sigwx
Member
I'm older but 1989 was very cold in Dec. around ChristmasI know I'm one of the younger ones on here (44 years old) but I think folks have forgotten how cold the winter of 84/85 were.
I'm older but 1989 was very cold in Dec. around ChristmasI know I'm one of the younger ones on here (44 years old) but I think folks have forgotten how cold the winter of 84/85 were.
One year l was on Beech mtn. and it was -3 and wind chill -14 coldest l have every been in my life...I was staying on top of Sugar Mountain one year and it was about -5 with a wind chill in the -20’s. We were spitting on the sliding glass door and it was freezing on contact. Good times
Miss you man happy to see you back.Actually had time to go over some weather modeling today, caught up on the last week and 1 /2 of runs and I will venture to say, everyone is about to start seeing some very wild solutions. Yes, Wintry solutions. I wouldn't be surprised to start seeing some "historic" type stuff showing up..
Please don't model chase though. They're going to be back and forth in the atmospheric chaos that the modeling is alluding to. I'd use the ensembles for the overall pattern recognition/temperature (PV stuff) and use the operational runs for 500mb energy and ideas at this point.
The higher resolution operational runs are going to pickup on pieces of energy the lower resolution ensembles will just plain miss out on for their forecast. There's a lot of volatility about to float around and small changes to angles, strength, and speed will greatly affect the way these systems track and develop.
James Spann really blew it on his afternoon update. He did show the Euro showing bitter cold in 10 days, but said he didn't see any snow chances in the next 8 ,9, 10 days other than flurries, so he completely ignored what the Euro shows with snow. Really lazy.
Yeah I think we are about to see something absolutely nuts in a minuteThe PV is rotating in southern Canada the freezer is coming towards day 9/10
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