CaptinCrunch wrote:Stratton23 wrote:CaptinCrunch i though we were going towards a strong la nina?
The La Nina is expected to be about -1.0 on the top end. It's getting harder to look at analogs on these things, our climate has changed and what was typical of these events has become the uncertain. Neither La Nina or El Nino present the type of characteristics those events from the 1960's through 2000 had. We are also in solar maximum, and I'm sure this also plays a part in the warmer winters of the last few years.
You need all your ducks in a row to get the type of Winters we would like to see here in the south. I've been living here in NTX my entire life 1968 to now, we just don't get the winters we had back in the mid 70s - mid 80s.
I didn't buy into the strong Nina forecast from way earlier in the year. We haven't had an official strong ONI Nina since 2010 really. It's so hard to cool the equatorial oceans enough to qualify, because everything is raised by the background warming. Hard to cool more when the base is starting high. -PDO is a factor though and may influence to 'feel' like a strong Nina at times via atmospheric response. But even that is due to an extreme marine heatwave going on east of Japan.
Contrary, because of this warming (with no scientific basis, anecdotal) perhaps there is a reason why the weak-mod Ninas have worked, the base state is higher, thus maybe they are behaving like 'weak' Ninos of the past? Our El Ninos haven't worked out since 09-10. Much of the cold, snow waves have come with weak-mod Ninas.