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January 10/11 Winter Storm Potential - May the Odds be Ever in our Favor


eyewall
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28 minutes ago, WX FAN said:

The weather service keeps changing the forecast. Now instead of snow, north Alabama is looking at mostly sleet. I’m at a loss to understand the sudden change. How long until the b word gets used? Or am I wrong?

I posted this morning that N. MS discussion had moved the snow line north. I guess that was the Memphis offfice.

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2 minutes ago, ncjoaquin said:

I noted that in the mountain thread. They are smart people, but they sure do have a lot of eggs in that one basket. 

The SREF increased totals from the previous run. I expect the next NAM to be snowier. 

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Just now, wncsnow said:

The SREF increased totals from the previous run. I expect the next NAM to be snowing. 

Agreed, and then they can adjust accordingly. I know they can't just blow it out like some weenie on a message board, lol. They have to answer to the public. Just give me and you a few inches, and we will be happy. 

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6 minutes ago, snowmaker13 said:

Can anyone explain the snow hole over Asheville? It's mildly disappointing. 

I think it is downslopping. When I lived there it was also annoying and remember, it is a giant bowl surrounded by mountains so you can get downslopped from literally every direction. 

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6 minutes ago, snowmaker13 said:

Can anyone explain the snow hole over Asheville? It's mildly disappointing. 

My somewhat scientific (but not professional meteorological) answer. Asheville is in a basin completely surrounded by higher terrain. Orographic lifting on the periphery (windward), downsloping and for various reasons - less precip. on the leeward.

I believe its true Asheville and Roanoke, VA are historically the "driest" urban/metro areas East of the Mississippi due to similar geographic situations.

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2 minutes ago, Silas Lang said:

I think it is downslopping. When I lived there it was also annoying and remember, it is a giant bowl surrounded by mountains so you can get downslopped from literally every direction. 

or yeah - what he said :) 

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4 minutes ago, Silas Lang said:

I think it is downslopping. When I lived there it was also annoying and remember, it is a giant bowl surrounded by mountains so you can get downslopped from literally every direction. 

Exactly right. Ridge-top winds will be ripping out of the S/SW, which is downsloping and drying off the Blue Ridge/Mt. Pisgah. 

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20 minutes ago, snowmaker13 said:

Can anyone explain the snow hole over Asheville? It's mildly disappointing. 

It is because Asheville is situated in a valley between 2 mountain ranges. We can get downsloped and models will show it as at lesser precip amount than surrounding areas. While this modeled minimum has validity, it obviously is not always what happens.

I have seen many snowstorms where that modeled minimum is shown and Avl and the whole French Broad River valley meets or exceeds the surrounding area in snowfall. Of course, I have seen where this minimum has held true. 

Asheville has 20 snowstorms historically that have exceeded 10 inches of snow. 65 inches of rain fell at the airport last year. Asheville averages more snow than any non mountain location in the state. It can precipitate here.

So, while the minimum may be correct, I have found it prudent to nowcast. There are plenty of models where the minimum is not that extreme. We shall see.

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