Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,601
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    ArlyDude
    Newest Member
    ArlyDude
    Joined

July Medium/ Long Range


 Share

Recommended Posts

Hopefully we'll match last July's thunderstorm season. 

It started June 24th last year. This year hasn't quite been the same so far. There has been a trend over the years for our severe weather to occur from the Spring to the Summer. I always contend that heat is our greatest variable. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, Stormchaserchuck1 said:

Hopefully we'll match last July's thunderstorm season. 

It started June 24th last year. This year hasn't quite been the same so far. There has been a trend over the years for our severe weather to occur from the Spring to the Summer. I always contend that heat is our greatest variable. 

This year has been a complete dud in the severe weather department. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 hours ago, Stormchaserchuck1 said:

Also looking like a real nice heat ridge setting up on LR models for the end of July. 

d5.gif

CPC thinks we will start to see widespread drought by late Summer

d1.png

The “flavor” of this summer has already revealed itself. 

It’s gonna be a long, hot and dry one. 
 

This morning’s LWX AFD if you read to the end:

.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
Ridging is forecast to persist over the northwest Atlantic Ocean
while broad troughing slowly drifts east over the central CONUS much
of next week. This pattern results in several weak surface fronts
drifting into the area and washing out, with daily low-end chances
for showers and thunderstorms each afternoon/evening. Without a more
obvious large scale feature, the prospects for any widespread
drought busting rainfall look rather slim.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Terpeast said:

The “flavor” of this summer has already revealed itself. 

It’s gonna be a long, hot and dry one. 
 

This morning’s LWX AFD if you read to the end:

.LONG TERM /MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY/...
Ridging is forecast to persist over the northwest Atlantic Ocean
while broad troughing slowly drifts east over the central CONUS much
of next week. This pattern results in several weak surface fronts
drifting into the area and washing out, with daily low-end chances
for showers and thunderstorms each afternoon/evening. Without a more
obvious large scale feature, the prospects for any widespread
drought busting rainfall look rather slim.

Meanwhile the Atlantic continues to cook. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Data since 1948 shows it has a high probability of continuing through the Fall and Winter. 

In the CONUS, we are likely going to have a record warm Dec - July. I am waiting for the CDC to update the June map, but Dec-May looked like this: 

f7.png

 

December to July analogs.. 30 top analogs:

f6.png

So 30 analogs is 40% of the whole dataset, since 1948 (30/75), so realistically a "normal" signal rolled forward should be +1-2F max areas. But what history shows is a higher correlation going forward!

The following Fall (Sept-Nov)

f2.png

 

December is the odd month

f4.png

 

Then the following Winter (Jan-Mar). Remember this is a mix of 30 years. 30/75. Look at the scale

f3.png

 

Whole period.. September through March, +3-4 anomalies for a 7-month span, covering 30-years and 40% of the total dataset!

f5.png

  • Weenie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Once Beryl clears out of the CONUS, ensembles are showing hints of the WAR/bermuda high re-flexing westward into the eastern seaboard. Hotter and possibly drier than normal conditions appear likely to continue as it has been. 

Beryl, and its remnants, seems to be the only chance we have for an area-wide drought buster in the extended. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Looks like two plumes of moisture to me.  Beryl's remnants head into the Great Lakes, but maybe it pulls up moisture off the Atlantic.  Unfortunately, someone is going to miss out between the two moistures surges.  TBD exactly where the dry slot sets up. WB 12Z EPS shows the possibilities.

IMG_3634.png

IMG_3633.png

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interesting AFD by Mount Holly this morning. 

It appears the areas for heaviest rainfall is dependent on where the front may stall or slow. Including threat of a Maddox heavy rain event. 

Lastest guideance has broken the trend and has the front stall further West , so the heaviest rain is to the West. 

Here is the AFD:

 

Details:

Friday into Saturday...Remnant low of Beryl should be well north and
weakening/filling by the day time on Friday. However, the previously
mentioned cold front will be stalling near or over our region. In
the mid and upper levels, a trailing trough will be approaching our
region in this period. The biggest concern I have with this period
of the forecast is the potential for heavy rain. Not only will
precipitable water values remain high (as there will be minimal dry
air advection between Thursday and Friday), but this set up has many
similarities to a Maddox Synoptic heavy rain event. The front
should be stationary (or very slow moving), it has a favored
orientation for these types of events, and the winds from 700 to 300
mb should be nearly parallel to the front. This could set the stage
for training storms capable of heavy downpours.

The main question remaining in terms of the threat specifically to
our region is how close the front will get before stalling. Some of
the latest deterministic guidance shows it stalling further west,
limiting the risk in our region. However, this is a relatively new
trend over the past few model runs, and there remains some models
depicting the front stalling over our region.

Saturday night into Sunday...Front should dissipate, and flow aloft
should become mostly zonal. While I can`t rule out some additional
storm development, by this point it is unlikely we will see
widespread thunderstorm coverage. Another mid an upper level trough
could approach as early as late Sunday, but confidence in the timing
of that feature is low at this time.

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

WPC very bullish on Eastern Seaboard rainfall potential, then a massive shoft West of the WAR combining with the Western US high Pressure system. 

Looks very hot and tropical down the road. Also,  a noticeably rise in western Atlantic SSTs this morning, and looking for that to continue. Would imagine 80 degree F SST in the surf zone later in July. 

  



922039293_p168i(14).gif.81c7dac8a4d42f1a22d3d68c18a4e546.gif

 

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, frd said:

Interesting AFD by Mount Holly this morning. 

It appears the areas for heaviest rainfall is dependent on where the front may stall or slow. Including threat of a Maddox heavy rain event. 

Lastest guideance has broken the trend and has the front stall further West , so the heaviest rain is to the West. 

Here is the AFD:

 

Details:

Friday into Saturday...Remnant low of Beryl should be well north and
weakening/filling by the day time on Friday. However, the previously
mentioned cold front will be stalling near or over our region. In
the mid and upper levels, a trailing trough will be approaching our
region in this period. The biggest concern I have with this period
of the forecast is the potential for heavy rain. Not only will
precipitable water values remain high (as there will be minimal dry
air advection between Thursday and Friday), but this set up has many
similarities to a Maddox Synoptic heavy rain event. The front
should be stationary (or very slow moving), it has a favored
orientation for these types of events, and the winds from 700 to 300
mb should be nearly parallel to the front. This could set the stage
for training storms capable of heavy downpours.

The main question remaining in terms of the threat specifically to
our region is how close the front will get before stalling. Some of
the latest deterministic guidance shows it stalling further west,
limiting the risk in our region. However, this is a relatively new
trend over the past few model runs, and there remains some models
depicting the front stalling over our region.

Saturday night into Sunday...Front should dissipate, and flow aloft
should become mostly zonal. While I can`t rule out some additional
storm development, by this point it is unlikely we will see
widespread thunderstorm coverage. Another mid an upper level trough
could approach as early as late Sunday, but confidence in the timing
of that feature is low at this time.

 

 

 

If anyone else needed to look up Maddox, here it is:  https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/bams/60/2/1520-0477-60_2_115.xml

 

 

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 2
  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, frd said:

Interesting AFD by Mount Holly this morning. 

It appears the areas for heaviest rainfall is dependent on where the front may stall or slow. Including threat of a Maddox heavy rain event. 

Lastest guideance has broken the trend and has the front stall further West , so the heaviest rain is to the West. 

Here is the AFD:

 

Details:

Friday into Saturday...Remnant low of Beryl should be well north and
weakening/filling by the day time on Friday. However, the previously
mentioned cold front will be stalling near or over our region. In
the mid and upper levels, a trailing trough will be approaching our
region in this period. The biggest concern I have with this period
of the forecast is the potential for heavy rain. Not only will
precipitable water values remain high (as there will be minimal dry
air advection between Thursday and Friday), but this set up has many
similarities to a Maddox Synoptic heavy rain event. The front
should be stationary (or very slow moving), it has a favored
orientation for these types of events, and the winds from 700 to 300
mb should be nearly parallel to the front. This could set the stage
for training storms capable of heavy downpours.

The main question remaining in terms of the threat specifically to
our region is how close the front will get before stalling. Some of
the latest deterministic guidance shows it stalling further west,
limiting the risk in our region. However, this is a relatively new
trend over the past few model runs, and there remains some models
depicting the front stalling over our region.

Saturday night into Sunday...Front should dissipate, and flow aloft
should become mostly zonal. While I can`t rule out some additional
storm development, by this point it is unlikely we will see
widespread thunderstorm coverage. Another mid an upper level trough
could approach as early as late Sunday, but confidence in the timing
of that feature is low at this time.

 

 

 

is a Maddox heavy rain event when the rain event throws a complete game in under 100 pitches?

  • Haha 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...