In all likelihood, December 2023 will tie for the 5th warmest at DFW with an average temp of 52.8*F.
Winter is definitely shrinking. The weeks leading up to Christmas tend to look and feel more like Thanksgiving used to.
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In all likelihood, December 2023 will tie for the 5th warmest at DFW with an average temp of 52.8*F.
SnowintheFalls wrote:Stratton23 wrote:This forum will get active soon lol, the arctic air is a guaranteed lock at this point, 100% confident in that, whether we can get a system or two to tap into that remains to be seen, but ensembles definitely are noisy on that
Getting cold air in place is a positive step in an El Nino winter. Hoping the moisture will aligns with it.
weatherdude1108 wrote:Got a Tempest Weatherflow station from Santa for Christmas. Temporarily set it up on a semi- sheltered fence post in backyard. Absorbing some radiant heat from fence (showing 75 when surrounding stations show 68-70).
Ordered the pole mount. Planning to install it on a raised fence picket I had leftover from the ice storm repairs last year. There is a clearing between surrounding trees in corner of my yard that I can raise between and and 10 feet off the ground.
Was thinking of side of roof, but have gutters everywhere, it gets hot in Summer, and "the boss" didn't like that idea of poking holes near the roof.So It's more accessible and out away from the house in a clear spot near trees.
Used Bill Ponder's discount code, and am looking forward to reporting measurements once permanently installed!
Ntxw wrote:SnowintheFalls wrote:Stratton23 wrote:This forum will get active soon lol, the arctic air is a guaranteed lock at this point, 100% confident in that, whether we can get a system or two to tap into that remains to be seen, but ensembles definitely are noisy on that
Getting cold air in place is a positive step in an El Nino winter. Hoping the moisture will aligns with it.
I'm a believer of opposing patterns in a developed ENSO state delivers change. Like in a La Nina having a nino-esque pattern tags in moisture and proper 500mb blocking to deliver storms with cold up north.
In an El Nino, a La Nina-esque pattern builds cold while the Nino STJ still goes on. Probably why first year El Nino/first year La Nina delivers some memorable events. You have a new base state with lingering old base state.
TeamPlayersBlue wrote:Ntxw wrote:SnowintheFalls wrote:
Getting cold air in place is a positive step in an El Nino winter. Hoping the moisture will aligns with it.
I'm a believer of opposing patterns in a developed ENSO state delivers change. Like in a La Nina having a nino-esque pattern tags in moisture and proper 500mb blocking to deliver storms with cold up north.
In an El Nino, a La Nina-esque pattern builds cold while the Nino STJ still goes on. Probably why first year El Nino/first year La Nina delivers some memorable events. You have a new base state with lingering old base state.
Very good point. I think most of Texas will see winter weather this Jan. This pattern is coming in with an attitude.
For me here in Denver, it looks like it will be very cold Jan for us.
Cpv17 wrote:Newest run of the Euro weeklies look very cold for the foreseeable future.
wxman57 wrote:It's official. There was no freeze in Houston in 2023. Let's do it again in 2024!!
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