gatorcane wrote:Taking a look at the global models shows no arctic air diving into the lower 48 for the forseeable future. I am inclined to think that with the analogs we should start seeing a change towards the end of this month and into January. If you look back several months going back into the summer, we saw the "polar vortex" even then, last one was in November, so you got to think there will be at least one this winter. I am thinking January could be the month we see another whopper coming out of Canada which could send much of the lower 48 east of the Rockies into a deep freeze. Time will tell.
The use of the term 'polar vortex' is so misused and became popular last year with the media/social media. We have a polar vortex now and it is positioned where it typically is...over the N Pole.
On to what we can expect the rest of the month...No changes in the general theme expected regarding our sensible weather well into the extended range. The Pacific will deliver a lot of southern tracking storms over the next couple of weeks and the sub tropical jet looks to remain rather noisy. That mean disturbances tracking E across the Southern tier of States will continue bringing chances of rain and snow across the higher elevations of the Southern Rockies and the potential for wrap around wintery mischief across the Southern Plains and the Panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma. This sort of pattern looks to continue right into the pre Christmas timeframe.
As we near Christmas and New Years Eve, the longer range Global ensembles remain steadfast suggesting a significant pattern change capable of delivery much colder air across much of N America. There are indications that the Southern jet and Polar Jet may merge bringing a very stormy and colder pattern across the Desert SW, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri on E. Such a pattern has been expected and actually forecasted by most long range Winter Forecasters and it does look like those forecast are right on schedule. As always, there remains a lot of uncertainty and we cannot not accurately 'predict' the sensible weather beyond the 3-5 day range. That said the various teleconnection indices we look to are strongly suggesting we are well on our way to an interesting and active pattern as we end 2014 and begin 2015.