LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 02:16 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 02:16 PM 1 hour ago, michsnowfreak said: Im sure some of the indices were similar, but really the sensible weather didnt come close here. Obviously the snowfall as has been mentioned (I had my all-time high 96.2" in 2013-14 vs 29.5" this winter....DTW had their all-time high 94.9" in 2013-14 vs 28.7" this winter), but more than just that, 2013-14 was nonstop cold and storm systems thru the Great Lakes whereas this winter was quiet. Sure, it snowed often but much of that was helped by the lakes. Not talking just locally, but the entire region, a huge difference in the activeness of the pattern. Temp wise, 2013-14 was colder than avg every month Nov-Apr. This winter, Nov-Dec mild, Jan-Feb cold, Mar mild, Apr cold. Didn't you find it annoying that in 2013-14 you came so close to 100 inches and missed it by less than 4 inches ! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michsnowfreak Posted Wednesday at 05:35 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 05:35 PM 3 hours ago, LibertyBell said: Didn't you find it annoying that in 2013-14 you came so close to 100 inches and missed it by less than 4 inches ! It crossed my mind but honestly, that winter was about so much more than the total snowfall. There was the brutal cold, the constant blowing and drifting of the existing deep snowpack (barns in rural areas between Detroit and Toledo were drifted over rooftops in spots), it was truly all-encompassing. The 0 snow depth on Dec 7th would be my last 0 depth til March 30th. Whats astounding about nearly hitting 100" of seasonal snow in Detroit is it is done without aid of a monster noreaster or lake effect event. While we get LES, its never more than a few inches at a time. Our biggest storm that winter was around 11". It was a true parade of storm after storm, and in the wake of these storms was usually blowing and drifting snow with wind chills way below zero. Day after day of heaven. Though its not a metric i usually use, one of the Lakes posters talks about SDDs (snow depth days), which is a sum of the seasonal snow depth. The winter of 2013-14 at Detroit ranks #1 at 922, with #2 way behind at 573 (and this was 2014-15). The infamous winter of 1977-78 comes in at 4th with 514, over 400 LESS than 2013-14. (I looked it up and first place for NYC is an impressive 660 in 1947-48). The Accumulated Winter Season Severity Index (AWSSI) was developed to rates winters (since 1950) related to the intensity and persistence of cold weather, the amount of snow, and the amount and persistence of snow on the ground. The Accumulated Winter Season Severity Index (AWSSI) was developed to objectively quantify and describe the relative severity of the winter season. 2013-14 is #1 at Detroit with a score of 1277, and 2nd place (the infamous winter of 1977-78) is 231 less at 1046. NYCs most severe winter since 1950 is 2014-15 with a score of 578. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 05:44 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 05:44 PM 8 minutes ago, michsnowfreak said: It crossed my mind but honestly, that winter was about so much more than the total snowfall. There was the brutal cold, the constant blowing and drifting of the existing deep snowpack (barns in rural areas between Detroit and Toledo were drifted over rooftops in spots), it was truly all-encompassing. The 0 snow depth on Dec 7th would be my last 0 depth til March 30th. Whats astounding about nearly hitting 100" of seasonal snow in Detroit is it is done without aid of a monster noreaster or lake effect event. While we get LES, its never more than a few inches at a time. Our biggest storm that winter was around 11". It was a true parade of storm after storm, and in the wake of these storms was usually blowing and drifting snow with wind chills way below zero. Day after day of heaven. Though its not a metric i usually use, one of the Lakes posters talks about SDDs (snow depth days), which is a sum of the seasonal snow depth. The winter of 2013-14 at Detroit ranks #1 at 922, with #2 way behind at 573 (and this was 2014-15). The infamous winter of 1977-78 comes in at 4th with 514, over 400 LESS than 2013-14. (I looked it up and first place for NYC is an impressive 660 in 1947-48). The Accumulated Winter Season Severity Index (AWSSI) was developed to rates winters (since 1950) related to the intensity and persistence of cold weather, the amount of snow, and the amount and persistence of snow on the ground. The Accumulated Winter Season Severity Index (AWSSI) was developed to objectively quantify and describe the relative severity of the winter season. 2013-14 is #1 at Detroit with a score of 1277, and 2nd place (the infamous winter of 1977-78) is 231 less at 1046. NYCs most severe winter since 1950 is 2014-15 with a score of 578. 2014-15 was one of my favorite winters of all time-- can you see where 2010-11 ranks on that list? And do you have numbers for JFK as well, since thats closer to where I live, Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michsnowfreak Posted Wednesday at 06:18 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:18 PM 29 minutes ago, LibertyBell said: 2014-15 was one of my favorite winters of all time-- can you see where 2010-11 ranks on that list? And do you have numbers for JFK as well, since thats closer to where I live, Thanks! Here is the link to play around. They only have NYC & LGA, no JFK. Few years in late 1990s missing https://mrcc.purdue.edu/research/AWSSI/chart https://mrcc.purdue.edu/research/awssi 2010-11 ranked 4th 2014-15: 578 2013-14: 568 1993-94: 552 2010-11: 548 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluewave Posted Wednesday at 06:21 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:21 PM On 4/14/2025 at 8:24 AM, michsnowfreak said: I dont think ive ever seen an ASOS issue where temps are too low, but frequently where they are too high That isn’t the case as a faulty ASOS sensor could just as easily run too cold like was the case in Albany several years back. https://cbs6albany.com/weather/weather-extra/octobers-weather-highlights-and-why-temps-at-albany-remain-a-problemOctober temperature data at Albany continued to suffer from the estimated 2-3 degree cold bias that was introduced into the climate record on July 17 as a result of the temperature sensor being replaced at the airport ASOS (automated surface observation station.)Hope, however,grew in October that the problem was corrected when the National Weather Service announced the sensor had again been replaced on October 15. Unfortunately, the replacement sensorwas not new, but instead a refurbished unit and has subsequently also illustrated a cold bias.We know there is a cold bias through comparisons we can make utilizing nearby observations sites including sites that are part of the New York Mesonet.The sensor appears a little better, but the bias may be as great as 2 degrees, which is significant when it comes to the climate record.I'm told the sensor is under evaluation and therefore it is not known if it will again be replaced.In terms of the temperature data going into Albany's climate record since July 17, it is not known what if anything will be done to adjust it.A determination has to be made on how cold the July 17th sensor was and that either has not yet been determined or the information has not yet been released.So stay tuned on that one.When I learn of any decision by NOAA's National Center for Environmental Information (NCEI), the keepers of the nation's climate data, I'll let you know. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michsnowfreak Posted Wednesday at 06:23 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:23 PM 1 hour ago, michsnowfreak said: It crossed my mind but honestly, that winter was about so much more than the total snowfall. There was the brutal cold, the constant blowing and drifting of the existing deep snowpack (barns in rural areas between Detroit and Toledo were drifted over rooftops in spots), it was truly all-encompassing. The 0 snow depth on Dec 7th would be my last 0 depth til March 30th. Whats astounding about nearly hitting 100" of seasonal snow in Detroit is it is done without aid of a monster noreaster or lake effect event. While we get LES, its never more than a few inches at a time. Our biggest storm that winter was around 11". It was a true parade of storm after storm, and in the wake of these storms was usually blowing and drifting snow with wind chills way below zero. Day after day of heaven. Though its not a metric i usually use, one of the Lakes posters talks about SDDs (snow depth days), which is a sum of the seasonal snow depth. The winter of 2013-14 at Detroit ranks #1 at 922, with #2 way behind at 573 (and this was 2014-15). The infamous winter of 1977-78 comes in at 4th with 514, over 400 LESS than 2013-14. (I looked it up and first place for NYC is an impressive 660 in 1947-48). The Accumulated Winter Season Severity Index (AWSSI) was developed to rates winters (since 1950) related to the intensity and persistence of cold weather, the amount of snow, and the amount and persistence of snow on the ground. The Accumulated Winter Season Severity Index (AWSSI) was developed to objectively quantify and describe the relative severity of the winter season. 2013-14 is #1 at Detroit with a score of 1277, and 2nd place (the infamous winter of 1977-78) is 231 less at 1046. NYCs most severe winter since 1950 is 2014-15 with a score of 578. some pics from 2014 3 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibertyBell Posted Wednesday at 06:23 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:23 PM 3 minutes ago, michsnowfreak said: Here is the link to play around. They only have NYC & LGA, no JFK. Few years in late 1990s missing https://mrcc.purdue.edu/research/AWSSI/chart https://mrcc.purdue.edu/research/awssi 2010-11 ranked 4th 2014-15: 578 2013-14: 568 1993-94: 552 2010-11: 548 early 2010s was pretty wild for both of us, 3 out of the top 4. 1993-94 and 1995-96 were really good too, I guess the thaw in the middle of January lowered it somewhat. That was our most snowfall record. I'm surprised not to see that up there and also 2002-03 those were our only wall to wall winters, we had snow every month from November to April those two seasons. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michsnowfreak Posted Wednesday at 06:38 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:38 PM 9 minutes ago, LibertyBell said: early 2010s was pretty wild for both of us, 3 out of the top 4. 1993-94 and 1995-96 were really good too, I guess the thaw in the middle of January lowered it somewhat. That was our most snowfall record. I'm surprised not to see that up there and also 2002-03 those were our only wall to wall winters, we had snow every month from November to April those two seasons. 1995-96 had M data for NYC so was not included on the graph. However, one thing to note, is this is the perfect metric for a true "severe winter" since it uses all metrics. Some mild, snowy winters here ranked less severe than much colder winters that saw 20+ less inches of snow. Our top 10 most severe winters since 1950 2013-14: 1277 1977-78: 1046 1981-82: 1031 2014-15: 925 1976-77: 872 2010-11: 864 2008-09: 804 1983-84: 784 1969-70: 780 1978-79: 780 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted 14 hours ago Share Posted 14 hours ago I see very little chance for El Niño at this point. The only thing that I recall that ever explicitly hinted at it was CANSIPS a number of months ago when looking ahead to August showing a significant central Pacific equatorial warming. However, it has since been modifying this each run and no longer shows anything of note. In addition, Nino regions have cooled notably from highs in March/earlier this month (see below). When also considering the Euro’s notable warm bias in spring for the subsequent autumn, I’d also say very low chance. La Niña may very well have a better chance than El Niño. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PhiEaglesfan712 Posted 9 hours ago Share Posted 9 hours ago 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GaWx Posted 8 hours ago Share Posted 8 hours ago 1 hour ago, PhiEaglesfan712 said: Thanks for posting this. Here are my thoughts fwiw: 1. The Euro has a significant warm bias from spring predictions. The April run has Nino 3.4 max at only +0.42 (in JAS) before starting to drop. Considering its warm bias, that in itself is signaling a trimonth peak near 0. 2. However, the CFS, which has tended to have a cool bias the last 2 years, is one of the warmest with a peak of +0.62 in OND and still rising slowly. That tells me to not completely dismiss the chance for a weak El Niño. 3. MetFrance over the last 2 years has averaged a modest warm bias though it has missed somewhat too cold in some months. It’s April has a peak of +0.19 in ASO and still very slowly rising. If anything, that suggests a trimonth peak that could be ~~0. 4. BoA (Aus-Access) has it up to +0.57 in JAS and still very slowly rising. Due to a strong warm bias in 2023, a moderate warm bias in 2024, and this being the warmest for ASO of any major dynamic model, I feel this is signaling a low end warm neutral. 5. I consider the combo of the UKMET and the JMA as having the lowest bias of any kind. The UK has -0.31 in JAS (coldest of major dynamic models) and still falling significantly. The JMA has -0.14 in ASO and still falling slowly. These two suggest cold neutral as being most likely in autumn. 6. So, based on the above, I currently favor anywhere from ~0.0 to cold neutral for autumn to winter. 7. None of this takes into account RONI, which I currently favor to be at least 0.3 cooler than ONI. So, RONI could drift into weak La Niña territory based on UK/JMA. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stormchaserchuck1 Posted 6 hours ago Share Posted 6 hours ago If we have a Weak La Nina this year (RONI), I would most definitely bet on a decent sized El Nino for either 26-27 or 27-28. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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