eyewall Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 48 minutes ago, wncsnow said: Mid March could be a legit threat for wintry in NC. Especially I 40 north. Lock it in! 4 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 Looking at the monthly NAO table back to 1950, the above maps are actually for when the March NAO averages lower than -0.5. The NAO looks to start that way but it remains to be seen whether or not it will stay predominantly negative enough through the month for it to end up sub -0.5. However, with the strong start being helped by the very weak SPV, I think the odds are pretty high. NAO monthly table: https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/pna/norm.nao.monthly.b5001.current.ascii.table 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 The correlation of a -NAO with BN SE temps is higher during March vs all other months: https://psl.noaa.gov/cgi-bin/data/correlation/corr.test1.pl?iregr=1&var=Air+Temperature&level=Surface&mon1=3&mon2=3&iy[1]=&iy[2]=&ilead=0&ilag=0&type=3&timefile=&customtitle=&labelc=Color&labels=Shaded&cint=&lowr=&highr=&scale=&switch=0&proj=USA&xlat1=&xlat2=&xlon1=&xlon2=&custproj=Cylindrical+Equidistant&level1=1000mb&level2=10mb&Submit=Create+Plot Edit: Also, the correlation to BN in the SE during March is higher for -AO and -NAO vs any other indices such as +PNA. 2 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 The 12Z EPS is by a good margin the coldest run yet for much of the E US! 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Met1985 Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 14 minutes ago, GaWx said: The 12Z EPS is by a good margin the coldest run yet for much of the E US! Yeah was just going to post about another really cold run for the Midwest and the Eastern US. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StantonParkHoya Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 Looks short lived thankfully. Terrible for agriculture. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Met1985 Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 21 minutes ago, StantonParkHoya said: Looks short lived thankfully. Terrible for agriculture. Not really. We are currently in the midst of another major SSW that will impact a good portion of April in my opinion. Lots of variables and changes going on. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StantonParkHoya Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 37 minutes ago, Met1985 said: Not really. We are currently in the midst of another major SSW that will impact a good portion of April in my opinion. Lots of variables and changes going on. That’s good if you like cool rain. It’s not 1962. You’re not getting snow in April. I, like most sane people, prefer Spring and being outdoors. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthHillsWx Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 4 minutes ago, StantonParkHoya said: That’s good if you like cool rain. It’s not 1962. You’re not getting snow in April. I, like most sane people, prefer Spring and being outdoors. I mowed my yard for the second time this year today. Was quite nice out. Had to spray the plethora of weeds that have taken off. Without exaggeration, we are more than a month ahead of schedule for the growing season. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
franklin NCwx Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 17 minutes ago, StantonParkHoya said: That’s good if you like cool rain. It’s not 1962. You’re not getting snow in April. I, like most sane people, prefer Spring and being outdoors. Might want to check climo before making bad posts. Most of us (especially the mtns) average more snow in April than November 7 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StantonParkHoya Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 7 minutes ago, franklin NCwx said: Might want to check climo before making bad posts. Most of us (especially the mtns) average more snow in April than November I checked my climo. In April, we average 73 degrees. It’s not snowing. No one lives in Franklin. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Buckethead Posted February 28, 2023 Share Posted February 28, 2023 I checked my climo. In April, we average 73 degrees. It’s not snowing. No one lives in Franklin. I had 9" of snow just before Good Friday last year.And I don't live in Franklin.Sent from my SM-S908U using Tapatalk 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Met1985 Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 26 minutes ago, StantonParkHoya said: I checked my climo. In April, we average 73 degrees. It’s not snowing. No one lives in Franklin. I mean realistically people outside the mountains have a very low chance of see snow but yall aren't out of the woods for some cold temps for sure. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buckeyefan1 Posted March 1, 2023 Author Share Posted March 1, 2023 GSP's take on Friday .SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/... As of 130 PM EST Tuesday: A positively-tiled upper trough will dig across the western CONUS during the beginning portions of the forecast period, while an attendant frontal boundary stretches from the Southern Plains, through the ArkLaTex region, and into the OH Valley and northeastern CONUS. As the pattern evolves through the period, expect the frontal boundary to sag into the Southeast Wednesday night into Thursday as the parent low lifts into the northeastern CONUS. With a surface high shifting offshore and the flow aloft gaining a southwesterly component, deep moisture advection and low-level convergence will lead to a swath of precip to push into the CFWA during the alluded timeframe. With a 40-50 kt LLJ and scattered upper forcing to go along with high PWAT values (1.00"-1.50+"), expect precip rates to be enhanced, which ultimately may lead to a low-end hydro threat. Model guidance continue to show the alluded frontal boundary stalling over the CFWA Thursday, which may lead to an extended period of precip. As a result, likely to categorical PoPs will remain in the forecast on Thursday. While the frontal boundary remains stalled over the region, the positively tilted trough will strengthen into a vertically stacked low over the Four Corners region and shift to the Southern Plains Thursday night. The surface low riding underneath will undergo cyclogenesis and rapidly strengthen as it rides along the stalled boundary and lifts in the mid-MS Valley. The stalled boundary over our CFWA will activate into a warm front in response and lift well north of the CFWA by Friday morning. This will set the area under a stout warm sector regime, ahead the approaching frontal system. Underneath the aforementioned warm sector, an environment favorable for severe weather will be in store. The cold front attached to the surface cyclone will be strongly forced as it encroaches the CFWA by Friday afternoon. Model guidance continue to support 500-1000 J/kg of SBCAPE across the area as the front enters the CFWA. Great deep layer shear and unidirectional hodographs support the development of a squall line as the main frontal zone swings through the CFWA. Mini-supercells could form out ahead of the front as well. In this case, all three severe hazards will be possible with damaging straight-line winds and a few embedded tornadoes being the main focus. With the forward progression of this system being relatively quick, any hydro threat will be low and localized. One caveat being thrown into this forecast is the timing between global models and the pesky NAM. Global models are still in great consensus and that the main frontal band will push through the area during peak heating. On the other hand, the NAM is slower in the front`s progression and appears to push the front across the CFWA just after peak heating, which could limit the overall severe threat as a result. This will be a trend to watch out for, especially once the hi-res models start to get a handle on this setup on Wednesday. We urge everyone to continue monitoring the forecast leading up to Thursday and Friday as it will change between now and then, but the run-to-run consensus between all operational models and ensembles makes it hard to believe that there won`t be at least a low-end severe threat across the western Carolinas and northeast Georgia. Temperatures through the period will be well-above normal. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
franklin NCwx Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 56 minutes ago, StantonParkHoya said: I checked my climo. In April, we average 73 degrees. It’s not snowing. No one lives in Franklin. Glad we don't live there! Apparently it doesn't snow in winter in Raleigh either. Unfortunately, too many people live in Franklin. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
calm_days Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 Some chilly periods in March and April would probably be preferable to actual heat from February through late autumn sometime!! (also i feel like if you put a vote up in Southeastern States if we were ready for a cooler than average summer, there would be lots of yes votes!!) 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 The chances of the upcoming March NAO ending up sub -0.5 is pretty good considering how displaced/weak is the strat and how negative it is progged to be for the first 10 days. Since 1950, there have been 20 of these out of 73 (just over 1 in 4 chance). I did some calculations based on these 20 for RDU: 1. Temperature: 7 MB, 5 B, 7 N, 1 A (60% MB to B, 35% N, 5% A) AVG -2.8 2. Snow/IP (I didn't do ZR): - Measurable in 8 of 20 (40% of these vs 33% of all) - 4"+ in 3 of 20 (15% of these vs 10% of all)(all 3 cold) - Max 9.3" (1969) - Average: 1.2" vs longterm average for all of 1.1" (so not bad but not much difference from average considering the high percentage that were cold) 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KChuck Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 5 hours ago, GaWx said: The chances of the upcoming March NAO ending up sub -0.5 is pretty good considering how displaced/weak is the strat and how negative it is progged to be for the first 10 days. Since 1950, there have been 20 of these out of 73 (just over 1 in 4 chance). I did some calculations based on these 20 for RDU: 1. Temperature: 7 MB, 5 B, 7 N, 1 A (60% MB to B, 35% N, 5% A) AVG -2.8 2. Snow/IP (I didn't do ZR): - Measurable in 8 of 20 (40% of these vs 33% of all) - 4"+ in 3 of 20 (15% of these vs 10% of all)(all 3 cold) - Max 9.3" (1969) - Average: 1.2" vs longterm average for all of 1.1" (so not bad but not much difference from average considering the high percentage that were cold) Appreciate all of your work!!! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
olafminesaw Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 The Triad gets a 3-5" snow after March 10th about every 15 years (2018, 1993, 1981, 1974, 1972, 1940). The latest 6" storm on record was March 9th 1960 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 1. The 12Z EPS held consistent with the prior colder E US trend and has a stronger PNA trend in the 11-15 vs prior runs. 2. The -AO continues to trend in the stronger direction on the EPS and other models out near day 10. I wouldn't be surprised if this continues. I suspect this is because of the very weak SPV. The 10 mb winds at 60N dipped all of the down to -19 m/s yesterday, indicative of a very weak strat. A strong -AO is a primary effect of a successfully down-welled weak strat onto the troposphere. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Upstate Tiger Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 Severe threat still appears to be on schedule for Friday: As of 225 PM EST Wednesday: A potent shortwave trough and closed upper low will take on a negative tilt as it ejects out of the Southern Plains Thursday night and lifts through the Tennessee Valley and into Ohio on Friday. This will push a strong cold front through the area that will bring a threat for severe thunderstorms. A warm front will quickly lift north Thursday night into Friday morning with the entire forecast area residing within an open warm sector by the early afternoon hours. Upper 50s to low 60s dewpoints will be common within the warm sector, which should be sufficient to support 500-1500 J/kg of surface-based CAPE across the area with the highest values across the Piedmont. This is concerning as shear profiles will be quite impressive. A 50-60kt low-level jet translating across Georgia and the Carolinas will help sweep out large cyclonically curved hodographs with 400-500 m2/s2 of 0-1km SRH and 40-45kts of 0-1km bulk shear. Deep-layer wind shear will also be impressive on the order of 70-80kts. The resulting parameter space will be more than supportive of all modes and hazards of severe weather. Details, however, will reside in the placement and magnitude of forcing and where the best CAPE/shear balance sets up shop. A very strong ~985mb surface low will lift into central Indiana with a pre- frontal surface trough extending into northeast Georgia and the Carolinas. While pressures will be low, the strongest surface pressure falls and height falls aloft will be displaced just northwest of the area. Early CAM/mesoscale guidance depicts a scenario where forcing is just enough to instigate a cellular storm mode while not being too strong for rapid upscale growth into a line of convection. This solution would support a broken band of supercells, which would yield a greater severe weather threat. The other uncertainty is the CAPE/shear balance as warm mid-level temperatures and poor lapse rates result in meager CAPE profiles. Resulting updrafts could struggle with such a strong magnitude of shear, but this could potentially be offset by stronger forcing/kinematics. With that being said, the current slight risk appears well placed across the area until details can get ironed out. An upgrade to higher severe probabilities cannot be ruled out either given the aforementioned parameter space. Winds will also be gusty outside of the severe weather threat, especially during peak heating/mixing within the warm sector. A high wind watch may eventually be needed across the higher terrain in the mountains with advisory level winds possible elsewhere. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
olafminesaw Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 *Wedge Watch* The GFS has the Triad in the low 70s Friday afternoon, while the hires NAM keeps temps in the mid to upper 40s. I think I can count on a drizzly miserable Friday Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 Tropospheric NAM = AO 0Z GEFS based AO forecasts for March 6th: trend is downward: 2/26 run: -0.1 2/27 run: -0.5 2/28 run: -1.3 3/1 run: -1.5 For March 10th, yesterday's 0Z GEFS had 0. Today's had -0.9. The 12Z EPS has a stronger -AO through most of its run through March 14th and that continues its trend since the 0Z 2/27 run. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kayman Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 1 hour ago, Upstate Tiger said: Severe threat still appears to be on schedule for Friday: As of 225 PM EST Wednesday: A potent shortwave trough and closed upper low will take on a negative tilt as it ejects out of the Southern Plains Thursday night and lifts through the Tennessee Valley and into Ohio on Friday. This will push a strong cold front through the area that will bring a threat for severe thunderstorms. A warm front will quickly lift north Thursday night into Friday morning with the entire forecast area residing within an open warm sector by the early afternoon hours. Upper 50s to low 60s dewpoints will be common within the warm sector, which should be sufficient to support 500-1500 J/kg of surface-based CAPE across the area with the highest values across the Piedmont. This is concerning as shear profiles will be quite impressive. A 50-60kt low-level jet translating across Georgia and the Carolinas will help sweep out large cyclonically curved hodographs with 400-500 m2/s2 of 0-1km SRH and 40-45kts of 0-1km bulk shear. Deep-layer wind shear will also be impressive on the order of 70-80kts. The resulting parameter space will be more than supportive of all modes and hazards of severe weather. Details, however, will reside in the placement and magnitude of forcing and where the best CAPE/shear balance sets up shop. A very strong ~985mb surface low will lift into central Indiana with a pre- frontal surface trough extending into northeast Georgia and the Carolinas. While pressures will be low, the strongest surface pressure falls and height falls aloft will be displaced just northwest of the area. Early CAM/mesoscale guidance depicts a scenario where forcing is just enough to instigate a cellular storm mode while not being too strong for rapid upscale growth into a line of convection. This solution would support a broken band of supercells, which would yield a greater severe weather threat. The other uncertainty is the CAPE/shear balance as warm mid-level temperatures and poor lapse rates result in meager CAPE profiles. Resulting updrafts could struggle with such a strong magnitude of shear, but this could potentially be offset by stronger forcing/kinematics. With that being said, the current slight risk appears well placed across the area until details can get ironed out. An upgrade to higher severe probabilities cannot be ruled out either given the aforementioned parameter space. Winds will also be gusty outside of the severe weather threat, especially during peak heating/mixing within the warm sector. A high wind watch may eventually be needed across the higher terrain in the mountains with advisory level winds possible elsewhere. There's already a thread on it: https://www.americanwx.com/bb/topic/58949-march-3-severe-potential/ 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LakeNormanStormin Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 18Z GFS says no snow for you. Winter is canceled for the Piedmont. Time to chase twisters. Or play twister. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SnowDawg Posted March 1, 2023 Share Posted March 1, 2023 Anybody in here see the 12z Euro control? One of the best modeled fantasy storms I've seen in a while. An absolute legend that will never happen lol 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coach McGuirk Posted March 2, 2023 Share Posted March 2, 2023 51 minutes ago, SnowDawg said: Anybody in here see the 12z Euro control? One of the best modeled fantasy storms I've seen in a while. An absolute legend that will never happen lol what does it show? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
buckeyefan1 Posted March 2, 2023 Author Share Posted March 2, 2023 32 minutes ago, Coach McGuirk said: what does it show? 2 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coach McGuirk Posted March 2, 2023 Share Posted March 2, 2023 46 minutes ago, buckeyefan1 said: 1993 pt deux 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PackGrad05 Posted March 2, 2023 Share Posted March 2, 2023 Classic Wake County gradient. By the time it got here (if it even was still a storm by then), it would have moved 100 miles NW. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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