Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,609
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    NH8550
    Newest Member
    NH8550
    Joined

Upstate/Eastern New York-Into Winter!


 Share

Recommended Posts

A secondary off the New England coast and most of New York is still rain. I have mentioned this several times over the past few years. I mean, there IS cold air available this year in Canada...so that should be able to work into the system. I suppose it's moving too fast and developing too late to tap into much.

prateptype_cat.us_ne.png

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I’m just looking at today locally…the Mets were all wrong today. It was supposed to be above freezing by thus time per all the stations…still below here in Williamsville. I’m also watching the report right now and the in house models show all snow tomorrow and a hood hit of it…hey Todd STILL wants to state it’ll be sat we than it’s bring depicting…here’s my thought…I’m thinking  these models are not picking up the finite parts of these systems. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, TugHillMatt said:

A secondary off the New England coast and most of New York is still rain. I have mentioned this several times over the past few years. I mean, there IS cold air available this year in Canada...so that should be able to work into the system. I suppose it's moving too fast and developing too late to tap into much.

prateptype_cat.us_ne.png

Plenty cold enough in Canada but look at the 850 low and those lovely SW winds lol Still time for change, who knows the first system could become the storm of interest .

850th.conus (8).png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, wolfie09 said:

Plenty cold enough in Canada but look at the 850 low and those lovely SW winds lol Still time for change, who knows the first system could become the storm of interest .

850th.conus (8).png

I could see that happening. But, we have seen the models blow these storms up and make them cutters, only to see them become weak waves passing through on a fast flow. If we see a cutter, we may be able to get a deeper cold shot behind...rather than continue the mild air that exists behind these waves zipping across.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, BuffaloWeather said:

Nothing compares with the bolded though, I don't think you guys know how big of a deal that is. It means Dec 27th is the warmer than anytime in history on Oct 5th and April 21st, Fall/Spring. That is just insanity....

In temperature recorded history. If this happens again and again, then big deal. A one-off in a perfectly place extreme blocking pattern is reasonable. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Attention will then turn towards a large synoptic system that will
impact our region Saturday and Sunday. Several shortwave troughs
across the West will merge over the Plains to start the weekend,
with an eventual negatively tilted deep trough over the east coast.
The global models and their ensemble members still are in
disagreement about the track of the surface low, with the GFS and
Canadian operational models taking the track to the north of us,
while the ECMWF keeps the surface low suppressed to our south. Will
favor the climatological favored track of the low cutting by to our
west and north, with warming temperatures Saturday Night...with any
snow changing over to rain, before a cold front Sunday ends the warm
temperatures with rain changing back to snow.

High pressure returns later Sunday Night and Monday with a much
cooler airmass, and trending drier.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

37 minutes ago, wolfie09 said:
Attention will then turn towards a large synoptic system that will
impact our region Saturday and Sunday. Several shortwave troughs
across the West will merge over the Plains to start the weekend,
with an eventual negatively tilted deep trough over the east coast.
The global models and their ensemble members still are in
disagreement about the track of the surface low, with the GFS and
Canadian operational models taking the track to the north of us,
while the ECMWF keeps the surface low suppressed to our south. Will
favor the climatological favored track of the low cutting by to our
west and north, with warming temperatures Saturday Night...with any
snow changing over to rain, before a cold front Sunday ends the warm
temperatures with rain changing back to snow.

High pressure returns later Sunday Night and Monday with a much
cooler airmass, and trending drier.

This, right here, defines our climate...with the steroids its on.

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, TugHillMatt said:

This, right here, defines our climate...with the steroids its on.

Climatological? That seems like rubbish unless they are defining climate as the past few years?  If they said pattern based, I'd understand that, and agree. Parsing words of course cuz...what else is there to do? :)

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, BGM Blizzard said:

Hell yeah. Temps look a bit marginal down this way but hoping we can squeeze out 2-3" of pasty snow so I can do some plowing with the Deere again on Wednesday morning. 

0z 3k and 12k NAM

1454166247_snku_024h.us_ne(3).thumb.png.4be8218b034733fa4c44d1b9970a2401.png198385962_snku_024h.us_ne(2).thumb.png.e65f3c771c098ad4524be7012d231868.png

I’m interested as to why the trajectory of the accumulation to the west over lower Michigan doesn’t translate east…notice the hole over WNY? That seems odd

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...