The morning forecast challenge will focus on Christmas Day into early next week as a powerful Winter Storm system currently moving across the Gulf of Alaska drops SE into the developing Western Trough and cuts off from the main Polar jet stream across Southern Arizona/Northern Mexico and deepens into a very cold core upper low as very chilly spills South from the Canadian Prairies into the Great Basin/Upper Rio Grande Valley of New Mexico and eventually spills East over the Continental Divide into the Plains during the upcoming weekend. Leeside cyclogenesis, or a strong surface low pressure system is expected to develop across West Texas and slowly move ENE and then NE into the Ozarks as a very strong blocking SE Ridge of High Pressure prevents any storm system of being progressive, or quickly moving East across the Lower 48. That blocking SE Ridge will keep the Eastern 1/3rd of the United States very warm, but trouble lurks across our Region into the Southern/Central Plains as well as the Southern/Central Rockies as folks head home from the busy Christmas Holiday travel period. There is still some uncertainty to the eventual track of the cut off cold core low, but past experience in years that have had a strong El Nino tend to suggest that a more slow meandering Southern track across Mexico to Texas South of the Big Bend and on East into the Permian Basin would be the most likely solution. That eventual storm track will likely not be realized until Christmas Day as the shortwave and the dynamics associated with the cold air currently over Greenland spill SW into the Canadian Prairies and all features enter the RAOB network for ingestion into the computer schemes.
As of this morning will go with a powerful Winter Storm and possible Blizzard condition across New Mexico, Colorado, portions of West Texas into the Panhandle where wind blown snow likely will approach or exceed 2 feet. Depending on the eventual storm track, locations across portions of Oklahoma into portions of Kansas on North may well experience very heavy wind blown snow with the potential of Blizzard conditions across portion of the Southern and Central Plains.
In the warm sector ahead of this developing Storm, a stalled frontal boundary will lift slowly North as a strong low level jet off the Gulf develops in response to rapid pressure falls across Northern Mexico, New Mexico and West Texas ahead of the cold core upper low and developing deep surface low. While there may be a chance for strong to severe storms across Central, N Central, SE and East Texas this coming weekend, too much uncertainty in the low track and just how quickly the storm race SE along a very strong cold front associated with the surface low lends to a VERY uncertain forecast challenge.
Looking ahead into next week in the wake of this power storm, a generally deep Western trough appears to be carved out across the Western 2/3rd of the United States with a continuation of an active storm track as well as a very active sub tropical jet stream over Texas. Stay Tuned as the next 10 days unfold in what could be one of the most challenging forecast period we have seen in a long time.
