Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,597
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    DAinDC
    Newest Member
    DAinDC
    Joined

December 2023 Mid/Long Term Pattern Discussion: Let it Snow!


John1122
 Share

Recommended Posts

49 minutes ago, Carvers Gap said:

I will say this, the system this weekend will help with drought conditions over E TN.  The slp slows down and almost stalls.

My god what a storm track for east Tennessee on 18z.  4 days of solid snow, this easily could of been one for ages.  

  • Like 6
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Bigbald said:

My god what a storm track for east Tennessee on 18z.  4 days of solid snow, this easily could have been one for ages.  

I Was going to come here and say this exact thing. Precip over us for 84hrs on 00z gfs. 2.5-3" of rainfall.  Would have been one of those winter storms you hear talked about for decades. Instead we get 30s and rain haha still good for our area though. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Power T is back as the avatar.  Ensembles look workable as do extended ensembles d+14.  Some of the "clutter" from the past few days has been removed.  The Pacific trough is still too close to the West coast, but(and it is a big but)......the trough over the SE has begun to show around the 28th.  Is it a mirage?  50/50 IDK.  I do think cold is still lacking in a massive way, but just getting rid of the NA torch will be helpful.  

As for the boomer this weekend...man, it really wants to stall.  Any time we see storms looping, re-forming, etc....good luck to modeling in figuring that out.  Trends overnight have been eastward???  What is crazy is the lack of cold is probably producing that storm.  There are few steering currents once it gets to our latitude.  It is almost like a hurricane that gets tucked under big high and just sits.  If it gets as strong as modeled, somebody in the East is getting a frozen mess even if temps are warm...the storm is modeled that strong.  Modeling could be overdoing it.  Today is a big day in terms of figuring out intensity.

And yes,  Holston, when the Nam finally sees it, it is gonna be like a bear which sees one of those big red coolers in a compact car.  Havoc is gonna take place!

  • Like 6
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was at UT at the time.  One of my roommates was from Powell - actually knew three of the guys from the team which went to state maybe in 89.   That year was also when Lenoir City was hit by the tornado in '93, right?  I remember seeing all of the requests for EMS on TV.  

Yes.. same day. The LC tornado was really bad.


.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

At the rate winter is going.  I will be mowing my yard all winter.  Near 60 for next 10 days.  Christmas shows near 60 also.  My yard is green & growing.  

A warm December is right on par with Nino winters. Most strong Nino winters don’t get going around here until January into February. Not panicking yet but by the week of Christmas we should see some LR hope showing up. Let’s also not forget that when we have a very strong anomaly that’s influencing our weather, the mods are going to struggle even more than they do.


.
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pretty big changes to the operational 12z GFS.  Those began at 0z or maybe earlier.  Big PNA pops as the HB block retrogrades into NW Canada - that changes things for the better if real.   Fingers crossed, that would mean that models are reverting to a better pattern.  I suspect, the MJO is correcting into colder phases.  It looks that way on the CPC site.  If the MJO is correct, the MJO will progress back through warm phases yet again...but I doubt it gets caught on the warm side for more than a 10-12 days.    The 12z GFS does have cold air back in the pattern after d10.

  • Like 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

30 minutes ago, Carvers Gap said:

Pretty big changes to the operational 12z GFS.  Those began at 0z or maybe earlier.  Big PNA pops as the HB block retrogrades into NW Canada - that changes things for the better if real.   Fingers crossed, that would mean that models are reverting to a better pattern.  I suspect, the MJO is correcting into colder phases.  It looks that way on the CPC site.  If the MJO is correct, the MJO will progress back through warm phases yet again...but I doubt it gets caught on the warm side for more than a 10-12 days.    The 12z GFS does have cold air back in the pattern after d10.

Carver, I'm wondering when the mjo will be able to get to the colder phases (8-2)? Warm phases aren't good for cold weather lol

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

One thing I've been wondering, and it might not have much bearing on the upcoming pattern, is how will this jet extension behave when it hits the convection at the dateline and eastward? How will that convection modulate it and what do I mean by that? We've seen these jet extensions that aim at the west coast in the past and they usually roast us, but I'll be interested to see what happens when that extension actually gets to the more convectively active part of the Pacific.

The whole point of watching all this tropical convection all the time, when there isn't anything more immediate to analyze, is to see how it impacts the Pac jet. I think one of the reasons we like Ninos for blocking is that these jet extensions, as long as they're not Godzilla strength, add Momentum to atmosphere in the higher latitudes and thats why they can have more blocking and SPV disruptions. 

Does the ongoing convection strengthen it? Weaken it?  Redirect it a bit? How exactly will the convection look when the jet extension happens? The much feared jet extension is still 3 days away as far as I can tell. The ongoing dateline convection has already changed some over the past couple of days, but it seems to me that the tropics along and east of the dateline still look much more active than when we've had these jet extensions and accelerations over the past Ninas.

 

IDK, maybe just a bunch of ramblings after lunch, but something to think about since there's not much else going on. 

PS:  After the 12z GFS, the "Is this a deviation from the inevitable Torchmas, or is it another head fake?" debate in some of the more... I don't know...fussy subforums, should be fun over the next few days for those of you (like me) who like to watch those kinds of things. 

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's crazy how different over the mountains are from some of yall.  We had two snows last week, temps in the teens and 30s, we still have snow across the mountains and we could be looking at a big high elevation event this weekend.  A warm December was always on the table and very well forecast. I wouldn't fret yet.

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

33 minutes ago, Holston_River_Rambler said:

 

One thing I've been wondering, and it might not have much bearing on the upcoming pattern, is how will this jet extension behave when it hits the convection at the dateline and eastward? How will that convection modulate it and what do I mean by that? We've seen these jet extensions that aim at the west coast in the past and they usually roast us, but I'll be interested to see what happens when that extension actually gets to the more convectively active part of the Pacific.

The whole point of watching all this tropical convection all the time, when there isn't anything more immediate to analyze, is to see how it impacts the Pac jet. I think one of the reasons we like Ninos for blocking is that these jet extensions, as long as they're not Godzilla strength, add Momentum to atmosphere in the higher latitudes and thats why they can have more blocking and SPV disruptions. 

Does the ongoing convection strengthen it? Weaken it?  Redirect it a bit? How exactly will the convection look when the jet extension happens? The much feared jet extension is still 3 days away as far as I can tell. The ongoing dateline convection has already changed some over the past couple of days, but it seems to me that the tropics along and east of the dateline still look much more active than when we've had these jet extensions and accelerations over the past Ninas.

 

IDK, maybe just a bunch of ramblings after lunch, but something to think about since there's not much else going on. 

PS:  After the 12z GFS, the "Is this a deviation from the inevitable Torchmas, or is it another head fake?" debate in some of the more... I don't know...fussy subforums, should be fun over the next few days for those of you (like me) who like to watch those kinds of things. 

We are seeing reversals across modeling today.  I don’t know what to make of it other than modeling weakened the MJO in error

  • Like 5
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Carvers Gap said:

We are seeing reversals across modeling today.  I don’t know what to make of it other than modeling weakened the MJO in error

I've heard the OLR charts are the real deal when it comes to how and where the mjo is and going in the future. Better than the rmm charts I think

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, Itryatgolf70 said:

I've heard the OLR charts are the real deal when it comes to how and where the mjo is and going in the future. Better than the rmm charts I think

Satellite is the gold standard, but OLR works as well. Basically, if you see storms firing over the Indian Ocean and/or Indonesia...phases 4-6 will follow.  I you see an MJO pulse make it to the dateline, that is basically phase 7-8-1.    The Nino projected to warm near the dateline (think that is right) should enhance MJO phase 8.  Big thing right now is I think modeling is struggling mightily with HL blocking, the potential for a strat split.  Model chaos is impending IMHO.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Itryatgolf70 said:

Carver, I'm wondering when the mjo will be able to get to the colder phases (8-2)? Warm phases aren't good for cold weather lol

The MJO is maybe less important right now as it is still early winter, but the MJO is for sure present on modeling.  The big problem is the GoA low modeling in the medium range.  Where it sets up is highly important.  If we can get the ridge out of central Canada that will help displace it.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's crazy how different over the mountains are from some of yall.  We had two snows last week, temps in the teens and 30s, we still have snow across the mountains and we could be looking at a big high elevation event this weekend.  A warm December was always on the table and very well forecast. I wouldn't fret yet.

You are Green Co right?


.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Carvers Gap said:

The MJO is maybe less important right now as it is still early winter, but the MJO is for sure present on modeling.  The big problem is the GoA low modeling in the medium range.  Where it sets up is highly important.  If we can get the ridge out of central Canada that will help displace it.

Yeah, that's what we discussed awhile back in pushing that thing west . Need blocking to help with that as well. May be a quick block pop as wave breaking may get it done.

      Btw, check out the high pressure over our area now. 10.33 mb ! 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, Daniel Boone said:

Yeah, that's what we discussed awhile back in pushing that thing west . Need blocking to help with that as well. May be a quick block pop as wave breaking may get it done.

      Btw, check out the high pressure over our area now. 10.33 mb ! 

You meant 1033mb? That's pretty good hp regardless 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

22 minutes ago, Daniel Boone said:

Yeah, that's what we discussed awhile back in pushing that thing west . Need blocking to help with that as well. May be a quick block pop as wave breaking may get it done.

      Btw, check out the high pressure over our area now. 10.33 mb ! 

I can’t recall a hp of that magnitude (and forecasted to increase to 1040 on some models) where it was so warm. I mean it hasn’t really been a torch today, but it was 56 here today. Ordinarily a 1033 or greater would be good for highs in the 30’s at least. Shoot, I’ve seen single digit lows and highs around 20 with a 1033+. It’s just a testament to the fact that we don’t really have much cold air around right now. Hopefully that will change down the road.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well this storm has a long way to go. The euro and UK tonight really dig the second wave of energy and deliver a pretty potent NW event. A lot of eps support too and the gfs jumped that way at 00z just didn't dig it as much.

this is really the solution that can deliver any frozen precip with this system. And it will likely be changing until a few hours before the event. Long few days of watching ahead

 

IMG_0925.thumb.png.272e4b86c74fd0345a09dee9a031af4a.pngIMG_0926.thumb.jpeg.a25825baf855b825e273dc0d2df98381.jpeg

  • Like 3
  • Thanks 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...