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Joker January


Prismshine Productions
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1 minute ago, CoastalWx said:

A blend is kind of Leon with undertones of Wilton Felder in there.

IF we can keep that ridge nice and poleward into the Bering and north of it, then I think we'll continue to have chances even if we have to deal with a cutter mixed in at some point. It will keep loading the source region with arctic air so the airmasses won't become perpetually stale.

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The GFS versIon of the flow medium across the country has a definitive difference to the Euro leading the 24th.   Not sure which will turn out ultimately real.

GFS has a western ridge node moving bodily eastward thru southwestern Canada/Pac NW leading up thru the 23rd and that allows less shearing with the trough back east in its solution --> system up the EC.  

Euro holds this ridge node farther west; in fact, it's not even clear if it ever comes east, rather just sort of dissolves.  Anyway, that opens the flow up in the east. Wave space arguments become a negative interference for amplitude --> no system up the EC

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3 hours ago, Typhoon Tip said:

Yeah, agreed ... the 23-25th is probably the next viable risk period -  nod to any model that speeds that up by a day between now and then, because of the underlying mode of circulation being what it is - fast.

Just something that's been air apparent to me about that period, is that said mode of circulation is slowing.   I spoke at length about this, yesterday, ...and then immediately the Euro's 12z run "re-compressed" the flow.   The GFS however has maintained its idea of slowing things enough that the next series of wave mechanics have better ability to conserve it's total vitality as it runs up the flow at that time.  That's why it's been more robust with that development.  The CMC is not as relaxed... it's speeding up the same wave complex, but also has it suppressed because -

time to iron this out.  But ...as the present event that's looking above median confidence at this point, was all but gone yesterday ... these compression patterns can be overcome, too

Seems like that is exactly what the fast flow is doing. Not allowing any wrinkles.

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2 hours ago, ORH_wxman said:

IF we can keep that ridge nice and poleward into the Bering and north of it, then I think we'll continue to have chances even if we have to deal with a cutter mixed in at some point. It will keep loading the source region with arctic air so the airmasses won't become perpetually stale.

I think that is a reasonable ask for a lot of Feb.

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3 hours ago, Ginx snewx said:

I disagree with your premise. In fact with a shift in flow, it appears more favorable for slower moving large moist systems.

Depends on how compressed the flow becomes....my preseason window was 1/23 to 2/3, but even if we don't see a KU per se, could still stack up plenty of snowfall.

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