NOAA'S May update of ENSO=Neutral next 3-6 months
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- cycloneye
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NOAA'S May update of ENSO=Neutral next 3-6 months
NOAA'S May Update of ENSO
Well for me it's no surprise this may update from NOAA as the data has suggested in recent weeks that La Nina has been dying with time.
Well for me it's no surprise this may update from NOAA as the data has suggested in recent weeks that La Nina has been dying with time.
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- cycloneye
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Wow I can't believe that no replies haved occured to this important news.
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- cycloneye
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NCHurricane wrote:cycloneye wrote:Wow I can't believe that no replies haved occured to this important news.
You guys here at Storm2K keep us all so well-informed, that we knew it before NOAA did.![]()
That is so true.

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NCHurricane wrote:cycloneye wrote:Wow I can't believe that no replies haved occured to this important news.
You guys here at Storm2K keep us all so well-informed, that we knew it before NOAA did.![]()
Knew before NOAA did??? That's an amusing statement to say the least...

It is interesting that even though the Nino 3.4 temps have gone to neutral.. the atmosphere still has a lot of La Nina characteristics.. see:
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/MEI/
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wo ... I/comp.gif
"In the context of recent negative MEI values, this section features a comparison figure of weak-moderate La Niña events since 1950. The most recent MEI value has dropped a bit further to -.59, while its rank has dropped to 16th lowest, the lowest rank since Jan/Feb 2001, clearly below the weak La Niña threshold for ranked MEI values during this season. Compared to the "pack" of four comparable modest La Niña events depicted above (1960-1, 1984-5, 1995-6, and 2001-2), it has followed the behavior of 1995-6 more than that of the other events. All of the La Niña events depicted in this figure were similar to each other with peak MEI values from -0.5 to -0.7 see numerical values of the MEI timeseries). It is also worth noting that three out of four events continued as weak-moderate La Niña events into the next calendar year, with the exception of 2001"
As long as the atmosphere stays in a La-Ninaesque manner.. I'm not worried at all. How do you forecast that though? hmmm.
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- Extremeweatherguy
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benny wrote:NCHurricane wrote:cycloneye wrote:Wow I can't believe that no replies haved occured to this important news.
You guys here at Storm2K keep us all so well-informed, that we knew it before NOAA did.![]()
Knew before NOAA did??? That's an amusing statement to say the least...
That was the intent. Glad you liked it.

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benny wrote:Knew before NOAA did??? That's an amusing statement to say the least...
It is interesting that even though the Nino 3.4 temps have gone to neutral.. the atmosphere still has a lot of La Nina characteristics.. see:
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/MEI/
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/MEI/comp.gif
"In the context of recent negative MEI values, this section features a comparison figure of weak-moderate La Niña events since 1950. The most recent MEI value has dropped a bit further to -.59, while its rank has dropped to 16th lowest, the lowest rank since Jan/Feb 2001, clearly below the weak La Niña threshold for ranked MEI values during this season. Compared to the "pack" of four comparable modest La Niña events depicted above (1960-1, 1984-5, 1995-6, and 2001-2), it has followed the behavior of 1995-6 more than that of the other events. All of the La Niña events depicted in this figure were similar to each other with peak MEI values from -0.5 to -0.7 see numerical values of the MEI timeseries). It is also worth noting that three out of four events continued as weak-moderate La Niña events into the next calendar year, with the exception of 2001"
As long as the atmosphere stays in a La-Ninaesque manner.. I'm not worried at all. How do you forecast that though? hmmm.
Unless I am mistaken, this is what CVW has been saying. A neutral cool pattern with La Nina overtones, which is the basis for the split forecast. Cape Verde season threatening the east coast states north of Florida, especially with a continued negative NAO pattern followed by late season activity in the Caribbean posing the greatest threat to Florida. If the current pattern holds, of course. At least he was right in predicting months ago that La Nina would not last the season.
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- Extremeweatherguy
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- gatorcane
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how many bocas are there on this board now - if I would have known this I would have picked another name
BocaDude
BocaGirl
Boca_chris
Boca
BocaDad
I think there are a few more that I haven't seen in a while
Anyway Bocadad welcome
This board is a blast and you will get addicted soon!
Yes you bring some good points up but it is tough to generalize what will happen this early. Actually La Nina may be getting replaced by an El Nino as we speak and some speculate we will see a strong el nino by the end of the summer. We shall see.

BocaDude
BocaGirl
Boca_chris
Boca
BocaDad
I think there are a few more that I haven't seen in a while

Anyway Bocadad welcome

Yes you bring some good points up but it is tough to generalize what will happen this early. Actually La Nina may be getting replaced by an El Nino as we speak and some speculate we will see a strong el nino by the end of the summer. We shall see.
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- Hybridstorm_November2001
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Hybridstorm_November2001 wrote:Was 1996 a neutral year, or a La Nina year? I know there was a negative NAO that year, and I think ENSO was neutral (though not sure). I also know it was a wet gloomy Summer in the East.
Neutral
Source: http://iri.columbia.edu/climate/ENSO/gl ... oyear.html
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- Hybridstorm_November2001
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