Texas Winter 2018-2019

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SnowintheFalls
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#281 Postby SnowintheFalls » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:22 am

The cold is still showing to be somewhat close. It will be criminal if we get all of that precip and the cold is just an arms lenght away!
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#282 Postby Cpv17 » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:32 am

Op runs of the 0z GFS & FV3 sucked tonight. A lot less digging with that trough over the Baja. Euro doesn’t look good either.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#283 Postby Brent » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:34 am

Cpv17 wrote:
BTAYLOR5021 wrote:Can someone please advise why the temps are warmer for N Texas vs the southeast. Dallas and ATL are same latitude yet Atl is mostly colder and have been getting more winter storms the passed few years.


+PNA .. here in Texas we need a neutral to slightly negative PNA to get some fun.


just to add to this... last year a lot of the DFW problem was the arctic air kept shunting the storms to our southeast... remember the times it snowed in Austin and College Station and Houston and we were just really cold and dry? Those are the storms that made for the snowy winter back east, had the storm track been just a bit NW those snows would have been over DFW and would have missed Atlanta largely

Amarillo and people to our NW really got shut out last year which was even crazier than DFW getting shut out given they average more snow

But our time is coming
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#284 Postby spencer817 » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:38 am

I'd be interested to see if the GEFS wins as the outlier at this point...
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#285 Postby Haris » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:46 am

Cpv17 wrote:Op runs of the 0z GFS & FV3 sucked tonight. A lot less digging with that trough over the Baja. Euro doesn’t look good either.


Yes, true they have trended a bit more N tonight but we have a long long way to go still and models have a lot of trouble with handling the STJ

Also, not really 'suck' Euro is actually wetter and I will take the 2-4" on the GFS still. Never good to be in the bulls eye either :wink:
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#286 Postby Haris » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:52 am

Atlanta the last decade has been doing incredibly good snow wise.

Had many inches on Christmas 2009, luck enough I was there since I have family. Feb 2010. Jan 2011. 2014 panic as we all know lol. 2015, 2016,

and last year near a foot on Dec 8th with an additional 2" this year!

Soo jealous :D
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#287 Postby Cpv17 » Sun Dec 02, 2018 2:20 am

Haris wrote:
Cpv17 wrote:Op runs of the 0z GFS & FV3 sucked tonight. A lot less digging with that trough over the Baja. Euro doesn’t look good either.


Yes, true they have trended a bit more N tonight but we have a long long way to go still and models have a lot of trouble with handling the STJ

Also, not really 'suck' Euro is actually wetter and I will take the 2-4" on the GFS still. Never good to be in the bulls eye either :wink:


Yeah I see the Euro is still wet lol good!!
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#288 Postby northjaxpro » Sun Dec 02, 2018 5:46 am

One big thing I see lacking with the models, both GFS and EURO: No.real strong polar Highs (1040 mb +) have yet to be shown dropping south into the CONUS. Teleconnections still not yet favorable for the true arctic air masses, which have yet to be tapped or dislodged.

I am thinking we may have to wait until the mid to latter part of this month, or possibly even January before we see these big arctic plunges come south.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#289 Postby Ntxw » Sun Dec 02, 2018 11:26 am

To reiterate again depth of the cold air is everything. What happens midweek up north can have consequences here. We can probably get away with a warmer surface as long as a loft it is very cold. And again a surface low in SE Texas along the coast is not going to have a big precip shield in Oklahoma.

Image

Image

This is one of the cases where we want to the storm to move a little faster to take advantage of the cold in place. Slow SW return flow is not beneficial.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#290 Postby Ntxw » Sun Dec 02, 2018 11:47 am

Beyond this period though, there is still signs of a mid month torch centered around the Great Lakes and northern tier. Hopefully the STJ will be active during that time and keep us with rains and while milder, at least stormy. A new Scandinavian ridge will take place by mid month and retrogress and we're back to where we were mid November. I don't think this is the winter for big cold, but more usual of an El Nino. A lot of storms we will be nitpicking for marginals with climo helping as the season goes on. Much like November was. Nothing was shockingly cold just consistently cold enough.

Image

Image
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#291 Postby Cerlin » Sun Dec 02, 2018 11:49 am

Ntxw wrote:Beyond this period though, there is still signs of a mid month torch centered around the Great Lakes and northern tier. Hopefully the STJ will be active during that time and keep us with rains and while milder, at least stormy. A new Scandinavian ridge will take place by mid month and retrogress and we're back to where we were mid November. I don't think this is the winter for big cold, but more usual of an El Nino. A lot of storms we will be nitpicking for marginals with climo helping as the season goes on. Much like November was. Nothing was shockingly cold just consistently cold enough.

https://images2.imgbox.com/d7/12/hV8PAvx4_o.png

https://images2.imgbox.com/31/ac/EcoX057N_o.jpg



So is this kind of a case where, if we’re gonna get something, we need it to happen with this system we’re all watching next weekend, or else we’ll have to wait until around Christmastime?
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#292 Postby bubba hotep » Sun Dec 02, 2018 11:53 am

One of the things that stands out to me with this system is that the wave spacing isn't overly favorable. So we end up seeing the majority of the cold air sliding off to the the NE with a northern stream wave. If that wave was slower then we would have a much more favorable setup. This gets back to the Pacific not necessarily playing along, we would want to see lower heights out north of Hawaii and more ridging across Alaska.
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Winter time post are almost exclusively focused on the DFW area.

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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#293 Postby Ntxw » Sun Dec 02, 2018 11:55 am

Cerlin wrote:So is this kind of a case where, if we’re gonna get something, we need it to happen with this system we’re all watching next weekend, or else we’ll have to wait until around Christmastime?


It's our best shot within the next 2 weeks at least. We lose cold air source when Canada warms up from Pacific jet extension. It can still snow, if storms are big and deep enough. Thankfully we are in an El Nino and not a La Nina or cold and dry :lol: or in the case of the last two years, warm and dry.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#294 Postby gpsnowman » Sun Dec 02, 2018 12:07 pm

Yeah, not expecting huge arctic fronts the season but hopefully, similar to 2009-10, mostly cloudy days with a front/system every 3 or 4 days keeping things honest, therefore increasing our chances of something frozen falling.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#295 Postby spencer817 » Sun Dec 02, 2018 12:12 pm

Ntxw wrote:
Cerlin wrote:So is this kind of a case where, if we’re gonna get something, we need it to happen with this system we’re all watching next weekend, or else we’ll have to wait until around Christmastime?


It's our best shot within the next 2 weeks at least. We lose cold air source when Canada warms up from Pacific jet extension. It can still snow, if storms are big and deep enough. Thankfully we are in an El Nino and not a La Nina or cold and dry :lol: or in the case of the last two years, warm and dry.


Is this still a case where we can see the mesocale models 5 degrees colder allowing more ice to be shown farther south?
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#296 Postby Ntxw » Sun Dec 02, 2018 12:16 pm

spencer817 wrote:Is this still a case where we can see the mesocale models 5 degrees colder allowing more ice to be shown farther south?


I don't think ice is a huge threat, my opinion. To get ice you need to be substantially colder at the surface ahead of time or during while warm air layer above. That's not going to be the case, if anything we are hoping for cooler surface temperatures to match the cold air above. If the surface is cold enough, the column above will be well cold enough for snow. Either rain or snow.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#297 Postby spencer817 » Sun Dec 02, 2018 12:20 pm

I also wonder why these models advect more warm air north like the FV3
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#298 Postby bubba hotep » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:15 pm

spencer817 wrote:I also wonder why these models advect more warm air north like the FV3


Look at the modeled flow at H7 & H5.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#299 Postby Brent » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:43 pm

The Euro is colder, with the snow closer to N TX. Actually has a little in Wichita Falls this run.
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Re: Texas Winter 2018-2019

#300 Postby Haris » Sun Dec 02, 2018 1:55 pm

Image
Image

If you want heavy rains, trends remain very nice!


EURO up to 3.6" in Austin

GFS 5"

With lakes and rivers full , minor flooding possible. Within 120 hours almost. Confidence rising
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