lsuhurricane wrote:0z GFS coming alive in the MDR? Say it ain’t so
I don't see anything there but a couple of tropical waves, which is normal for mid to late July.
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lsuhurricane wrote:0z GFS coming alive in the MDR? Say it ain’t so
Deshaunrob17 wrote:Lol I started this forum in 2017. Every year since then was non El Niño ( most La Niña ). I wonder how this forum looks in an upcoming El Niño?
Category5Kaiju wrote:The only thing about comparing this season with 2011 (at least Pacific wise) is that this year does not really seem to have as strong of a La Nina Modoki setup. In 2011, the Nino 1,2 region (at least in July) was glaringly warm, and that could have very well contributed to its overperformance during an otherwise moderate -ENSO year. Other Modoki La Nina years that had an active EPAC in July include 1998 and 2008, and in 2017, one could perhaps argue that the temporary coastal El Nino that affected Peru and caused a major drought in the spring may have had lingering effects on the EPAC.
Now notice this: in all four of the years that I have mentioned, the Atlantic kicked into high gear in late August, with the first major hurricane of those seasons occurring after the August 20 date. However, I am still a bit hesitant to compare this year with those years in this regard because clearly, the -ENSO state has not disappeared (it even strengthened a little in the far west Nino regions in the spring/early summer), and the Nino 1,2 region, while warmer than the Nino 3 and 4 regions, is not eye-popping anomalously warm and does not look anywhere close to a La Nina Modoki from what I can tell. So either the EPAC is just extremely lucky with a very localized region of favorable conditions (and where the basin will eventually slow down going into August), or there's something else happening.
LarryWx wrote:SFLcane wrote:Ntxw wrote:Regarding ACE, the average of the seven 3rd year La Nina seasons was 79, which is near normal. The average of the respective seven seasons prior (all were 2nd year La Ninas)'was a whopping 133! (Out of curiosity, I looked at the other seven 2nd year La Ninas (1890, 1950, 1971, 1984, 2008, 2011, and 2017) and they averaged a very similar 132 ACE.))
Eric Webb's ONI analysis:
https://www.webberweather.com/ensemble- ... index.html
**Corrected for typo
Ntxw wrote:LarryWx wrote:SFLcane wrote:
Curious what the ACE averages/numbers are if you included cold neutral as criteria rather than just La Nina that extend for 3=+ seasons with no official Nino present during that time.
LarryWx wrote:Ntxw wrote:LarryWx wrote:
Curious what the ACE averages/numbers are if you included cold neutral as criteria rather than just La Nina that extend for 3=+ seasons with no official Nino present during that time.
I want to make sure I know what you're asking before attempting to analyze. Are you asking to look at the third season when it was cold neutral rather than La Nina and when it followed some combo of La Nina and cold neutral the prior two seasons?
MGC wrote:I'm getting 2011 vibes this season. Hot in Texas and only 3 named storms to date, same as 2011. We shall see what transpires in the coming months......MGC
Ntxw wrote:LarryWx wrote:Ntxw wrote:
Curious what the ACE averages/numbers are if you included cold neutral as criteria rather than just La Nina that extend for 3=+ seasons with no official Nino present during that time.
I want to make sure I know what you're asking before attempting to analyze. Are you asking to look at the third season when it was cold neutral rather than La Nina and when it followed some combo of La Nina and cold neutral the prior two seasons?
I'd say we can broaden the sample size, any string of 3+ or later neutral or lower without a Nino.
LarryWx wrote:Ntxw wrote:LarryWx wrote:
I want to make sure I know what you're asking before attempting to analyze. Are you asking to look at the third season when it was cold neutral rather than La Nina and when it followed some combo of La Nina and cold neutral the prior two seasons?
I'd say we can broaden the sample size, any string of 3+ or later neutral or lower without a Nino.
If I were to add any string of 3+ or later warm neutral or lower without Nino, I'd be adding 44 seasons to the 7 I have now for a total of 51 seasons. In my mind, that's too many. Besides, I wouldn't have the time to do that many. Moreover, I honestly wouldn't feel comfortable counting any string that includes any warm neutral, regardless, because I feel that warm neutral would be straying too far from La Nina, which is my focus. Warm neutral being closer to El Nino than La Nina would bother me.
However, I do think that stopping at cold neutral would be more reasonable since cold neutral isn't far from La Nina. So, IF I were to decide to add any, I might add 2001 (cold neutral that is after 3 La Nina), 1985 (cold neutral after 2 La Nina), and 1875 (cold neutral that is after 3 La Nina). But then again, two of these three additions would be a 4th year rather than just a 3rd year. My focus has been on 3rd year only and then comparing the 3rd years to 2nd years. So, if I eliminated 4th years, I'd be left with only 1985. So, 1985 would be the first season I'd add to my initial seven seasons if I were to add anything. Then I'd compare 1985 to 1984.
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