• Hello, please take a minute to check out our awesome content, contributed by the wonderful members of our community. We hope you'll add your own thoughts and opinions by making a free account!

Misc General Banter Thread

I’ve always wondered if we could look back 1,000 years what the largest snowfall ever for our region was. Imagine the 1457 superstorm that dropped 33” on Columbia and 48” on charlotte
1776 Christmas Snow Campaign. Washington led troops in battle against the British. I've read accounts of them marching in snow that was measured in feet around Greenville and the upstate.
 
I’ve always wondered if we could look back 1,000 years what the largest snowfall ever for our region was. Imagine the 1457 superstorm that dropped 33” on Columbia and 48” on charlotte
it would be interesting to know what is possible on a long enough timeline. Given some of the improbable weather events that have happened in just the last century, you’d have to think some really bizarre stuff that we’d think is impossible has happened in the 1,000-10,000-year timeframe. A Miami blizzard, maybe?
 
e3442c4d96e212bac9a11f62ea2e3540.jpg

Solid Windows Open in a Hoodie day here in the Office. 36 and Aesthetic Rain. Call me a moron …. My fav days are below 40, Rain or Cloudy with windows open and a candle burning on the desk.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
it would be interesting to know what is possible on a long enough timeline. Given some of the improbable weather events that have happened in just the last century, you’d have to think some really bizarre stuff that we’d think is impossible has happened in the 1,000-10,000-year timeframe. A Miami blizzard, maybe?
Although the odds are very low in any given year I always ponder could we get one of those once in a few hundred year winter events. Although it's normally laughable on its face there is a non zero chance. And if you add up the odds over the course of your lifetime the odds add up...well I'm still waiting so I feel like each year I have a better shot lol.
 
Although the odds are very low in any given year I always ponder could we get one of those once in a few hundred year winter events. Although it's normally laughable on its face there is a non zero chance. And if you add up the odds over the course of your lifetime the odds add up...well I'm still waiting so I feel like each year I have a better shot lol.
I mean I once would’ve thought double digit snowfall totals were borderline impossible in Florida, then we saw 10” of snow fall in parts of the panhandle last winter. So who knows. I suspect on a long enough timeline, some truly crazy stuff has happened.
 
I mean I once would’ve thought double digit snowfall totals were borderline impossible in Florida, then we saw 10” of snow fall in parts of the panhandle last winter. So who knows. I suspect on a long enough timeline, some truly crazy stuff has happened.

1895 in Louisiana for sure.... Supposedly was 2 feet somewhere
 
Talk to me @Stevo24 for 2 years I got absolutely nothing. Last year I got 0.5"
Do you think maybe this is the year I get 1 whole inch? Or should I go ahead and hang it up for the winter?
@RainlessSnowless & Grumpy I want to say hang it up. But something just feels like it’s going to happen in a big way this winter to me. That being said if it doesn’t I’ll probably be scarred for winters to come and will never be positive again lol
 
@RainlessSnowless & Grumpy I want to say hang it up. But something just feels like it’s going to happen in a big way this winter to me. That being said if it doesn’t I’ll probably be scarred for winters to come and will never be positive again lol
I kinda agree. One year snowless is hard, but it happens now. Never thought 2 in a row would happen, until it did! Then surely not a chance in hell of 3! But, then it kinda did. Surely no way it happens again this winter!
 
To avoid disappointment, don't believe modeling outside of 24 hours for major events.
You cannot rely on your local forecasters anymore, because they want cash via comments/views on their social media.

Follow climatology. If a storm system doesn't match up to your region historically getting a big event, throw the idea away.

For me this is:
- Arctic front has come through and in place
- High pressure providing plenty of cold air
- Storm track no further north than North-Central Florida
- Real strengthening not occurring until well off the SC coast

This is not the same for Upstate/NC. But until I see that for my area, with model consensus, I will always remain pessimistic for a major event of +SN for my back yard.

If you guys just look at the historic storms, not the outliers (like the crusher) you will see that 9/10 times, these models are not lining up with history when they put you under a foot of snow in a marginal setup.
 
Talk to me @Stevo24 for 2 years I got absolutely nothing. Last year I got 0.5"
Do you think maybe this is the year I get 1 whole inch? Or should I go ahead and hang it up for the winter?
There have truly been changes in the snow patterns of the SE. Many of us remember the days when we used to watch snow storms track from TX all the way to the Carolina's. I cannot remember the last one we saw like that; Jan 2011? It used to be that the snow grade was more North and South; ex. North of I40, North of I85, etc. Now it is West to East; almost everything is the mtns of NC/VA and West. With this, we have seen places like Dallas, LA, MS, AL, and even the FL panhandle get more snow than the Carolinas; last year was just the latest example. I remember a few years ago every state in the Union had recorded snowfall except... SC. We really are the new FL when it comes to snowfall. Sure, we can get cold enough; but it never matches up with the precipitation anymore. It has always been a timing issue for us but with the overall patterns we can't get the timing to ever work. I can't help but hope this is cyclical and that we could eventually flip back; but we have to get out of this pattern where the SE ridge seems to dominate. Everything is a cutter or a late bloomer, that gets the coastal areas, but leaves the piedmont out either way. Pretty painful.
 
There have truly been changes in the snow patterns of the SE. Many of us remember the days when we used to watch snow storms track from TX all the way to the Carolina's. I cannot remember the last one we saw like that; Jan 2011? It used to be that the snow grade was more North and South; ex. North of I40, North of I85, etc. Now it is West to East; almost everything is the mtns of NC/VA and West. With this, we have seen places like Dallas, LA, MS, AL, and even the FL panhandle get more snow than the Carolinas; last year was just the latest example. I remember a few years ago every state in the Union had recorded snowfall except... SC. We really are the new FL when it comes to snowfall. Sure, we can get cold enough; but it never matches up with the precipitation anymore. It has always been a timing issue for us but with the overall patterns we can't get the timing to ever work. I can't help but hope this is cyclical and that we could eventually flip back; but we have to get out of this pattern where the SE ridge seems to dominate. Everything is a cutter or a late bloomer, that gets the coastal areas, but leaves the piedmont out either way. Pretty painful.
I'd say a lot of the problem is a lack of a -NAO. I know the PNA is just as important, but most of our cold recently has been EPO driven. And with that we fight a SER or either Vodka cold that suppresses everything and shears out. Its a very fine line. And when they're not suppressed they are late bloomers like you said. That is what usually happens with northern stream garbage as I call it. There is almost no room for error with those. They either dig just right and tilt just right at the right time or you lose. This area needs a -NAO and and active STJ and stout PNA ridge. Unpopular opinion but the La Ninas can take a hike
 
Back
Top