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IW Met

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  1. Im certainly not one to ramp or anything, but I do find it rather interesting that the latest GFS somewhat resembles this in 1881. WWW.METEOCIEL.FR Archives NOAA NCEP de 1836 à maintenant By no means am I saying it will be anything like that! But it goes to show how patterns like this can evolve if everything is just right. Retrogressing high to greenland followed by a gently declining pressure up that way and a crazily south tracking jet.
  2. The problem with a Scandinavian high is that in a sense it isn't always a true block. What I mean is that a Greenland high is quite often an extension or part of an Arctic high, and whilst a Scandi high can also work the same way (be part of an Arctic high like Feb 2018), more often than not a Scandi high is just a mid latitude block that is propped up by low pressure over Eastern Europe or the Med, and without the "prop" it often just sinks. So a Greenland high shifting to Scandi CAN happen, it just isn't a scenario that we usually see. We do occasionally see a Westward extension of the annual Siberian high but this is usually its own unique pattern and unrelated to Northern blocking. So to answer the question, yes it is possible but unlikely. Original post: https://community.netweather.tv/topic/99584-model-output-discussion-into-winter/?do=findComment&comment=4971569
  3. The problem with a Scandinavian high is that in a sense it isn't always a true block. What I mean is that a Greenland high is quite often an extension or part of an Arctic high, and whilst a Scandi high can also work the same way (be part of an Arctic high like Feb 2018), more often than not a Scandi high is just a mid latitude block that is propped up by low pressure over Eastern Europe or the Med, and without the "prop" it often just sinks. So a Greenland high shifting to Scandi CAN happen, it just isn't a scenario that we usually see. We do occasionally see a Westward extension of the annual Siberian high but this is usually its own unique pattern and unrelated to Northern blocking. So to answer the question, yes it is possible but unlikely.
  4. Down here we need that surface wind to be north of east, even if just by 10 degrees, otherwise the channel will keep surface temps a fair bit higher than just 10 miles north and west. Luckily the fetch is short which means any surface warmth from the channel will be shallow, so central and northwestern parts of the island are often much colder than eastern and southern parts in any potential east flow.
  5. Sea temps are surprisingly not as high as many might think. Compare the buoy temps from Nov so far this year with previous years. We are sat at maybe 1°C or (less) above the average from the last 15 years.....down here anyway (English Channel). National Coastal Monitoring - Realtime Data COASTALMONITORING.ORG
  6. Having an extremely cold spell across many parts of the US and even Siberia at the moment. There are some positive anomalies too of course, but that cold over the US looks fairly extreme!
  7. There were some fairly decent easterlies in the 90s, for example Feb 4th - 12th 1991 with a Scandi high and huge snowfalls in some parts. Nov 19th - 22nd 1993 that brought quite widespread snow. Feb 12th - 15th 1994 with a scandi high and lots of snow in south and east. Dec 4th - 16th 1995, Jan 21st - Feb 8th 1996, Dec 21st - Jan 10th 96/97 that brought snow to the usual areas and freezing drizzle to the IOW. Dec 14th - 17th 1997, although it was fairly short lived but still brought plenty of snow showers followed by a very heavy transitional snow event to many places in the UK. I would say no less than any other decade to be fair. I would love to see day by day strat charts for the dates above as I am sure there are probably splits and displacements driving some of them, as we know very well that even just minor warmings can occasionally influence the strat, especially if wave 2, although during the Neutral ENSO years I am leaning more towards trop driven blocking or at least lack of strat-trop connection for the early season Easterlies.
  8. A bit off topic, but here on the IOW we had 2 amazing falls of snow in January and March 2013, 3 falls in 2018 and about 5-8cm worth in 2019 away from the east and south coast of the island. All cold was strat triggered too, with 2019 being a displacement. No different to the previous 40 years here really. Our worst snow drought was from Dec 1987-Nov 1993, with 1991 having a slight dusting. We are yet to beat that!
  9. I agree, at least for the southern half. The norhtern half of the UK would take a beating!
  10. Synoptically looks reasonable but the cold is much further north, so really based on this run, only half the country will be seeing the good stuff while the other half watches on TV
  11. Im very relaxed, im just talking about what this run is showing, not what I think it will be showing when the day comes. Thats the whole point of this thread, to discuss what is currently being shown
  12. I do think so, those uppers are pretty poor for southern parts.
  13. I think the comment meant South-southwest when saying SSW
  14. 6z Arome The problem we have is that the air will be fairly dry, particularly on the western edge of any streamer type activity that runs south through the country, so we will be seeing a lot of the precipitation evaporating before it reaches the ground, but that said, where it manages to become a little heavier it will almost certainly be snow. Down in the far south (along the coast) it will be too far away from the source of the convective streamers, this means that most of the rain, sleet or snow will have fallen, leaving a lot of the far south mostly dry, at least through the daytime anyway.
  15. No problem if the main low stalls, as long as it sends a trough eastwards, that can then "prop" up any heights to our north.
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