Nairobi wrote:So no North American pattern-busting, recurving super typhoon. Those are rare anyway.
The GFS hardly gets Austin down to 50 for lows through Dec. 17th.
It's 40 right now, probably will bottom out in the Austin area in the upper 30s.
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Nairobi wrote:So no North American pattern-busting, recurving super typhoon. Those are rare anyway.
The GFS hardly gets Austin down to 50 for lows through Dec. 17th.
gatorcane wrote:The 00Z ECMWF is showing some cold anomalies for Texas, Deep south, and Eastern seaboard of the United States by hour 192:
The GFS is completely the opposite:
Ntxw wrote:7th freeze for DFW just occured as of 9pm. FW is calling for low 20s, should be 8th freeze in a few hours.
WeatherNewbie wrote:Ntxw wrote:7th freeze for DFW just occured as of 9pm. FW is calling for low 20s, should be 8th freeze in a few hours.
But the ECMWF said no surface freezes for Dallas through the 10th...
JDawg512 wrote:Nairobi wrote:So no North American pattern-busting, recurving super typhoon. Those are rare anyway.
The GFS hardly gets Austin down to 50 for lows through Dec. 17th.
It's 40 right now, probably will bottom out in the Austin area in the upper 30s.
Texas Snowman wrote:@BigJoeBastardi: GFS debacle on next week off 00z run ( too flat, not cold enough) about to become apparent to its worshippers on 12z run.
srainhoutx wrote:The pattern is very typical of that of a weak El Nino. We usually see the coldest anomalies across the Southern tier of States with above normal anomalies across The West into Canada. The guidance will likely be very volatile with the pattern change expected near the Day 10 timeframe. Add to the mix the eventual resolution of our WPAC Typhoon and whether or not we see it recurve and transition to a powerful extratropical Super Storm somewhere near the Aleutian Islands and Bering Sea. Remember the PNO is strongly positive and the PNA is shown by virtually all the guidance to spike very positive. The AO is beginning to show signs of falling back to a negative status and if the extratropical storm does in fact develop, a strongly negative AO is very possible. Time will tell. All that said this is not an outright torchy pattern in our part of the world, so expect daily flip flops as the guidance attempts to resolve the chaotic pattern across the Pacific.
TeamPlayersBlue wrote:Can someone explain to me why this super typhoon, if it recurves WOULD NOT develop into a major extra tropical system? Ive been reading from Maue that the the jet is too strong
cycloneye wrote::uarrow: It looks more and more that now Typhoon HAGUPIT will not recurve and even if it does that,it would be torned apart by the cold surge and strong shear north of 20N at this time of year in that basin.
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