thanks Giving said:

Since 1950, only one cold October weak nina year had slightly above average snowfall at DCA.  Most decent winters with cold Octobers were ninos.

 

DCA Cold Octobers.jpg

1.  There are only 5 examples there of a Nina with a cold October. Too small to be reliable. 
2.  You aren’t adjusting the goalposts. We know in a Nina snowfall will very likely be below avg. we’re discussing will it be in the dumpster fire type Nina or the “better” but still below avg snowfall category. 2/5 years in that set were in the better category, 15.4 and 12.8” at DCA. If DCA breaks 10” in a Nina that is a huge win. If it breaks 12” it’s dance in the street time. 15” and clothes should come off!!!  
 

You listing how all cold October Nina’s were below avg is kinda duh since there has only been 1 above avg Nina at DCA total since 1950 so it’s too small a sample to draw any conclusions!

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59 minutes ago, psuhoffman said:

But 1996 would be an aberration in any enso. How rare is that outcome just in general?  I think when you get that kind of blocking all bets are off on everything else. Look at 2018. We got that kind of blocking in March and April and had several legit threats!  One legit hit and a few others that would have been if it was January not March plus one storm suppressed south of us even!!!  If we could get that kind of Uber blocking Dec-Feb even in a Nina we would probably do good. 2010/11 spooks some people but it still took a pretty fluky weird course of events to miss that Boxing Day storm then we did get one good storm in January. But the blocking broke down and the rest of winter sucked. If the blocking had persisted another few weeks or had been centered mid winter vs so early when our climo is rough that year probably would have been better.  Anytime we get that kind of blocking it can overcome other negative factors. 

Yeah that makes sense. Seems like we're getting guaranteed storms or at least guaranteed potentials for hits every single time we get blocking nowadays, but of course the tradeoff is that we're in a period where periods of blocking are far and few between. Wonder if that's just a general climo shift of some sort. 

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Posting for historical reference when the winter ends up giving us "decent" median amounts -- let's go ahead and get rock bottom out of the way now! 

Although @Maestrobjwa might just get his wish of widespread pain and suffering along the entire east coast. :cliff: ;)

Ben Noll put together a "blend" of global winter snowfall anomalies from the ECMWF+UKMET:

https://www.bennollweather.com/ecmwf

Image

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1 hour ago, psuhoffman said:

1.  There are only 5 examples there of a Nina with a cold October. Too small to be reliable. 
2.  You aren’t adjusting the goalposts. We know in a Nina snowfall will very likely be below avg. we’re discussing will it be in the dumpster fire type Nina or the “better” but still below avg snowfall category. 2/5 years in that set were in the better category, 15.4 and 12.8” at DCA. If DCA breaks 10” in a Nina that is a huge win. If it breaks 12” it’s dance in the street time. 15” and clothes should come off!!!  
 

You listing how all cold October Nina’s were below avg is kinda duh since there has only been 1 above avg Nina at DCA total since 1950 so it’s too small a sample to draw any conclusions!

70 years of data is not unreliable.  I don't appreciate you always criticizing my work.

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5 minutes ago, BTRWx's Thanks Giving said:

70 years of data is not unreliable.  I don't appreciate you always criticizing my work.

open your mind Luke..  use the force.  i understood what PSU was getting at.  lets not create hostile environments already.  Its only September!  Save that for late February when the sun angle folks start to raise their voice.

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37 minutes ago, MountainGeek said:

Posting for historical reference when the winter ends up giving us "decent" median amounts -- let's go ahead and get rock bottom out of the way now! 

Although @Maestrobjwa might just get his wish of widespread pain and suffering along the entire east coast. :cliff: ;)

Ben Noll put together a "blend" of global winter snowfall anomalies from the ECMWF+UKMET:

https://www.bennollweather.com/ecmwf

Image

Lol Hey, you know me...if there has to be snow suffering..."All together now":whistle: :lol: And hey, better to get these bad look LR forecasts now instead of getting a head-fake...so that if there's a surprise, AWESOME! But if not...the expectations are low to begin with, lol

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