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2024-2025 La Nina


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25 minutes ago, bluewave said:

This may be why October was the 2nd warmest on record for the CONUS well beyond what would have been suggested by just looking at the MJO. 

 That’s why I’m implying more than the normal amount of caution is recommended to any folks who might be tempted to put large weight on the MJO phases while the W Pacific marine heatwave persists. All things being equal, I’d think that a colder phase would still be preferred, however.

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1 minute ago, GaWx said:

 That’s why I’m implying more than the normal amount of caution is recommended to any folks who might be tempted to put large weight on the MJO phases while the W Pacific marine heatwave persists. All things being equal, I’d still think that a colder phase would still be preferred, however.

I mentioned this the other day. The warmer MJO phases since October have been responding much warmer than past events. The cooler phases this month have been much warmer than past occasions.

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30 minutes ago, GaWx said:

 That’s why I’m implying more than the normal amount of caution is recommended to any folks who might be tempted to put large weight on the MJO phases while the W Pacific marine heatwave persists. All things being equal, I’d still think that a colder phase would still be preferred, however.

Fwiw, lots of cooling in worldwide ocean SSTA's including a few places where it counts too.

ssta_change_global (2).png

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31 minutes ago, mitchnick said:

Fwiw, lots of cooling in worldwide ocean SSTA's including a few places where it counts too.

ssta_change_global (2).png

Yeah. The global SST anomalies are actually the lowest we’ve seen in quite sometime at least as of a couple of days ago when I last looked. 

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Is OISST on crack? This shows it already barely into the positive!

IMG_0750.png.0a9e1ed5f9146319d957f05ef151d45c.png
 

while the cool biased CDAS is still down near -0.7 (huge discrepancy):

IMG_0751.png.734353a9e80e9274dea6a24cdf096fc6.png

and the slightly warm biased CRW is still down at -0.3:

IMG_0752.png.35e1481d8a577efef58bc69b3cd482e5.png
 

-Of course the equivalent RONI is still likely sub -0.5.

- This all gives me hope that the last 3 CANSIPS depictions of Modoki El Niño by next summer aren’t on crack.

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4 hours ago, GaWx said:

 That’s why I’m implying more than the normal amount of caution is recommended to any folks who might be tempted to put large weight on the MJO phases while the W Pacific marine heatwave persists. All things being equal, I’d think that a colder phase would still be preferred, however.

Yeah, looking like some changes may be in store with the recent changes in the SST'S out there. 

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10 hours ago, michsnowfreak said:

 

If I'm understanding the question from @mitchnick, I think he's asking if you forecast a DJF departure of +10, not just if any one location somewhere had a +10 month. 

I'm no forecaster but I personally think for most (especially my area/Great Lakes) there will be one month that's a real dud and one month that's a lot of fun. 

Many of those months had widespread warmth. In fact, with the exception of February 2019, PHL had a +5 temperature departure (1981-2010 normals) 

Dec…2015….51.2….+13.8

JAN…2017….38.5…..+5.6

FEB….2017….44.2….+8.5

FEB…..2018…41.9….+6.2

JAN….2020…38.9….+6.0

DEC….2021….45.3….+7.9

JAN….2023….43.3….+10.4

FEB….2023…..42.7…..+7.0

DEC….2023….43.5…..+6.1

Feb 2019 was just barely above average for us, and was in fact the snowiest month of that winter. Come to think of it, 2018-19 was probably the most consistent winter post-2015 here at PHL. 2017-18 and 2020-21 may have had more snow, but 18-19 didn't have the prolonged warmth that Feb 2018 had or the snow shut-off that mid-Dec to Jan 2020-21 had. Plus, Nov 18 and Mar 19 were well below average temperaturewise, making 18-19 the coldest Nov-Mar post-2015.

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1 hour ago, PhiEaglesfan712 said:

Many of those months had widespread warmth. In fact, with the exception of February 2019, PHL had a +5 temperature departure (1981-2010 normals) 

Dec…2015….51.2….+13.8

JAN…2017….38.5…..+5.6

FEB….2017….44.2….+8.5

FEB…..2018…41.9….+6.2

JAN….2020…38.9….+6.0

DEC….2021….45.3….+7.9

JAN….2023….43.3….+10.4

FEB….2023…..42.7…..+7.0

DEC….2023….43.5…..+6.1

Feb 2019 was just barely above average for us, and was in fact the snowiest month of that winter. Come to think of it, 2018-19 was probably the most consistent winter post-2015 here at PHL. 2017-18 and 2020-21 may have had more snow, but 18-19 didn't have the prolonged warmth that Feb 2018 had or the snow shut-off that mid-Dec to Jan 2020-21 had. Plus, Nov 18 and Mar 19 were well below average temperaturewise, making 18-19 the coldest Nov-Mar post-2015.

Yeah its definitely been a mild stretch of winters, especially for the east coast. But forecasting a +10 DJF anomaly would be a huge stretch for anywhere. My favorite post 2015 winter is 2017-18. Very snowy and wall to wall cold Nov-Apr except the last 10 days of Feb. 

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7 hours ago, GaWx said:

Is OISST on crack? This shows it already barely into the positive!

IMG_0750.png.0a9e1ed5f9146319d957f05ef151d45c.png
 

while the cool biased CDAS is still down near -0.7 (huge discrepancy):

IMG_0751.png.734353a9e80e9274dea6a24cdf096fc6.png

and the slightly warm biased CRW is still down at -0.3:

IMG_0752.png.35e1481d8a577efef58bc69b3cd482e5.png
 

-Of course the equivalent RONI is still likely sub -0.5.

- This all gives me hope that the last 3 CANSIPS depictions of Modoki El Niño by next summer aren’t on crack.

oisst is the newest sst method and uses buoys/obs in addition to satellite, while CDAS/CRW dont

CDAS was showing a moderate nino last year while we were well in strong-super territory, oldest out of the 3 which is why alex's website doesnt use it 

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46 minutes ago, michsnowfreak said:

Yeah its definitely been a mild stretch of winters, especially for the east coast. But forecasting a +10 DJF anomaly would be a huge stretch for anywhere. My favorite post 2015 winter is 2017-18. Very snowy and wall to wall cold Nov-Apr except the last 10 days of Feb. 

Same..my only above average snowfall season since 2014-2015. It was still warm here, but March made it worth it.

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1 hour ago, michsnowfreak said:

Yeah it’s definitely been a mild stretch of winters, especially for the east coast. But forecasting a +10 DJF anomaly would be a huge stretch for anywhere. My favorite post 2015 winter is 2017-18. Very snowy and wall to wall cold Nov-Apr except the last 10 days of Feb. 

 Mine too. I got ~1,000% of my climo mean liquid equivalent of wintry precip (all from one storm in early 1/2018), which is the largest since 1921-2! The one in late 1/1922 was the predecessor to the NE US’ Knickerbocker Storm. The snow/sleet combo portion of 1/2018 was the heaviest since the great 12/1989 coastal pre-Christmas near blizzard.

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the pattern that closes out November might be crucial for determining the flavor of the overall winter. given that we're seeing a pretty favorable winter pattern showing itself on medium to long range guidance, i wanted to see if it would have any predictive power for the winter

gfs-ensemble-all-avg-nhemi-z500_anom_10day-2903200.thumb.png.e2a2fb0b898e5278f2034aeee0ca2a46.png

i did some digging on the analogs which i find viable: 1983-84, 1998-99, 1999-00, 2001-02, 2007-08, 2008-09, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2020-21, 2021-22, and 2022-23. better analogs are bolded

i plotted the pattern from Nov 19-29 (basically just a 10 day stretch in late Nov) and the resulting winter pattern. the results were interesting... most years had a decent to strong correlation between the late Nov pattern and the overall winter, mainly in the Pacific

there are years like 1998-99, 1999-00, 2010-11, 2011-12, and 2013-14 that had late Nov periods that strongly correlated to the following winter. years like 2011-12 and 1998-99 were near dead ringers... years that went into Dec with a potent AK trough often had it linger for the winter. years like 2010-11 aren't as airtight, but the Pacific patterns were very similar

loop.gif.92116c0bef367fffbad507cbe94aa120.gifloop.gif.da13a5c67888b12ffaeefa252860b788.gifloop.gif.b8c1073b6ecc62cfeb47c80fc98f09da.gifloop.gif.ce0fc801a3c68ae83c14200c777e2c94.gifloop.gif.6250d2b879f444f09f0b45f7a6f35f9a.gif

years like 2001-02, 2008-09, 2020-21, and 2021-22 had a decent correlation, mainly in the Pacific. for example, although there was no early -NAO blocking in 2020-21, the Pacific patterns are nearly identical. the patterns for 2021-22 aren't perfectly matched, but late Nov picked up on the +PNA tendency that would lead to a cold Jan (2008-09 is similar). 2001-02 had a EC ridge that never really went away with -PNA rearing its head early

loop.gif.71f31740a7eaa60f8f9abe7e4c76c539.gifloop.gif.41c3d8e533dc11b737ff128e000c9ac8.gifloop.gif.3aa13bae7e1abf6a93b1681a61251069.gifloop.gif.b667ccf7e801dddf4fbcb0e14219b9dc.gif

the other four years had little to no correlation, like 2012-13: loop.gif.d3728f9f79eefb42f0f4d32e1c8d4cbe.gif

overall, 9/13 years had at least a decent correlation, and 5 of those 9 were strongly correlated IMO. this isn't a perfect science by any means, though it does provide some numbers to the age-old "when does winter start showing itself" question

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now, it's another can of worms as to whether modeling will be correct. we'll find out in the coming weeks, though the +PNA/-EPO pattern is moving forward in time

if late Nov does indeed feature a +PNA/-EPO pattern, it will make me more optimistic for the +TNH pattern that people like Webb are hinting at

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1 hour ago, brooklynwx99 said:

now, it's another can of worms as to whether modeling will be correct. we'll find out in the coming weeks, though the +PNA/-EPO pattern is moving forward in time

if late Nov does indeed feature a +PNA/-EPO pattern, it will make me more optimistic for the +TNH pattern that people like Webb are hinting at

Myself and others have noticed things seem to be off by about a month right now. Not to say this continues going forward but I can't help but think that maybe just maybe this still has a really solid possibility this winter. If we actually really start to reduce the -PDO within the next 2 weeks or so it only helps the idea. If we really start to amplify this -EPO pattern it could be interesting going forward.

Sep 2013.png

Oct 2024.png

Oct 2013.png

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12 hours ago, GaWx said:

 Mine too. I got ~1,000% of my climo mean liquid equivalent of wintry precip (all from one storm in early 1/2018), which is the largest since 1921-2! The one in late 1/1922 was the predecessor to the NE US’ Knickerbocker Storm. The snow/sleet combo portion of 1/2018 was the heaviest since the great 12/1989 coastal pre-Christmas near blizzard.

2017-18 was a fantastic winter, we set a few cold records, had a snowy December including a perfect Christmas Eve snowstorm, had the longest stretch on record with temps of 19F or colder, spent much of the late Feb torch with snowpack as it was deep early in the month and had to melt, and had a crazy mid-April ice storm. NO complaints at all about 2017-18, and it probably would have seemed even more harsh had the record 2007-15 stretch not been so fresh in the mind.

Its been the only winter that has really stood out in the post-2015 era, but outside of last winter its really not been too bad for snow here either. Its been far more the fact that 5 of the 9 winters were very mild. Ironically, the other low-snow year was 2018-19, a winter with near avg temps and 3 ice storms. 

% of avg snowfall in the post-2015 era:

2015-16: 78%
2016-17: 83%
2017-18: 134%
2018-19: 69%
2019-20: 96%
2020-21: 99%
2021-22: 104%
2022-23: 82%
2023-24: 52%
9-winter avg: 88%

It should also be noted this is using the 1991-2020 avg snowfall, the highest on record. If we use the long-term avg which is a few inches less, all those % would be higher.

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16 hours ago, michsnowfreak said:

Euro weeklies continue to cool.

I meant to add this yesterday.  Euro Weeklies even bolder with placing troughing over or near Japan past week 1.

https://charts.ecmwf.int/products/extended-anomaly-z500?base_time=202411130000&projection=opencharts_eastern_asia&valid_time=202411250000

I mention it because if close to accurate, it often translates into a trough over the eastern US down the road, it brings in cooler air to help with cooling Eastern Pac sea surface temps already in decline , and it fires up @snowman19:devilsmiley: lol

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16 minutes ago, mitchnick said:

I meant to add this yesterday.  Euro Weeklies even bolder with placing troughing over or near Japan past week 1.

https://charts.ecmwf.int/products/extended-anomaly-z500?base_time=202411130000&projection=opencharts_eastern_asia&valid_time=202411250000

I mention it because if close to accurate, it often translates into a trough over the eastern US down the road, it brings in cooler air to help with cooling Eastern Pac sea surface temps already in decline , and it fires up @snowman19:devilsmiley: lol

Yea, he's gonna be making Webb voo doo dolls by turkeyday.

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if we do end up going the colder route this winter (which i do not expect is the case as of now), then something like a 2021-22 / 2013-14 blend looks reasonable

general tendency towards +PNA, a -WPO that encroaches on the -EPO domain, a largely -NAO, and an elongated PV in SE Canada

fp7lc0gi3p.png.365ffaa03145639c49f343d2e0b2bd4c.pngcd70_89_205_249_318.9_25_39_prcp.png.e4062a510730dce6e8a7adbe6b055157.png

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59 minutes ago, brooklynwx99 said:

if we do end up going the colder route this winter (which i do not expect is the case as of now), then something like a 2021-22 / 2013-14 blend looks reasonable

general tendency towards +PNA, a -WPO that encroaches on the -EPO domain, a largely -NAO, and an elongated PV in SE Canada

fp7lc0gi3p.png.365ffaa03145639c49f343d2e0b2bd4c.pngcd70_89_205_249_318.9_25_39_prcp.png.e4062a510730dce6e8a7adbe6b055157.png

Only part of that I don't expect is a -NAO/+PNA in the mean, but nor do I think either will be extremely positive and negative, either....there will be variance. WPO should drive this winter in conjunction with PDO.

DM%20Temps.png

 

CORRELATION.png

DM%2024%2025%20H5%20COMPOSITE.jpeg

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17 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

Only part of that I don't expect is a -NAO/+PNA in the mean, but or do I think either to be extremely positive and negative, either....there will be variance. WPO should drive this winter in conjunction with WPO.

DM%20Temps.png

 

CORRELATION.png

DM%2024%2025%20H5%20COMPOSITE.jpeg

functionally, I feel like that composite acts like a +NAO. Atlantic flow is fast there

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