gpsnowman wrote:hriverajr wrote:I see absolutely nothing exciting in Texas. Not even any hints.
Yeah this is getting pretty lame. It needs to get wet or cold or both quick. A November not to remember on tap.
Lame is an understatement...

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gpsnowman wrote:hriverajr wrote:I see absolutely nothing exciting in Texas. Not even any hints.
Yeah this is getting pretty lame. It needs to get wet or cold or both quick. A November not to remember on tap.
gpsnowman wrote:hriverajr wrote:I see absolutely nothing exciting in Texas. Not even any hints.
Yeah this is getting pretty lame. It needs to get wet or cold or both quick. A November not to remember on tap.
nathanc1969 wrote:According to Larry Cosgrove, no winter until early/mid January.
HockeyTx82 wrote:nathanc1969 wrote:According to Larry Cosgrove, no winter until early/mid January.
So instead of Winter always 2 weeks away now it is always 2 months away...... got it!
nathanc1969 wrote:According to Larry Cosgrove, no winter until early/mid January.
Cerlin wrote:Been holding off on saying something but it’s been about 6 runs now that the GFS is showing some potential for action around the 23rd of November. Originally it was showing a massive ridge placing itself over the bulk of the US through the end of November, but there’s a chance an arctic blast coupled with a few strong troughs could break into the area and give us some wintry threats, or at the very least, some colder temps. Currently, 18z GFS is showing some snow for the panhandle and Oklahoma around that time. The GFS sniffed out the ice storm pretty early for Oklahoma in October so it’s worth monitoring.
Don't give up hope!!CaptinCrunch wrote:Nothing to be concerned with through Thanksgiving. Nothing in the long range worth discussing since the long range forecast has not be all that good the last few winters.
Hopefully La Nina will remain in the weak category this winter but unfortunately I don't think it will make any impact on our winter. 20 years ago we could say a weak La Nina, Neutral, or weak El Nino winter could all play out with keeping NTX with a average winter season, but now that's no longer the case. Since the Super El Nino of 2015 it hasn't made much if any difference how those 3 events would shape our winter.
I don't count a brief flurry as a snow event, or even a winter event at that, it's no different calling a brief shower in spring a weather event. I'm fully on board with this all falling in to the area of climate change over the last 10-20 years, let's face it, the winters of today haven't come close to the Winters of the 60s-90s.
CaptinCrunch wrote:Not giving up hope, but also not getting any hopes up.
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