

Moderator: S2k Moderators
Texas Snow wrote:The 0z euro provides a super light dusting in DFW next Wednesday morning, nothing to get excited about but it’s the first time it’s shown up outside the Canadian so something to dream about if it can trend south
Texas Snow wrote:Texas Snow wrote:The 0z euro provides a super light dusting in DFW next Wednesday morning, nothing to get excited about but it’s the first time it’s shown up outside the Canadian so something to dream about if it can trend south
Also NWS thinks it may bear watching:
A strong cold front arrives next Wed Night/Thursday with colder temperatures. I only
advertise low chances of a cold rain at this time, however we will
need to monitor forecast thermodynamic profiles across the north
and west closely with this system as we move through this coming
holiday weekend as no way of knowing that right now. I do expect
this system may be delayed by a day and more toward New Years Eve
knowing model biases of moving such deep systems east too quickly
beyond Day 5. This system will bear watching closely.
wxman57 wrote:
12Z GFS indicates warm air advection across Texas on the 1st with a high in the low 60s and a low near 50 that night.. Euro has temps near 60 in the afternoon dropping to the low to mid 40s that Friday night. You can uncross your fingers. This isn't the type of pattern that brings snow to TX. Zonal flow through the first week of January with no significant cold air intrusions. Occasional cold air confined to the Great Lakes & New England. No cold lasting very long with the fast zonal flow.
I hope the heat miser is proved wrong next week!!!Texas Snowman wrote:wxman57 wrote:
12Z GFS indicates warm air advection across Texas on the 1st with a high in the low 60s and a low near 50 that night.. Euro has temps near 60 in the afternoon dropping to the low to mid 40s that Friday night. You can uncross your fingers. This isn't the type of pattern that brings snow to TX. Zonal flow through the first week of January with no significant cold air intrusions. Occasional cold air confined to the Great Lakes & New England. No cold lasting very long with the fast zonal flow.
A Winter Weather Christmas Carol:
Wxman57: “Bah, humbug!”
Texas Winter Weather Lovers: “I am sorry, with all my heart, to find you so resolute... But I have made the trial in homage to Winter, and I'll keep my snow and cold weather loving humour to the last. So A Merry Christmas, Wxman57!"
Wxman57: “Bah, humbug, and good afternoon!”
(I hope the Ghosts of Christmas Weather Past, Present, and Future all pay you a visit this week, kind sir, and help your heat miserly heart turn around as completely as old Ebeneezer Scrooge’s did!
)
wxman57 wrote:
12Z GFS indicates warm air advection across Texas on the 1st with a high in the low 60s and a low near 50 that night.. Euro has temps near 60 in the afternoon dropping to the low to mid 40s that Friday night. You can uncross your fingers. This isn't the type of pattern that brings snow to TX. Zonal flow through the first week of January with no significant cold air intrusions. Occasional cold air confined to the Great Lakes & New England. No cold lasting very long with the fast zonal flow.
hriverajr wrote:wxman57 wrote:
12Z GFS indicates warm air advection across Texas on the 1st with a high in the low 60s and a low near 50 that night.. Euro has temps near 60 in the afternoon dropping to the low to mid 40s that Friday night. You can uncross your fingers. This isn't the type of pattern that brings snow to TX. Zonal flow through the first week of January with no significant cold air intrusions. Occasional cold air confined to the Great Lakes & New England. No cold lasting very long with the fast zonal flow.
I agree with weatherman, systems too progressive. don't get the excitement with what models are currently displaying.
hriverajr wrote:wxman57 wrote:
12Z GFS indicates warm air advection across Texas on the 1st with a high in the low 60s and a low near 50 that night.. Euro has temps near 60 in the afternoon dropping to the low to mid 40s that Friday night. You can uncross your fingers. This isn't the type of pattern that brings snow to TX. Zonal flow through the first week of January with no significant cold air intrusions. Occasional cold air confined to the Great Lakes & New England. No cold lasting very long with the fast zonal flow.
I agree with weatherman, systems too progressive. don't get the excitement with what models are currently displaying.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests