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West is Best

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Posts posted by West is Best

  1. 21 minutes ago, NeilN said:

    Yes the models seem to be a bit dull and lifeless, but isnt it too early in the game?

    I'm sure many a good winter have started like this and have built upon it. As long as it stays dry and is cool is what matters. 

    I don't think there's much evidence of it being dry though? Pretty much a soaking for the next week or so.

    There was a guy called Bill Firkin who used to post on the precursor to this forum c 20-25 years ago. He was a spectacular troll until he got banned: used to speak about 'the cut-off.' His theory was that if we don't have cold by January 15th, I think that was the date, then winter was over  Needless to say it was a terrible wind-up and devoid of evidence.

    February used to be the month I remember for the most embedded cold and snow.

    • Like 4
  2. Re what has happened this time, I think it's always worth keeping an eye on the ensembles. The 0z is a case in point. You can see that nowhere over the next week does the operational touch -5C 850hPa, which is really mandatory for snow at low levels in England. But the other point of interest is if you follow the mean. It's clearly a gradually rising temperature profile.

    That doesn't mean this is set in stone: they could all be wrong because they're only as good as the input data. However, betting against the ensemble trend is a hazardous occupation 

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    • Like 4
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  3. 20 minutes ago, Iceaxecrampon said:

    Considering the 528 is in evidence for much of the country

     

    Thickness is only a part of the equation. As you know, snow is often a knife-edge experience in this country and to seal the deal we really need -5C 850 hPa upper temps. We simply don't look likely to have them this time. The added pain is the current North Sea temperature. It's around 12.9C which is warm and 3C above the mean December temperature. The Met Office / BBC are not forecasting widespread snow, but there may well be some wet snowy precipitation on the back edge especially at higher elevation: above 300 metres.

    WWW.OSPO.NOAA.GOV

    The Office of Satellite and Product Operations (OSPO) is part of the National Environmental Satellite Data and Information Service...
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    WWW.SEATEMPERATURE.ORG

    Lowestoft, United Kingdom December average sea temperature. Marine / ocean climate data updated daily, surface sea temperatures and...

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    • Like 2
  4. 12 minutes ago, Steve Murr said:

    Have you turned into the mild advocate WIB from like 2008

    Great UKMO > NW SE jet axis, Amplifcation upstream.  Meaning nice & cold for the foreseeable future..

    No just being realistic Steve. These synoptics are decent but not dramatic. At no point on the latest 0Z GFS ensembles is the -5C 850 hPa touched. I'm afraid there's not going to be a lot of snow out of this, but it will certainly feel cold for two or three days. The UKMO T144 actually shows an advancing mid-Atlantic low, something supported by the latest GFS.

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    • Like 8
  5. 1 hour ago, Steve Murr said:

    Morning

    Not withstanding the excitement at 72 for the bit of snow, the UKMO 144 00z is superb, pushing cold uppers south & the atlantic alligned to continue cold proceedings 

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    Actually it shows an advancing low mid-Atlantic at T144. And whilst T850's are chilly they are nowhere near the -5C hPa required. A case of only seeing what you wish to see I fear Steve on this occasion.

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    • Like 5
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  6. 17 minutes ago, Iceaxecrampon said:

    00z a bit of a flop for us in the NW. But someone is going to get a pasting from this as the LP rotates. S Coast up through to Wilts heads up. 

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    Sorry but this is not a 'pasting.' That's rain which may turn to sleet and wet snow at high elevation i.e. above 300 metres for a brief period.

    I love snow but the ramping on this cold snap has been entirely out of proportion to what the charts are really showing. And the Met Office happens to agree with me  

    • Like 6
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  7. 3 hours ago, Steve Murr said:

     

    All joking to one side those 10-20 mile increments have added up to a fairly substantial change to a colder theme giving way to a higher threat of snow.

     

     

    I don't think this is wholly true. The trend has been and continues to be away from cold. The one good bit of news is that the 12z operational was on the mild side in FI, even at one moment a brief outlier. But the ensembles continue to show a wide scatter with more and more mild runs appearing and the cold snap is less sustained as the Atlantic returns. In the short term the operational was less supported, with a significant number of milder runs. The general trend is way from anything too dramatic. A colder snap, certainly, from Friday to Sunday but nothing to get too ramped about. Very early days in winter terms and all that.

    Snow will be in short supply with such warm North Sea temps. It will only really be apparent above 300 metres, elevation which doesn't exist in East Anglia. 

     

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    • Like 3
  8. With the North Sea still so warm I suspect anything off that ECM will be a disappointment except on high ground to the north. It's too early in the season and the upper air source would need to be far more penetrative.

    I'm not meaning to be a killjoy. I can't see much excitement in this. It's going to feel cold but it's all a bit 'meh.' The GFS is trending away from cold and UKMO has now followed suit. And there's little in the GFS ensembles to make me sit up. Here's the 18z:

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    And the 0z:

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    The fact that UKMO has backed away from anything more sustained is not a good sign.

    • Like 4
  9. The thing is, I've been watching the GFS for months and it has forever been plumping for blocked scenarios which are, mysteriously, always out in FI. Then, up pops a return to Atlantic zonality and we are back in the usual cycle until the next FI blocking appears. Rinse and repeat. Call me a cynic but I've stopped paying any attention to anything beyond T168. 

    We would need serious upstream blocking i.e. a proper Greenland High, a phenomenal Svalbard High or a fantastic mid-Atlantic High and we need them inside T168.

     

     

  10. 5 hours ago, Zak M said:

     

    I think it's pretty much guaranteed that next week will be colder than average,

     

    Gulp. You seem very sure of that? 

    I'm sadly not yet convinced by the excitement on here. A chart like this is, imho, a recipe for trouble in future runs:

    1294279480_Screenshot2020-11-28at07_22_10.thumb.png.c045de013518369352e0a7088ff52f8c.png

     

    The problem is that we don't have a Greenland High and we don't really have a mid-Atlantic ridge. As our weather derives from the west I am always very wary when we end up relying on cold to come from any variant of easterly blocking. But, hey ho, I'm an amateur dabbler and what do I know.

    I hope you're right!

     

    • Like 7
  11. I usually come out of hibernation around now and it has been tempting once or twice with recent model runs. However, I'm not yet salivating. My hunch is that the Atlantic hasn't given up its blow just yet and that we are in for two or three phantom easterlies until Christmas. The GFS is backing away from anything particularly exciting, although we may have something meridional around c. 3rd December. 

    The ECM is the main source of hope and it makes me wary that there isn't much backing from the other big two. I may be wrong!

    • Like 3
  12. 17 hours ago, ICE COLD said:

    And the big winter chase begins. The GFS FI is a stonker for late October. Wonder how many of these will come of this year . 

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    I'm quite wary of cold Novembers as they don't always, or even often, mutate into cold winters. Much the same can happen with summer. Remember this year we had that incredible dry and sunny run from April through May? Then we ended up with a below average July.

    On the other hand, I do remember winter 1985/6 when November was bitterly cold under blocking and an easterly and a CET of 4.1C. Although December was mild, we then hit a real bone chilling February with a resumption of the blocking.  At -1.1C February 1986 remains one of the coldest months ever recorded in this country. In the last 100 years only 3 months have been colder. It's a month that is frequently forgotten, mostly because it was so dry: a lesson that despite TEITS' aspirations (I hope he's still around?), easterlies are not always the best news for snow.

    • Like 4
  13. Good morning Tamara and one and all. I hope you've been staying safe through this godawful virus. And, Tamara, re. your move: wow. SW Europe is a large area so are you able to be a little more specific? How wonderful.

    I'm making a brief foray onto the forum ahead of winter when I'm mostly on here. I wanted to state ahead of time that I think the GFS has gone down the plughole with its medium and longterm charts. I have long championed the GFS as the Gold Standard. Well, not any more. I've been monitoring the GFS for weeks and I don't know what has happened to it but it is utter junk. Complete rubbish. It spews out chart after chart totally at variance with previous runs and which usually bears absolutely no relation to what actually unfolds.

    Anything past T144 you're better off putting on a blindfold and pinning a tail on the donkey than using the GFS.

    • Like 4
  14. The Atlantic onslaught continues. It's now virtually certain that I shall witness my first ever snowless winter. Not even a flake from the sky.

    The briefest flirtation from ECM is soon snuffed out.

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    With the jet this powerful there's nothing that's going to stand in the westerly way. A remarkable February but, for most of us, for all the wrong reasons.

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    • Like 5
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