But if we're gonna get really cold we'll have sub freezing highs easily. January this year and December 2022 was more like teens for highs

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Stratton23 wrote:Brent ive noticed typically when an operational run of any model ( in this case the GFS) when it shows an extreme cold solution, it typically takes a few model cycles for the ensembles to catch on if at all ( and assuming the operational run doesnt drop it) so we will see if the GEFS starts coming in colder the next few runs
Sambucol wrote:Stratton, is the GFS showing a several day period of highs in the 20s? And does it resemble Feb 2021?
Sambucol wrote:Stratton, is the GFS showing a several day period of highs in the 20s? And does it resemble Feb 2021?
Harp.1 wrote:It ain’t gonna be there this time
Cpv17 wrote:Stratton23 wrote:Brent ive noticed typically when an operational run of any model ( in this case the GFS) when it shows an extreme cold solution, it typically takes a few model cycles for the ensembles to catch on if at all ( and assuming the operational run doesnt drop it) so we will see if the GEFS starts coming in colder the next few runs
Ensembles usually don’t go full on Barney colors till it gets within close range. Like inside 5 days.
Brandon8181 wrote:Does anyone have thoughts on more specific reason why one model run can be so vastly different than the next?
Stratton23 wrote:Another slight shift west with the longwave trough noted on the 00z GEFS, down the road, any little shifts can make a huge difference on where the cold air spills to
wxman57 wrote:About a week ago, the GFS and EC were forecasting cross-Polar flow to develop next week. This would drive some very cold air into Canada. Now, models have given up on the cross-Polar flow. Thus, no big Arctic air push south.
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