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Severe weather for deep south and Snow for NC

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2003 7:46 am
by wrkh99
Monday into tuesday severe weather is likely in the deep south with heavy snow thursday night friday into parts of NC. Time for some sleep :) :roll:

What parts?

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2003 3:11 pm
by HeartofNC
wrkh99

Good Morning!

What parts? :D

HeartofNC :multi:

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2003 3:15 pm
by wrkh99
Good Afternoon. Your part of NC. :) Is that what you wanted to here ?

Posted: Sun Feb 02, 2003 3:55 pm
by Anonymous
Severe weather should be limited due to low moisture return from the Gulf.

http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/model/g ... c_dewp.gif

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 4:11 pm
by HeartofNC
Forcasters say rain mixed with snow Thursday PM :?

heartofnc

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 4:17 pm
by Rainband
Which means yuck, sleet or slush...But if it snows I hope you all enjoy it :wink:

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 7:08 pm
by Stormsfury
Good evening, this is my first post on Storm2K.

There still will be a CAD event for the Southeast, but not quite enough cold air to produce snows except the NC Mountains, and maybe some initial snows to start. No AFD's this afternoon from Southeast outline any freezing rain which puzzles me at this point. This is a Miller B Type Low scenario. Initial develop of a low in the Western Gulf, will quickly develop a secondary low off the Carolina Coast closer to the thermaline of the Gulf Stream. TD's are running as low as -6 at Rutherfordton to 0 degrees F at Greer, SC to 18 dewpoint F at Charleston. Columbia, SC has an SPS for snow/rain to rain but very cold. Greenville-Spartanburg (GSP) has outlined snow NC mountains, snow/mix north of I-85, mix to rain south of I-85. The temperatures will not get out of the 30's along the surface. This is a CAD event, however, not a real wintery one, but CAD nonetheless - an initial Gulf low transfers its energy very quickly off the Carolinas. No southerly wind component at all in the Carolinas, procludes that the NNE winds will continue throughout the entire event, thus CAD. - looks similar to Dec. 5th, but the arctic air is not as firmly established as the aforementioned storm.

Also concerns for Western Carolinas, and the fact that freezing rain isn't mentioned in the AFD's today - which I think is more possible with an insitu wedge.

Today's placement of the 500mb zonal trough and a closed 500mb low off the California Coast at 48hrs by the ETA is a new development. The 18z ETA actually has multiple low centers at 36hr. One off of Cape Hatteras, and a second ENE of Jacksonville, Fl. The low moves NNE towards the Cape area at 48hr, still moving quick.
I still have my doubt about the low moving as close to the coast as the ETA shows because I believe the low will develop 100 miles further east, again closer to the thermaline of the Gulf Stream.

I like the GFS placement of the Carolina coast low development, but I'm blending the GFS/ETA position to an average about 40/68 low off of Cape Cod at 48 hours which will give Central and Southern NJ a good shot at 4"-8" snows. This is a quick hitter with no 50/50 low, NAO positive, and a screaming SBJ.

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 7:15 pm
by chadtm80
Welcome aboard Stormsfury, Your going to love it here. Pass it along to all your friends :wink:

Great Post. Thanks for the info. Keep us updated

Welcome

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 7:15 pm
by mf_dolphin
Great post and welcome to Storm2k! Make yourself right at home...


:smilecolros:

Welcome

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 7:17 pm
by BreinLa
Glad to have you here

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 7:19 pm
by Rainband
WELCOME!!!!!!!! AND KEEP THE INFO COMING :wink:

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 7:24 pm
by Stormsfury
Thank you for making me feel quite welcome here! 48 hrs ago, it looks as if Coastal South Carolina, Coastal North Carolina were going to deal with a frozen event, however, the trend north burned us ... again.

The January 23rd, 2003 event did bring snow to Charleston, however, only a dusting to .5". My friends in North Carolina got quite an event that day.

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 7:58 pm
by WidreMann
Looks like NC loses out again. We did get three events this year, which is more than we have gotten any year since 1996 with the exception of the January 2000.

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 8:09 pm
by Rainband
Welcome WidreMann, Glad to have you here. Post Post Post We have lots going on. Any thoughts on the upcoming cane season or the news....Let us know :wink:

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 8:12 pm
by chadtm80
Welcome aboard WidreMann

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 8:28 pm
by Stormsfury
Just a quick update

EURO does NOT support the up the coast theory.

Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 8:40 pm
by Rainband
Thanks for the update :wink:

hmmm

Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 3:40 pm
by JQ Public
Sleeting in raleigh :) Probably changing to rain soon enough :(

Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 3:47 pm
by Rob-TheStormChaser
Nice little band of 2-4" across my state...mostly south of here...this should punch out to see and not head up the coast for anything remotely major this go around. The 'ca-ca' line is below DC and you'll see alot of pink on the maps tonight!

Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 3:48 pm
by Rainband
LET IT SNOW ...LET IT SNOW... LET IT SNOW :lol: :lol: :wink: Just not here but don't think I will have to worry about that. :o Although last week I believe there was brief snowfall on the east coast of florida. I don't believe it was much. :roll:I think it didn't even make it to the ground 8)