Wulfer
Member
Well, my eyes must be lying because the radar is showing snow flurries and well its snowing outside. Nothing reported on the major forecasts for snow today. I'm impressed it remembered how to snow here. LOL
Same here, saw some nice brief flakesWell, my eyes must be lying because the radar is showing snow flurries and well its snowing outside. Nothing reported on the major forecasts for snow today. I'm impressed it remembered how to snow here. LOL
beechmtn.com
managed to find some flakes not too far from home, right up against the NC line. pretty good northwest flow spillover event
Seems like a novelty frozen event is brewing for central NC around day 8.
Non accumulating snow flurries all day here. Definitely not jealous of the Northeast today![]()
Finally getting accums from some nice banding
Just wow at the pics and videos out of the NE; this is a legitimate true generational storm. An actual snowcane. Pretty incredible from a meteorological standpoint.
makes sense to, we are staring down a strong +EAMT event with a unfavorable forcing mech focused around the MC, and increased momentum with a poleward shifted pacific jet. This likely induces the effects of the upcoming SPV event initially with the main lobe sitting around Alaska, while the U.S. sits with a more zonal look, with some sort of ridge response on the EC as some energy gets trapped in the SW US. Somebody in the SE might hit 90 during this period, the analogs for this type of hemispheric pattern matches up with some notable warm march periods, including all the way up into the Midwest/GLs. One popular one that shows up is March 2012. I think the more shocking thing showing up on NWP is the MJO wave losing steam as it moves east now, which would result in a colder flip eventuallyRather strong signal for a toaster ridge in early March towards the End of WK1-WK2, with possible mid/upper 80s as a ceiling. Rather legit look here at a shot at some persistent late spring like warmth and even early summer if you start drawing anomalous 850s out the south central U.S. View attachment 194519View attachment 194520View attachment 194521View attachment 194522View attachment 194523View attachment 194524




makes sense to, we are staring down a strong +EAMT event with a unfavorable forcing mech focused around the MC, and increased momentum with a poleward shifted pacific jet. This likely induces the effects of the upcoming SPV event initially with the main lobe sitting around Alaska, while the U.S. sits with a more zonal look, with some sort of ridge response on the EC as some energy gets trapped in the SW US. Somebody in the SE might hit 90 during this period, the analogs for this type of hemispheric pattern matches up with some notable warm march periods, including all the way up into the Midwest/GLs. One popular one that shows up is March 2012. I think the more shocking thing showing up on NWP is the MJO wave losing steam as it moves east now, which would result in a colder flip eventually View attachment 194528View attachment 194527View attachment 194526View attachment 194525