Ain’t no way the SE in the forecast gets more snow then NYC.BAM Weather had a free webinar today. I couldn't listen to it, but here's their forecast.
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Ain’t no way the SE in the forecast gets more snow then NYC.BAM Weather had a free webinar today. I couldn't listen to it, but here's their forecast.
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Looking at those temperature maps, they look promising for December and January. I hope we can score before February if this forecast pans out. Below normal precipitation is one feature that comes with the territory with a weak La Nina in place.BAM Weather had a free webinar today. I couldn't listen to it, but here's their forecast.
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We have a slowdown of the MJO in Phase 5
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But that was forecasted and may be good news depending on how you want to view Dec-Jan. I think the JMA has a good middle of the road forecast here of the MJO getting into lower amp Phase 7 by mid-Nov.
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Similar on the Euro Wk as it shows a slow trek in Phase 7 thereafter into early Dec.
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A good target in my mind would be a slow trek thru phases 7-8-1-2-3 from late Nov to early-mid Jan. We had that type of slow trek in Dec-Jan 2021-2022 (Nina with very similar -QBO structure as this winter / low amp MJO toward the end), albeit a little later then (early Dec to late Jan)
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BAM Weather had a free webinar today. I couldn't listen to it, but here's their forecast.
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Yeah so these are just saying that they expect more snow compared to normal in parts of the SE, with NYC below normal snowfall...not actual snowfall amounts.Ain’t no way the SE in the forecast gets more snow then NYC.


Things seem to be moving along nicely so far. Here is the Euro Wk MJO. 1st image is MJO forecast from Oct 16. 2nd image is MJO forecast from Nov 5. Green dots are ensemble members for Day 20 of the forecast. End of black line is 30 day forecast (I believe, as it says Monthly forecast and that seems to make sense) - so early Dec in Phase 7Expected turn, but painful to watch. Really hope it keeps going 8-2 and doesn't stay on the right, as that seems to me the biggest driver of our colder patterns of late. Convection in the pacific, the jet alignment makes all the difference. Any red flags that would make it stay in the maritime?


Things seem to be moving along nicely so far. Here is the Euro Wk MJO. 1st image is MJO forecast from Oct 16. 2nd image is MJO forecast from Nov 5. Green dots are ensemble members for Day 20 of the forecast. End of black line is 30 day forecast (I believe, as it says Monthly forecast and that seems to make sense) - so early Dec in Phase 7
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Also, on the VP maps from today's weeklies, we can see the -VP signal in green (upper divergence / uplift / enhanced convection) in the E Maritime Continent (Phase 5) for Nov 5-12 avg....with that signal out of the MC and uplift over S America in the 2nd image for Dec 14-21 (Phase 8-1 type look). Sure, the Weeklies can leave us standing at the altar, but they seem to follow the general idea of MJO expectations from what I've seen and gathered.
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La Niña is living on borrowed time.
The only reason the extreme -IOD event we're currently seeing is going to collapse is because all of the warm water is about to get flushed into the tropical west pacific at depth over the next month or two in this MJO event's westerly wind burst. Another solid subsequent MJO burst over the West Pacific later in the winter would lead to rapid onset of El Nino conditions this spring.
A more rapid shift towards El Niño is probably the one wild card we could play that would have the potential to significantly alter the outcome of the latter part of this winter/February in our favor (though even then it wouldn't be a guarantee that things would shift favorably even in that scenario).
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The negative NAO in late November into December is pretty key & favorable to communicating this upper-level footprint of the MJO into the Western Hemisphere
Getting an MJO event to orbit into the Western Hemisphere (phase 8-1) a majority of the time relies on the extratropical circulation carrying the signal along, because the SSTs aren't warm enough outside of the Indo-Pacific to couple directly with the ocean, except perhaps in big El Niño events.
Having a negative NAO makes these western hemisphere MJO orbits more likely to occur because the extratropical waves penetrate deeper into the tropics during -NAO:
You can basically think of this as a positive feedback, where the presence of a -NAO makes a phase 8-1 MJO more likely to occur, which also favors -NAO, etc.
https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/clim/34/23/JCLI-D-21-0153.1.xml

In this study, based on the reforecast data of 11 models of the WWRP/WCRP S2S project, the influence of the NAO prediction of the MJO is investigated. It is found that most models are able to reproduce the MJO phase change following the occurrence of positive and negative NAO events. About three weeks after a positive NAO, there is increased probability of MJO phase 7, while about three weeks following a negative NAO, MJO phase 3 is more likely to occur.
One possible explanation is that following an NAO event, which has a dipole Z200 anomaly structure in the Greenland and midlatitude North Atlantic regions, there is a slow southward propagation of energy, so that with time the amplitude of the Greenland anomaly center is reduced and a subtropical center develops and enhances. After about 2–3 weeks, wave activity flux converges in the subtropical North Atlantic, causing a local zonal wind acceleration that acts as a forcing on the tropics. As a result, an equatorial Kelvin wave is excited to the east in the region with an easterly mean flow over the tropical Indian Ocean, leading to strong zonal wind anomalies, thereby influencing the MJO. However, questions related to the detail of this process, what controls the southward wave energy propagation, and how the extratropical forcing excites the tropical Kelvin remain unclear.
I reviewed the paper you shared on this earlier and it appears to state the exact opposite. It clearly states that a negative NAO often lags an eventual MJO in P3 and a positive NAO lags an eventual NAO in P7.
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Observed 21–30-day lagged occurrence frequency of MJO phases following positive and negative NAO in extended winters of 1981–2017. The remaining panels show the probability of occurrence of MJO phases in the forecast period of 21–30 days initialized with positive and negative NAO for individual S2S models. The vertical bars represent the 95% level of confidence from a 10 000 bootstrap resampling calculation.
They theorized this relationship could be due to the following, but it doesn't sound like a definitive explanation:
Not trying to be argumentative, but I am curious how you come to the seemingly definitive conclusion that a negative NAO makes a phase 8-1 MJO subsequently more likely to occur when the paper you cited appears to state the opposite?

I'll agree that the potential weakened SPV (if it indeed comes to pass, which I do have more confidence in for reasons discussed earlier) is a great harbinger of increased potential for blocking heading into December. In fact, I give guest lectures to school students and one of my most-requested topics is always the winter outlook and I always include the December SPV forecast and historical analyses as part of that outlook. We've certainly had some of our better Decembers with a weakened SPV and we've had some real duds the other way (to no ones surprise).No worries. It’s actually all part of the same large scale slowly evolving subseasonal process! This takes many, many weeks to fully transpire of course
(I.e. western pacific mjo >> -NAO/western hemisphere mjo >> Indian Ocean MJO >> +NAO >> western pacific mjo >> & so on/so forth)
What you are describing is a multi-week positive lagged relationship between the -NAO & Indian Ocean MJO, which argues for eventual MJO propagation into the Indian Ocean, but likely not until the mid-latter part of December or so. It doesn’t however address what happens prior to that, because the MJO signal has to be first communicated upstream thru the Western Hemisphere before it reaches the Indian Ocean weeks later.
The extratropical circulation pattern is of course key in determining whether or not an MJO event is carried across the western hemisphere because the upper-level footprint of the MJO is usually all the evidence we have of an MJO event occurring outside the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool. Oth, during the northern summer the NE Pacific is warm enough to readily couple to the atmosphere and changes this signature somewhat.
From Zhang (2005): https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2004RG000158
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The Euro weeklies also do hint at another Indian Ocean MJO orbit happening as we approach the Solstice (~Dec 21) fwiw, which is consistent with this study (& something I can agree with), but also not totally inconsistent with what’s being argued in my earlier post wrt an early December western hemisphere MJO.
Regardless, what has been really encouraging to me for the last week or two is knowing the lagged relationship between Indian Ocean MJO and the positive phase of the NAO is usually muted in La Niña winters like this one due to greater zonal separation between the pacific and Atlantic jet streams.
If we also couple this -NAO with the weaker stratospheric vortex (which too seems more likely given how the -NAO is being timed up with the stratospheric warming as discussed earlier in this thread), this would make it more difficult for +NAO to occur at positive lag from an Indian Ocean MJO event. Of course, in that case we’d talking about early January or so, so things can certainly change and I personally do not have super high confidence in how January pans out yet. I do suspect however we will eventually break thru with a more positive NAO/AO, but it may take a “wave reflection” type event from an -EPO/+TNH pattern later in January coupling with a recovering polar vortex from this very early winter disruption/weakening event to make it happen.
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2019GL084683
I'll agree that the potential weakened SPV (if it indeed comes to pass, which I do have more confidence in for reasons discussed earlier) is a great harbinger of increased potential for blocking heading into December. In fact, I give guest lectures to school students and one of my most-requested topics is always the winter outlook and I always include the December SPV forecast and historical analyses as part of that outlook. We've certainly had some of our better Decembers with a weakened SPV and we've had some real duds the other way (to no ones surprise).
Looking for ways this goes off the rails (the potential for a fast start to winter) is where the MJO certainly has to be considered, and the potential that the negative NAO we're currently experiencing could actually interfere with the pass into the western Hemisphere is what has my attention. It's not something I'd expect models (certainly not the weeklies, which are not reliable IMO) to latch onto ahead of time, so that is where I'm coming from in being concerned about a "rug pull". I'm cautiously optimistic, but I've got to see definitive evidence the MJO continues on into P8-1 before I move into the excited camp for first half of December.

Inspired by the study @griteater shared with us a few days ago, I replicated their QBO/Solar analysis on subseasonal variability of the polar vortex, but used a lot more data, looked only at cool neutral and La Niña winters, and utilized NOAA 20th Century Reanalysis SLP to analyze surface variability in the polar vortex.
In order to increase the sample size of the data I had to play with, I also used this pre-1953 QBO reconstruction from Bronnimann et al (2007) to analyze early 20th century QBO behavior.
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Breaking down things by month revealed some very interesting behavior. I highlighted this year's current solar/QBO combo (High solar/East QBO) for reference (Warm colors = High SLP, Cold Colors = Low SLP). There's of course a lot of variability still within each sub-composite, but it was neat to see what this looked like anyway.
High Solar/East QBO/-ENSO winters like this one historically tend to have a weaker polar vortex & -NAO in December and January, and usually see a rather sudden & dramatic flip of the AO/NAO to positive (or even strongly positive) during February, with the positive AO/NAO lasting into at least March.
One thing you can honestly say about High Solar/East QBO winters like this year compared to other cool ENSO cases is that outside of January, they tend to follow the typical La Niña paradigm (far right column) more than most. (i.e. a front-loaded winter).
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Circling back around to this post, I see why the AO/surface Northern Annular Mode (NAM) evolves like this in east QBO/solar max winters.
This study lays this dynamical mechanism out pretty clearly:
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2015JD024460
Basically, the easterly qbo strengthens the brewer-dobson circulation, leading to more upwelling/cooling in the tropical stratosphere. This upwelling increases ozone levels in the mid-upper stratosphere of the tropics and a causes an accumulation of ozone over the polar stratosphere. High solar activity thru energetic particle precipitation then catalyzes/accelerates ozone destruction in the polar stratosphere (thru HOx and NOx radicals), which causes the polar stratosphere to preferentially cool. The stratosphere meridional temperature gradient then increases between the poles and the tropics, causing the westerly winds in the stratosphere to intensify. These circulation anomalies in the stratosphere then progressively propagate downward into the troposphere, anchoring themselves to the surface by February & March.
The SLP/surface NAM, QBO, and solar activity analysis from this study agrees with what I showed in the quoted post, w/ the AO/NAO being the most positive in Feb-Mar during east QBO/solar max winters like this year:
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Is the subsurface cold enough to still lean weak east based Niña?Circling back around to this post, I see why the AO/surface Northern Annular Mode (NAM) evolves like this in east QBO/solar max winters.
This study lays this dynamical mechanism out pretty clearly:
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2015JD024460
Basically, the easterly qbo strengthens the brewer-dobson circulation, leading to more upwelling/cooling in the tropical stratosphere. This upwelling increases ozone levels in the mid-upper stratosphere of the tropics and a causes an accumulation of ozone over the polar stratosphere. High solar activity thru energetic particle precipitation then catalyzes/accelerates ozone destruction in the polar stratosphere (thru HOx and NOx radicals), which causes the polar stratosphere to preferentially cool. The stratosphere meridional temperature gradient then increases between the poles and the tropics, causing the westerly winds in the stratosphere to intensify. These circulation anomalies in the stratosphere then progressively propagate downward into the troposphere, anchoring themselves to the surface by February & March.
The SLP/surface NAM, QBO, and solar activity analysis from this study agrees with what I showed in the quoted post, w/ the AO/NAO being the most positive in Feb-Mar during east QBO/solar max winters like this year:
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Is the subsurface cold enough to still lean weak east based Niña?
I guess what I'm getting at is in the winter 21-22, it was a pretty robust east based niña. We blowtorched in December, which allowed djf to average above normal. After January 1st it got stormier and colder. With a weaker eastward leaning niña, it would seem like stormier earlier and colder but last longer than people think, UNLESS radical changes were to happen.More than plenty cold enough for the time being.
Im not too concerned about a significant ENSO transition until perhaps March.
The first MJO orbit thru the Indo-Pacific here is establishing the warm water volume in the tropical western pacific. The next MJO event later this winter in the west pac will likely advect this warm water eastward along the thermocline in the form of a downwelling Kelvin Wave, with some enso transition 2-3 months lagged from that.