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February 21-23 Major Winter Storm


Hoosier
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1 hour ago, Powerball said:

With the windy conditions and low sun angle, today's 90*F didn't feel bad at all.

But -18*F will never *NOT* feel disgusting under any circumstance, lol...

Yea its gonna break record highs down here in estero this week. It's humid too but tbh it's no worse than summer humid heat in michigan. I'd imagine come summer, I'll notice a bit of a difference lol. Def beats frigid cold. 

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12 minutes ago, Stevo6899 said:

Yea its gonna break record highs down here in estero this week. It's humid too but tbh it's no worse than summer humid heat in michigan. I'd imagine come summer, I'll notice a bit of a difference lol. Def beats frigid cold. 

 

I'll pass on both.. 

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30 minutes ago, A-L-E-K said:

Dry fropa, sad times

 

30 minutes ago, A-L-E-K said:

Dry fropa, sad times

Radar still looks a bit sketchy, though they tend to explode in set ups like this. I see LOT took the bait and brought the freezing rain line south a touch. Big worry with this is robbing of moisture transport from gulf convection.

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Eyeballing around 4” here. Lower end of guidance, but still within guidance nonetheless. People will call this a bust because we hit the lower end instead of the upper end. (Same as it ever was) The southern suburbs are doing well. There’s been a band stalled out just south of the Minnesota River for a few hours and I expect numerous 6”+ reports down there. Of course the official obs site at the airport is a few miles north of that…

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My backyard thermometer just went from 30 to 31 at 7 am. I’ll assume it was about this temperature while the moderate to heavy freezing rain moved through last hour. The parking lots and grass were only wet but everything else was covered in ice. Trees, cars, fences, etc. It seemed to accrue somewhat efficiently just above the ground. You’ve been alerted, Michigan posters. Good luck.

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38 minutes ago, IWXwx said:

Solid first thunderstorm of the year here. Just had a very close CG strike. Not bad for 6:30 AM in February.

I'm sure that it acted as an alarm clock for a lot of people.  It's getting me in the mood for severe season.

Sounds a lot better than just a cold rainy (icy) day.

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8 hours ago, mollydog said:

Last major in Oakland County was Apr 2003. Missed out on Christmas 2013. Mostly lapeer. Totally not stressing on this one!

April 2003 was an incredible event.  The Christmas 2013 was pretty bad here IMBY in NE Livingston County.  Some of my neighbors trees still show damage (still recovering major branches).  I will say it was very cool as it was my first white and very crystal Christmas!! :thumbsup: 

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6 minutes ago, mnchaserguy said:

3.5-4” here so far. Definitely low compared to the 6-8” forecast by MPX. Looks like a foot tonight into tomorrow is a solid better. Probably unlikely we hit 18” at this point. Big storm but significantly lower than what was shown by the models for several days.


.

4.1” at the airport as of 6am. Definitely the lower side of guidance but they were calling for 4-8” in this first wave, so not a bust. Really strong banding overnight in the south metro. Shame models are showing a substantial drying trend but we should have know those crazy totals from a couple days ago were unrealistic. I believe the record February snowfall at MSP is only in the 13-14” range so the monthly record is still very much in play. 

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3 hours ago, HillsdaleMIWeather said:

IWX and DTX both state they may need to upgrade their WWA areas later

DTX:

 

With the current outgoing forecast out of the way will offer to
insight in a potential deviation point as this gets into the latest
model trends and ramifications we`re watching. Hi-res runs this past
evening and tonight from the HRRR/RAP to NAM Nest (and to a lesser
magnitude the NAM12) are having a harder time lifting the frontal
slope into the area resulting into a shallower elevated warm nose
over the I-69/M-59 corridors, increasing sleet probabilities. If
this scenario pans outs, there would be a southward shift in primary
freezing rain axis towards the I-96/94 corridors... which as a
sidenote would be more in line with what the GFS and Canadian-NH
have been advertising. In addition, this would limit the chances to
switch to all rain over the far southern CWA instead remaining
wintry mix/freezing rain and increasing icing... which could warrant
a need for an upgrade of some or all of the advisory counties to an
ice storm warning. Areas of additional concern/uncertainties are the
effect of the still open waters of Lake Huron sitting firmly in the
mid to upper 30s, degree of latent heat release from higher rainfall
rates (or conversely any wet bulb cooling given dewpoints in the
20s), and the effect on ice accretion efficiency given the moderate
precip rates. Unfortunately these three points remain fairly
nebulous and really won`t be known until the event actually begins.

So basically, they won't know until it is already a done deal. Perfect for that office. They can then bump headlines. 

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4 minutes ago, RogueWaves said:

So basically, they won't know until it is already a done deal. Perfect for that office. They can then bump headlines. 

I love the last sentence the best:

Unfortunately these three points remain fairly
nebulous and really won`t be known until the event actually begins.
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4 minutes ago, RogueWaves said:

DTX:

 

With the current outgoing forecast out of the way will offer to
insight in a potential deviation point as this gets into the latest
model trends and ramifications we`re watching. Hi-res runs this past
evening and tonight from the HRRR/RAP to NAM Nest (and to a lesser
magnitude the NAM12) are having a harder time lifting the frontal
slope into the area resulting into a shallower elevated warm nose
over the I-69/M-59 corridors, increasing sleet probabilities. If
this scenario pans outs, there would be a southward shift in primary
freezing rain axis towards the I-96/94 corridors... which as a
sidenote would be more in line with what the GFS and Canadian-NH
have been advertising. In addition, this would limit the chances to
switch to all rain over the far southern CWA instead remaining
wintry mix/freezing rain and increasing icing... which could warrant
a need for an upgrade of some or all of the advisory counties to an
ice storm warning. Areas of additional concern/uncertainties are the
effect of the still open waters of Lake Huron sitting firmly in the
mid to upper 30s, degree of latent heat release from higher rainfall
rates (or conversely any wet bulb cooling given dewpoints in the
20s), and the effect on ice accretion efficiency given the moderate
precip rates. Unfortunately these three points remain fairly
nebulous and really won`t be known until the event actually begins.

So basically, they won't know until it is already a done deal. Perfect for that office. They can then bump headlines. 

I’ve been siding with global models just due to sheer consistency since last weekend. 

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