
https://x.com/WxTca/status/1914689469447389309
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cycloneye wrote:The OISST data shows the MDR cooling on a steady pace in the last few weeks.
https://i.imgur.com/S0Dmno9.png
https://i.imgur.com/ikfbPDQ.png
LarryWx wrote:cycloneye wrote:The OISST data shows the MDR cooling on a steady pace in the last few weeks.
https://i.imgur.com/S0Dmno9.png
https://i.imgur.com/ikfbPDQ.png
Thanks, Luis. And now just 8 days later, the MDR OISST anomaly has fallen even further from your cyclonicwx map’s +0.25C down to near 0! A year ago on this date it was way up at +1.5C. So, the MDR OISST has cooled a whopping 1.5C (2.7F) during the last year!
Does anyone know why the MDR (using definition that includes Caribbean) has cooled so much the past year? A 2.7F cooling of that large a portion of the ocean is pretty amazing to see. The MDR including the Caribbean is ~3 million sq miles or 7% of the entire Atlantic Ocean. The controversial Joe Bastardi thinks it’s due to a >50% drop in underwater seismic activity in the “mid-ocean spreading zones” of the globe because the area of major cooling surrounds a portion of the Atlantic part of that zone.
DorkyMcDorkface wrote:LarryWx wrote:cycloneye wrote:The OISST data shows the MDR cooling on a steady pace in the last few weeks.
https://i.imgur.com/S0Dmno9.png
https://i.imgur.com/ikfbPDQ.png
Thanks, Luis. And now just 8 days later, the MDR OISST anomaly has fallen even further from your cyclonicwx map’s +0.25C down to near 0! A year ago on this date it was way up at +1.5C. So, the MDR OISST has cooled a whopping 1.5C (2.7F) during the last year!
Does anyone know why the MDR (using definition that includes Caribbean) has cooled so much the past year? A 2.7F cooling of that large a portion of the ocean is pretty amazing to see. The MDR including the Caribbean is ~3 million sq miles or 7% of the entire Atlantic Ocean. The controversial Joe Bastardi thinks it’s due to a >50% drop in underwater seismic activity in the “mid-ocean spreading zones” of the globe because the area of major cooling surrounds a portion of the Atlantic part of that zone.
Pretty sure it's primarily a case of the NAO being in a different phase throughout this winter and early spring compared to this time last year. It's been positive for the most part so far this year as opposed to last year where it was predominantly negative, and the resulting weak trades helped build up the record warmth. With that being said, as others have noted, it appears we're due for a warmup as models are showing a slackening of trades headed into May, so we'll see how that pans out. Also have to watch for in-season warming over the summer thanks to the WAM, which seems to be a guarantee over the span of this high-amplitude phase we've been in over the past decade or so (remember how drastically the MDR warmed by peak season of 2018?)
cycloneye wrote:JB sees a bearish season.
@BigJoeBastardi
Hurricane season ACE index wise could turn out to be normal to below year. Look for slower moving, erratic storms further north rather than the MDR type situation we had last year ( look at tracks thru Caribbean) Atlantic MDR is coldest in many years, more like low ACE years, opposite high ace
https://x.com/BigJoeBastardi/status/1917208900090085553
WeatherBoy2000 wrote:cycloneye wrote:JB sees a bearish season.
@BigJoeBastardi
Hurricane season ACE index wise could turn out to be normal to below year. Look for slower moving, erratic storms further north rather than the MDR type situation we had last year ( look at tracks thru Caribbean) Atlantic MDR is coldest in many years, more like low ACE years, opposite high ace
https://x.com/BigJoeBastardi/status/1917208900090085553
I'll believe it when I see it. Ever since 2016, the Atlantic has not produced a below average season. 2018 had a full on -amo configuration paired with a building el nino going into the summer, neither is the case this year.
LarryWx wrote:WeatherBoy2000 wrote:cycloneye wrote:JB sees a bearish season.
@BigJoeBastardi
Hurricane season ACE index wise could turn out to be normal to below year. Look for slower moving, erratic storms further north rather than the MDR type situation we had last year ( look at tracks thru Caribbean) Atlantic MDR is coldest in many years, more like low ACE years, opposite high ace
https://x.com/BigJoeBastardi/status/1917208900090085553
I'll believe it when I see it. Ever since 2016, the Atlantic has not produced a below average season. 2018 had a full on -amo configuration paired with a building el nino going into the summer, neither is the case this year.
I’m a bit confused. Is he hedging his own 4/7/2025 forecast of ACE? On that day he forecasted ACE of 120-150! That’s above the 1991-2020 average of 110. I doubt he’s lowering his ACE forecast from that. I haven’t seen an official update. I think he’s just hedging on ACE.
toad strangler wrote:Last year, the 150th post in the indicators thread was made on January 28th. This year #150 was made today on April 29th. WOW!
That’s an indicator if I ever saw one!
mixedDanilo.E wrote:LarryWx wrote:WeatherBoy2000 wrote:
I'll believe it when I see it. Ever since 2016, the Atlantic has not produced a below average season. 2018 had a full on -amo configuration paired with a building el nino going into the summer, neither is the case this year.
I’m a bit confused. Is he hedging his own 4/7/2025 forecast of ACE? On that day he forecasted ACE of 120-150! That’s above the 1991-2020 average of 110. I doubt he’s lowering his ACE forecast from that. I haven’t seen an official update. I think he’s just hedging on ACE.
I thought the 1991-2020 average was 120? And I think Joe B might be a little pessimistic on this year. The MDR is probably gonna warm up considerably over the next few months and probably starting within the next few weeks. 2018 had above normal activity with a developing (although weak) el nino and near record cold SST anomalies in the MDR.
toad strangler wrote:Last year, the 150th post in the indicators thread was made on January 28th. This year #150 was made today on April 29th. WOW!
That’s an indicator if I ever saw one!
cycloneye wrote:toad strangler wrote:Last year, the 150th post in the indicators thread was made on January 28th. This year #150 was made today on April 29th. WOW!
That’s an indicator if I ever saw one!
DorkyMcDorkface wrote:ECMWF has a product which displays the modeled SST(A)s in the medium range. This is what it has by mid-May, quite a different (and frankly more favorable) Atlantic configuration compared to what we have right now. We'll see if this verifies in a few weeks.
https://charts.ecmwf.int/streaming/20250430-0110/0c/ps2png-worker-commands-79d786cf55-rxs8f-6fe5cac1a363ec1525f54343b6cc9fd8-vi2t0r01.png
https://charts.ecmwf.int/streaming/20250430-0110/26/ps2png-worker-commands-79d786cf55-k4z5f-6fe5cac1a363ec1525f54343b6cc9fd8-np7_fl09.png
SFLcane wrote:DorkyMcDorkface wrote:ECMWF has a product which displays the modeled SST(A)s in the medium range. This is what it has by mid-May, quite a different (and frankly more favorable) Atlantic configuration compared to what we have right now. We'll see if this verifies in a few weeks.
https://charts.ecmwf.int/streaming/20250430-0110/0c/ps2png-worker-commands-79d786cf55-rxs8f-6fe5cac1a363ec1525f54343b6cc9fd8-vi2t0r01.png
https://charts.ecmwf.int/streaming/20250430-0110/26/ps2png-worker-commands-79d786cf55-k4z5f-6fe5cac1a363ec1525f54343b6cc9fd8-np7_fl09.png
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