One minute your up and next thing you know "BAM" the other team scores again ....

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GaryHughes wrote:Good grief reading this board is like watching your favorite NFL team play the Super Bowl In sloooooooow mooooooootion!
One minute your up and next thing you know "BAM" the other team scores again ....
Portastorm wrote:Upon further review, the GFS ensemble means are close to what the Euro is suggesting. Yesterday we saw the models showing a full latitude trough over the central US at about 240 hours out (10 days). The 0z ensembles lag this trough further west and hold off on any Arctic outbreaks. Hmm ...
Euro
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GFS
http://img692.imageshack.us/img692/4513/00zgfsensembles500mbhei.gif
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orangeblood wrote:With the EPO forecast to go in the tank, putting a trough east of Hawaii, that should prevent any system from cutting off over the southwest. It should make this pattern much more progressive, with each system eating away at the ridge over the southeastern US. Arctic Cold usually overwhelms the pattern this time of year!! No need to worry, IMO!
GaryHughes wrote:Portastorm it's the fourth quarter and the 2:00 minute warning has just sounded... we're down by 10 and need a miracle...
Portastorm wrote:GaryHughes wrote:Portastorm it's the fourth quarter and the 2:00 minute warning has just sounded... we're down by 10 and need a miracle...
Perhaps the 12z GFS will be the miracle. Most folks here will enjoy it.
Kennethb wrote:I am all for a decent cold Arctic outbreak too. But remember 2 years ago I think we had a similiar setup. Both of the "reliable" models had 1050+ highs digging into the Plains at about 6-7 days out that had even the most conservative mets on board that Arctic was coming.
This time we have all of the teleconnections there with good general agreement. Generally it takes a little longer to get cold air to drop than models want. Cold air is dense so the energy and physics to get it to begin moving takes a while longer so the models generally have some difficulty in trying to figure things out. Too with blocking cold air needs to go somewhere. Sometimes it ends up on other sides of the globe.
In our favor is climatology the coldest time of the year is the third week of January and we have a good snowpack up north. The SOI is dropping again, so that suggests another round of an active STJ about the time the cold air should arrive.
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