Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,611
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    NH8550
    Newest Member
    NH8550
    Joined

Upstate/Eastern New York-Into Winter!


 Share

Recommended Posts

47 minutes ago, BuffaloWeather said:

Once a pattern locks in, it really locks in. I sense there will be some cliff jumpers coming if this comes to fruition. 

ecmwf_T850a_us_11.png

I think you and a couple others were the only ones buying the potential pattern change. Like you said, once a pattern locks in….

But there’ll be jumpers none the less. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, rochesterdave said:

I think you and a couple others were the only ones buying the potential pattern change. Like you said, once a pattern locks in….

But there’ll be jumpers none the less. 

I go on most sub forums and most Mets were buying it. Most professional outlooks had a cold/snowy December.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, TugHillMatt said:

How many times have we had this carrot dangled out in front of us this past decade?

Gfs loves to dangle carrots. 1-2 good les events a year and I’m satisfied. Last year checked that box 

Last year was much better than the year prior. I don't think we had one good LES band over my place which is pretty rare for a winter. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Off Lake Erie, the quick switch to 270-290 flow Wednesday morning
will focus lake snows ESE of the lake. Guidance suggest that there
may be some added upstream priming but the shorter fetch will likely
keep accumulations in check. That said, the most likely scenario
will be a brief burst of snow immediately behind the front then
declining returns throughout the day as drier air filters into the
region. Right now, expect snowfall accumulations of 1-3 inches in
the most persistent snows across the higher terrain ESE of the Lake.
Elsewhere, very little snowfall accumulation is anticipated with
less than an inch.

Off Lake Ontario, southwest flow will focus activity over the SLV in
the morning then veers to 290-300 by mid afternoon. This will then
focus lake snows in the late afternoon across Wayne, N. Cayuga, and
Oswego county. Before this occurs, added upstream connections and
the longer fetch coming into play will briefly enhance snowfall
accumulations east of the lake across the Tug Hill as the band
slowly shifts south. Snowfall accumulations still look light due to
residence time of the band with 2-4 inches possible across the Tug
Hill, lighter amounts elsewhere.
Upper level trough axis overhead of far eastern New York State
Wednesday night will support an area of surface low pressure over
northeastern Maine. This will place the area under northwesterly
flow, promoting 850mb temperatures to drop to a minimum of around
-14C overnight Wednesday night. This will continue to promote
upstream lake connections with a band of lake effect snow
south/southeast of Lake Ontario. However, snow accumulations will be
limited as the band will shift into an area of falling equilibrium
levels, with up to an inch of snowfall possible southeast of lake Ontario.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Even while the weekend system will weaken the broad mid-level
ridge in place over the Great Lakes, the persistent longwave
pattern will likely re-establish its dominance thereafter. This
is demonstrated by a high degree of model and ensemble
concurrence concentrating deep troughing over western Canada
and the western CONUS. A pattern as such will favor cold air
slipping southward down the front range of the Rockies, however
any eastward advection of said cold pool is not evident in any
solution through not only the end of the long term period, it
would seemingly be unlikely to occur even through the end of the
year.
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, wolfie09 said:
Off Lake Erie, the quick switch to 270-290 flow Wednesday morning
will focus lake snows ESE of the lake. Guidance suggest that there
may be some added upstream priming but the shorter fetch will likely
keep accumulations in check. That said, the most likely scenario
will be a brief burst of snow immediately behind the front then
declining returns throughout the day as drier air filters into the
region. Right now, expect snowfall accumulations of 1-3 inches in
the most persistent snows across the higher terrain ESE of the Lake.
Elsewhere, very little snowfall accumulation is anticipated with
less than an inch.

Off Lake Ontario, southwest flow will focus activity over the SLV in
the morning then veers to 290-300 by mid afternoon. This will then
focus lake snows in the late afternoon across Wayne, N. Cayuga, and
Oswego county. Before this occurs, added upstream connections and
the longer fetch coming into play will briefly enhance snowfall
accumulations east of the lake across the Tug Hill as the band
slowly shifts south. Snowfall accumulations still look light due to
residence time of the band with 2-4 inches possible across the Tug
Hill, lighter amounts elsewhere.
Upper level trough axis overhead of far eastern New York State
Wednesday night will support an area of surface low pressure over
northeastern Maine. This will place the area under northwesterly
flow, promoting 850mb temperatures to drop to a minimum of around
-14C overnight Wednesday night. This will continue to promote
upstream lake connections with a band of lake effect snow
south/southeast of Lake Ontario. However, snow accumulations will be
limited as the band will shift into an area of falling equilibrium
levels, with up to an inch of snowfall possible southeast of lake Ontario.

BUF had a great discussion this afternoon. While not what I was hoping to read, they do a great job detailing the pattern in which we're stuck in layman's terms and how it's probably not going to change through the rest of the month/year. I say we just get rid of the -NAO, allow the warmth to surge in and bake us, and hopefully in doing so, allow that -PNA to move out....and we reshuffle this whole mess of a pattern.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, TugHillMatt said:

BUF had a great discussion this afternoon. While not what I was hoping to read, they do a great job detailing the pattern in which we're stuck in layman's terms and how it's probably not going to change through the rest of the month/year. I say we just get rid of the -NAO, allow the warmth to surge in and bake us, and hopefully in doing so, allow that -PNA to move out....and we reshuffle this whole mess of a pattern.

January is going to be rockin Cara De Troll Face Clipart , Png Download - U Mad Bro Meme Troll,  Transparent Png - kindpng

 

  • Haha 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 minutes ago, BuffaloWeather said:

A really good illustration of what is happening from the New England Forum, they have great discussions over there. 

Graphic.png

The big ULL underneath the -nao is whats shearing everything out. If you didn't have that though, you would be baking and we probably would be talking svr threats and wind storms

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interesting 18Z NAM runs...kind of show what I had discussed yesterday... I had thought maybe the first wave would end up being the more potent of the two. Both look to try and drop an inch or two of synoptic Thursday night and Friday morning now. 12k is also making Saturday look like a very chilly rain or wet snow.

My call for Christmas across Western and Central NY is dreary and damp in the 30s with snizzle/light showers...with many areas having a "white" one with slush on the ground. I just don't see enough time for the follow-up wave on Christmas to develop much/cut in this fast pattern. In fact, that will be the pattern through the end of the year. Unsettled, with 30s to lower 40s for highs....mixed rain and snow.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rgem (best lake effect model) is also starting to show a healthy band of Lake effect snow Wednesday night across the Northern Finger Lakes/Lake Ontario Southshore. Then a bit of Synoptic Thursday night. Obviously I hope it comes in a little more WNW (that dumb curve to the south as it comes into Onondaga...)

Hopefully we can get it to pan out. I like that models are getting a bit more impressive with it as we get closer.

sn10_acc.us_ne.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Easterly wind kicked in here and the temp dropped 4 to 5 degrees rapidly across the Syracuse area. Currently sitting at 33 degrees here in the NW Burbs. The way this area responds so quickly to wind shifts continues to impress me. I see you guys out in Western NY are in the lower 40s with southerly winds, so perhaps we go back up again later.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Ericjcrash said:

I'd be into the 18z GFS Boxing day storm... mid 20s with mod-heavy rain changing to snow. The 26th will always hold a spot in my heart. Can't believe it's been 11 years 

At this time we were tracking the storm

 I will never forget Christmas morning when the Euro caved and showed a blizzard

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

48 minutes ago, TugHillMatt said:

The west coast had a ridiculous heat ridge over the summer...why not give them a huge trough now?

Oh, and we were STILL HOT here (and above normal) even when they had that summer ridge. lol

Anything to deny cold and snow. Lol. 

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...