40/70 Benchmark Posted October 29 Share Posted October 29 On 8/4/2024 at 5:29 PM, Typhoon Tip said: I know what's your getting at and don't disagree at a granular level but there are ways in which -PNA/+NAO becomes a problem from the Great Lakes to the upper mid Atlantic and New E regions. The simplest way to describe that model is an episodic retrograde of a NW-SE Canadian deep layer conveyor, one that sets up around a big eastern Canadian SPV, which becomes a positive NAO derivative. But importantly, that sets stage with presage cold loading, prior to RNA sending impulses E ... Storms are flat wave over-runners. +EPO ... yeah, that's a tougher sell. Kind of like Dec 2007 and 2008... 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Typhoon Tip Posted October 29 Share Posted October 29 I wonder if Fuji snow is correlating with the wpac warm anomaly “Japan’s iconic Mount Fuji has yet to see snow this season, breaking a 130-year record” -cnn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Maestrobjwa Posted October 29 Share Posted October 29 1 minute ago, Typhoon Tip said: I wonder if Fuji snow is correlating with the wpac warm anomaly “Japan’s iconic Mount Fuji has yet to see snow this season, breaking a 130-year record” -cnn Hasn't there been a warm anomaly there the last few winters? Seems like I've seen "wpac warm pool" a lot... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Typhoon Tip Posted October 29 Share Posted October 29 5 minutes ago, Maestrobjwa said: Hasn't there been a warm anomaly there the last few winters? Seems like I've seen "wpac warm pool" a lot... yeah .. kinda why i was careful to use ‘correlating’ as in ongoing. implicitly, maybe since the warm anomaly showed up there’s also a surrounding atmospheric echo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 @GaWx Just looking at the anomalies, the QBO is clearly still strengthening. Last month’s number was +12 and I believe the strongest westerly/positive QBO on record at 30mb was over +15. Wondering if we may rival or top that? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 The record breaking 500mb ridge which was up in Canada since last year dropped south in October with the La Niña and shut off the rainfall for much of the U.S. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 The record breaking 500mb ridge which was up in Canada since last year dropped south in October with the La Niña and shut off the rainfall for much of the U.S. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FPizz Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 13 hours ago, Typhoon Tip said: I wonder if Fuji snow is correlating with the wpac warm anomaly “Japan’s iconic Mount Fuji has yet to see snow this season, breaking a 130-year record” -cnn But Hawaii has gotten snow, so it evens out lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 1 hour ago, snowman19 said: Yeah, the PAC Jet shift to the north has really dried things out across the U.S. this month. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Typhoon Tip Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 partially agree. not sure the exact physical/causal root of the current distribution of anomalies of the hemispheric-scaled atmosphere can be 'directly' attributable to the pac sst observation like that. as i've mentioned before, and most credible sources know this to be true ... there is a longer termed, quasi coupled relationship between the ss stressing wind patterns, and sst anomaly distribution in the top most layer. it's an emergent state due to persistence in that relationship. it may in fact be more useful (indirect) as a means to expose where those stressing tendencies have been ...and from that, work backward ( so to speak) in determining the basal pattern construct(s). so that's the partial agreeing for me. i think there may be a slight and/or growing kind of misconception that these so called 'marine heat waves' have a spontaneity to their arrival, that the atmosphere is then motivated by their occurrence. it's plausibly imaginative to suspect there may be feed-backs later on, as the thermal sources perhap breach some thermodynamic (bulk) threshold. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 6 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said: partially agree. not sure the exact physical/causal root of the current distribution of anomalies of the hemispheric-scaled atmosphere can be 'directly' attributable to the pac sst observation like that. as i've mentioned before, and most credible sources know this to be true ... there is a longer termed, quasi coupled relationship between the ss stressing wind patterns, and sst anomaly distribution in the top most layer. it's an emergent state due to persistence in that relationship. it may in fact be more useful (indirect) as a means to expose where those stressing tendencies have been ...and from that, work backward ( so to speak) in determining the basal pattern construct(s). so that's the partial agreeing for me. The composites this month matched a much stronger MJO 6 in the means than we have seen in any other past October. So my guess is that we are getting enhanced SST feedback east of Japan. When this combined with the background Maritime Continent forcing it resulted in an unusually strong standing wave pattern for October. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Typhoon Tip Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 4 hours ago, bluewave said: The composites this month matched a much stronger MJO 6 in the means than we have seen in any other past October. So my guess is that we are getting enhanced SST feedback east of Japan. When this combined with the background Maritime Continent forcing it resulted in an unusually strong standing wave pattern for October. yeah, i added a late edit to that op ed there... not you or any one in particular, but i do suspect there is a growing kind of misconception related to so called 'marine heat waves' forcing patterns. almost like they have a spontaneity to their arrival, ...then the atmosphere is motivated by their occurrence. mm not really. but in fairness, i may be assigning that fallacy - it just comes off/"seems" like the former notion is lurking when these tweets or x's or whatever are re-posting about target causes like that. it's plausibly imaginative to suspect there may be feed-backs later on, as the thermal sources perhap breach some thermodynamic (bulk) threshold. but the ocean, particularly at middle latitude mixing circumstance ... isn't realistically going to just burst a thermal resonance out of nowhere, whereby we can conveniently find a silver bullet there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 23 minutes ago, Typhoon Tip said: yeah, i added a late edit to that op ed there... not you or any one in particular, but i do suspect there is a growing kind of misconception related to so called 'marine heat waves' forcing patterns. almost like they have a spontaneity to their arrival, ...then the atmosphere is motivated by their occurrence. mm not really. but in fairness, i may be assigning that fallacy - it "seems" like the former notion is lurking when these tweets or x's or whatever are re-posting about target causes like that. it's plausibly imaginative to suspect there may be feed-backs later on, as the thermal sources perhap breach some thermodynamic (bulk) threshold. but the ocean, particularly at middle latitude mixing circumstance ... isn't realistically going to just burst a thermal resonance out of nowhere, whereby we can conveniently find a silver bullet there. Yeah, the magnitude of the 500mb anomalies are off the charts for what would have been past occasions of forcing lining up over the WPAC. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 5 hours ago, bluewave said: The record breaking 500mb ridge which was up in Canada since last year dropped south in October with the La Niña and shut off the rainfall for much of the U.S. It now aligns with where a lot of the seasonals have the warmth centered this winter....in the N plains.....wonder if cold from Canada may be abit more accessible to the NE relative to last year. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LakeEffectOH Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 5 hours ago, snowman19 said: Does anyone have some idea as to what's causing this marine heatwave? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 7 minutes ago, LakeEffectOH said: Does anyone have some idea as to what's causing this marine heatwave? Combo of powerful Pacific cold phase and CC. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
George001 Posted October 30 Author Share Posted October 30 8 hours ago, bluewave said: The record breaking 500mb ridge which was up in Canada since last year dropped south in October with the La Niña and shut off the rainfall for much of the U.S. What are your thoughts on the plains centered warmth? It has been warm and dry everywhere but the real torch has been plains centered. The seasonal guidance is warm in November but with a similar theme to the past 90 day temp profile. Based on the fall temp profile and weak ENSO, I’m actually inclined to think that the risk is colder/snowier rather than warmer than the seasonal guidance based on this, especially if we do get periods of -EPO. Getting enough -EPO to result in a BN temp winter with a -3 PDO is an extremely tough ask especially with CC so I wouldn’t outright forecast it, but it’s something in the back of my mind. I’m thinking +2 to +3 AN temps for my area, but I do think there is say a ~20% chance that cold bleeds into the east and just about everyone busts way too warm. I am nowhere near as confident as I was last fall in a torch winter. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 59 minutes ago, George001 said: What are your thoughts on the plains centered warmth? It has been warm and dry everywhere but the real torch has been plains centered. The seasonal guidance is warm in November but with a similar theme to the past 90 day temp profile. Based on the fall temp profile and weak ENSO, I’m actually inclined to think that the risk is colder/snowier rather than warmer than the seasonal guidance based on this, especially if we do get periods of -EPO. Getting enough -EPO to result in a BN temp winter with a -3 PDO is an extremely tough ask especially with CC so I wouldn’t outright forecast it, but it’s something in the back of my mind. I’m thinking +2 to +3 AN temps for my area, but I do think there is say a ~20% chance that cold bleeds into the east and just about everyone busts way too warm. I am nowhere near as confident as I was last fall in a torch winter. I am thinking we are going to have to wait until the first week of December to know since the forcing leading to these standing wave patterns can result in the main 500mb height anomaly shifting locations depending on the month. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
roardog Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 I'd be stunned if the northern plains were the center of warmth this winter. If the northern plains is the center of warmth this winter during a Nina, then we're probably all screwed. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SethToast Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 Are any seasonal models even showing warm N plains beyond mid-December? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michsnowfreak Posted October 30 Share Posted October 30 1 hour ago, roardog said: I'd be stunned if the northern plains were the center of warmth this winter. If the northern plains is the center of warmth this winter during a Nina, then we're probably all screwed. 1 hour ago, SethToast said: Are any seasonal models even showing warm N plains beyond mid-December? I'm assuming George misspoke. The northern plains are the center of late october/early November warmth, but will quite likely be some of the colder anomalies this winter. Nearly all models show this to one extent or another, and it's definitely nina climo to boot. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
George001 Posted October 31 Author Share Posted October 31 2 hours ago, michsnowfreak said: I'm assuming George misspoke. The northern plains are the center of late october/early November warmth, but will quite likely be some of the colder anomalies this winter. Nearly all models show this to one extent or another, and it's definitely nina climo to boot. Yeah my post was kind of misleading, my bad on that. From what I have seen the guidance does have the warmth in the northern plains continuing into December, but yeah it should be much colder there in the winter. The main point I was making is that the fall pattern is completely different than the last 2 years, and when looking at winters with a similar temp/precip profile in the fall, there are some colder/snowier years in the mix. I mean a lot colder and snowier, like 13-14 and 10-11. I did not mean to imply that the northern plains would roast all winter with a strong +PNA, that would be a 14-15 type pattern. November was frigid in the east from what I remember and it was a warm ENSO pattern, so not a good analog at all. In 13-14 and 10-11, the plains was cold. In 13-14 in particular the plains was downright frigid, though the cold did bleed into the east as well. Of course, there were some really bad winters like 01-02 in there as well which is also a possibility. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SnoSki14 Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 1 hour ago, snowman19 said: What a disaster. Dust bowl 2.0 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CheeselandSkies Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 Quote This will also probably extend into winter, though the jet intensity may increase over the northern U.S., leading to a more unsettled regime for much of the northern tier of states. (From the earlier linked tweet Xpost by Ben Noll) I wonder if that could lead to more December central U.S. outbreaks a la 2021 (12/10, 12/15). Although interestingly we also had some in 2015 (12/23, 12/26) which was during the powerhouse El Nino. James Spann referred to the mild conditions across the southeast US during that period as the "El Nino Blowtorch," although it seems to me that pattern is also associated with La Nina. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
snowman19 Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 We are about to see massive strengthening of the stratospheric polar vortex during November 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 0Z Euro ensemble mean next 2 wks: still well below normal US pop weighted HDDs (~2/3 of the normal) and well above normal CDDs (~4 times the norm): normally US HDDs are ~23 times CDDs during this period but this fcast has HDDs only ~3.5 times CDDs. HDDs are rising and are forecasted to get to almost normal on 11/2 and 11/9, but then they fall back and still are not averaging anywhere near normal overall. Instead, the fcast has HDDs averaging a whopping nearly ~3.5 BN/day. In other words, the pop weighted US is forecasted to average a whopping ~3.5F/day AN for the period 10/31 through 11/13! The fcast averages 7.4 HDD/day, which is the normal US pop wted HDDs for Oct 24th. That means that this period overall is forecasted to be at US HDD levels from ~2 weeks earlier. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brooklynwx99 Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 it's encouraging seeing the MJO being able to get into 8-1-2 with some strength. the TPV being strong will make Greenland blocking harder to come by, which has been expected 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
40/70 Benchmark Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 7 minutes ago, brooklynwx99 said: it's encouraging seeing the MJO being able to get into 8-1-2 with some strength. the TPV being strong will make Greenland blocking harder to come by, which has been expected I think the past decade or so has aptly demonstrated that Pacific cooperation is more important than blocking in this stout, CC enhanced PAC cold phase. 5 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chris21 Posted October 31 Share Posted October 31 43 minutes ago, brooklynwx99 said: it's encouraging seeing the MJO being able to get into 8-1-2 with some strength. the TPV being strong will make Greenland blocking harder to come by, which has been expected I bet the Nov 5th-15th period will trend colder on guidance for the northeast. Wouldn’t even be shocked to see some flurries at some point at my location at 3800 feet on the NC/Tenn border. We had about a half inch Oct 15th (3 or 4 inches 700 feet up the mountain). Been unbelievably warm since. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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