Ntxw wrote:TeamPlayersBlue wrote:Ntxw wrote:
March is typically blizzard month for Panhandle and Oklahoma. But the reduction is pretty significant the last ~10 years so the new averages will likely be cut, unless it goes bonkers by then.
Thats very interesting because I dont think sea ice plays a direct role in this. I think it does for the lack of an early winter in the Southern Plains. Temps are def higher now in the arctic then the past in March but the cold source region of the arctic is full of ice.
The fringes is what's losing ground. As you mention early winter, late winter etc. The same concept applies to baselines. The cold blasts are still there and sharper than ever so is the warmer days due to patterns but the 'boring days' are tilting warmer than colder. I noted above there is no reason if the average is 55F that we can't spend some days in the low 50s and some in the upper 50s, instead between it's 60s, 60s, 70s way more than it should be. That's what skews every winter since to be above normal. This is putting it in the most simplistic terms, but the baseline is moving up, the numbers back it up there, can't argue that I've accepted defeat on that end. Which is why it's so hard to call a colder than normal winter 10+ years in a row...let that sink in.
Like you said, it's the inbetween days that are really noticeable. Usually getting below normal days only when there is some kind of front or a very rainy day.
Here in Denver, i'd love to see how a graph with the average wet bulb temps, and the amount of rainy days in winter months. Tomorrow we are expecting rain. System isn't attached to any cold air, but having rain here before April is hurtful.
The posts in this forum are NOT official forecast and should not be used as such. They are just the opinion of the poster and may or may not be backed by sound meteorological data. They are NOT endorsed by any professional institution or 



