It seems like this week is going to turn out to be pretty chilly and the weekend might end up being warmer instead of cooler. Weather is so wacky.

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Portastorm wrote:Those are very compelling numbers AFM.![]()
Considering you have researched the source region for this arctic airmass, I'm thinking your forecast of 12-15 below normal for a day or two looks pretty good at this point. And yes ... it is a far cry from anything historic or record-breaking.
jschlitz wrote:southerngale wrote:Amazing that we can go from cold that rivals 1989 to a hardly impressive cold snap in just a few days time.
Not amazing to some of us who keep a mental tally of how often these forecasts of 83/89/1899 are posted here and elsewhere. I was warning in this very forum a week ago to not buy into the '83/'89 hype.
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I'm still amazed at how some people - even some pro mets - practically scream "Icebergs in Galveston Bay" every time a block shows up. These are 50-yr and 100-yr events, they don't/won't happen very often.
And FWIW it seems just a handful are the culprits....but they say the same thing every winter and before long they have a flock of snow geese bowing before them. After several years of "buying" into the hype on a particular subscriber site, I had to learn the hard way and read the models myself.
Air Force Met wrote:jschlitz wrote:southerngale wrote:Amazing that we can go from cold that rivals 1989 to a hardly impressive cold snap in just a few days time.
Not amazing to some of us who keep a mental tally of how often these forecasts of 83/89/1899 are posted here and elsewhere. I was warning in this very forum a week ago to not buy into the '83/'89 hype.
![]()
I'm still amazed at how some people - even some pro mets - practically scream "Icebergs in Galveston Bay" every time a block shows up. These are 50-yr and 100-yr events, they don't/won't happen very often.
And FWIW it seems just a handful are the culprits....but they say the same thing every winter and before long they have a flock of snow geese bowing before them. After several years of "buying" into the hype on a particular subscriber site, I had to learn the hard way and read the models myself.
Cold, wintery days in SETX is about 2 things:
1) A massive frigid dome of very high pressure in AK and NW Canada setup to do (what I call ) the Lee-side slide down the east side of the Rockies. You need an upper air high to kick the high out of it's source and that's about it. Gravity does the rest. SW flow aloft can be all over the place...it won't matter.
2) A cold airmass that comes down with some upper level support and some overrunning aloft that gets the wet-bulb process going. That will turn a high of 40 into a high of 30...
IF you don't have those two things...you can get a decent high to slide south under good upper level support...it will drop you into the 20's...maybe even the teens (edit: for lows / given how cold the airmass is originally)...but it won't have any staying power.
This particular airmass isn't abnormally cold. The pattern is abnormal...the airmass (in it's source region) isn't. So...by the time it moves out of its source region and modifies...your looking at temps 15-20 below normal in the coldest areas. NOthing to write home about.
Below N.O. wrote:
Since, there will be a "Cross Polar Flow" can you tell what the current temperatures are over the North Pole?
At 0z Saturday it even has a 1038mb high sitting right over the TX/OK border...aggiecutter wrote:According to the 12z EURO, and this has been its solution about 7 out the last 10 runs ,it drives the bulk of the cold air, whatever that may be, straight down the plains into Texas, not east. Click on the link below and you can see it for yourself. Myself, I'll trust the EURO over the operational GFS, which has proven over the years and this year with the last outbreak that it held up stationary at the Oklahoma-Kansas border that is absolutely clueless when dealing with Arctic air.
12z EURO:
http://www.ecmwf.int/products/forecasts ... uv850_z500
It looks like Eureka; N. W. T. is the best Canada can do at -44 F.. That is just below normal but most of the arctic has been above normal for a while..Portastorm wrote:Those are very compelling numbers AFM.![]()
Considering you have researched the source region for this arctic airmass, I'm thinking your forecast of 12-15 below normal for a day or two looks pretty good at this point. And yes ... it is a far cry from anything historic or record-breaking.
vbhoutex wrote:I greatly respect and appreciate the opiniions and the knowledge that all of the pro-mets and amatuers are putting forth in trying to "pin down" what is going to happen with this "otbreak. What I don't think I understand or may not have read enough of is-what is going to be the source region for this "outbreak"? Is it going to be a cross polar flow from Siberia or the polar vortex that is setting up over the N Great Lakes/S Canada? If the source region is Siberia are the temps their running at or belwo normal ? If the source region is Siberia will it feed into this already cold polar vortex and cool it further? I know some of this, if not all, has at least been talked about, but can anyone give me a concise answer?(If that is possible this far out)
GFS CONTINUES TO INSIST THAT THE ARCTIC AIRMASS TO OUR NORTH WON`T
MAKE IT TO SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS BY THE WEEKEND. HAVE DECIDED TO
CONTINUE THE TREND OF ECMWF GUIDANCE AND PREVIOUS FORECAST PACKAGES,
WITH THE COLDER AIR ARRIVING ON SATURDAY. NEXT MONDAY MORNING`S
LOWS LOOK TO BE THE COLDEST OF THE FORECAST PERIOD, WITH THE HILL
COUNTRY DIPPING INTO THE MID 20S...AND TEMPERATURES AT OR A FEW
DEGREES BELOW FREEZING ELSEWHERE. HAVE LOWERED MAX TEMPS FOR THE
WEEKEND BY ABOUT 10-15 DEGREES AS COMPARED TO GFS, BUT GENERALLY
IN THE UPPER 40S TO MID 50S RANGE WITH PARTLY CLOUDY SKIES. KEEP
IN MIND THAT FORECAST CONFIDENCE FOR DAYS 5-7 IS NOT VERY HIGH,
GIVEN THE INCONSISTENCIES OF MODEL GUIDANCE[img][/img]
aggiecutter wrote:According to the 12z EURO, and this has been its solution about 7 out the last 10 runs ,it drives the bulk of the cold air, whatever that may be, straight down the plains into Texas, not east. Click on the link below and you can see it for yourself. Myself, I'll trust the EURO over the operational GFS, which has proven over the years and this year with the last outbreak that it held up stationary at the Oklahoma-Kansas border that is absolutely clueless when dealing with Arctic air.
12z EURO:
http://www.ecmwf.int/products/forecasts ... uv850_z500
Extremeweatherguy wrote:At 0z Saturday it even has a 1038mb high sitting right over the TX/OK border...aggiecutter wrote:According to the 12z EURO, and this has been its solution about 7 out the last 10 runs ,it drives the bulk of the cold air, whatever that may be, straight down the plains into Texas, not east. Click on the link below and you can see it for yourself. Myself, I'll trust the EURO over the operational GFS, which has proven over the years and this year with the last outbreak that it held up stationary at the Oklahoma-Kansas border that is absolutely clueless when dealing with Arctic air.
12z EURO:
http://www.ecmwf.int/products/forecasts ... uv850_z500
That looks like a pretty cold setup to me!
Also, here is the full ECMWF loop for everyone else to look at: http://weather.cod.edu/forecast/loop.ecmwf850t.html <<It shows another reinforcing shot of cold by 0z Monday.
Extremeweatherguy wrote:
That looks like a pretty cold setup to me!
Also, here is the full ECMWF loop for everyone else to look at: http://weather.cod.edu/forecast/loop.ecmwf850t.html <<It shows another reinforcing shot of cold by 0z Monday.
Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 38.
Saturday: Partly cloudy, with a high near 52.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 37.
Sunday: Partly cloudy, with a high near 54.
UPPER LEVEL FLOW BECOMING MORE NORTHWESTERLY
DURING WEEKEND AS UPPER RIDGE BUILDS OVER EASTERN PACIFIC/EXTREME
WESTERN CONUS. GFS AND ECMWF DIFFERS IN HANDLING LONG WAVE PATTERN
OVER NORTH AMERICA ESPECIALLY LATE IN THE WEEKEND THROUGH NEXT
WEEK. THE ECMWF PATTERN OPENS THE POSSIBILITY OF BRINGING COLD
ARCTIC AIR MASS SOMETIME NEXT WEEK.
Below N.O. wrote:
I think that's a 1028.
I do think it will get colder than the GFS numbers and I do think the Houston area will see a night in the 20's...maybe mid-upper 20's at IAH before it is all said and done (not by late week though...probably by early next week/late weekend...)
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