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SFLcane wrote:New NMME for May..
https://i.postimg.cc/MGLkt0Tv/HKHKHKHHK.png
https://i.postimg.cc/8chq1qb6/JKJKJKJ.png
Teban54 wrote:SFLcane wrote:Nothing is ever a sure thing in weather.
https://x.com/BenNollWeather/status/1787556232221606095
Does anyone recall examples of the other way round, where ECMWF shows high precipitation anomalies only for the season to turn out much less active? (Other than extreme bust years like 2013, of course)
I did a quick look at the ECMWF's official site which has data up to 2017. The only notable one I could find was 2022, which shows a rather extensive chunk of wet anomalies just north of South America. However, they seem rather localized and suppressed to the south, while 2024's forecast is much more extensive with wet anomalies all over the MDR.
https://i.postimg.cc/3xZJW5tY/image.png
https://i.postimg.cc/CKPhHCy2/image.png
Also, just like 2020, the 2017 ECMWF forecasts were even more of a nothingburger:
https://i.postimg.cc/xT3S3GMP/image.png
Hybridstorm_November2001 wrote:What I find interesting about the possible steering pattern is no Western Heat Doom-Death Ridge yet and nothing on the models. In the last five years by early May, the Western Death Ridge was already becoming established in the SW. Due to the lack of a mean Western Heat Doom-Death Ridge, the downstream pattern across North America is much more progressive this spring and will likely remain that way for the foreseeable future.
Rather disturbing seasonal forecasts even if 25% too high.
zzzh wrote:https://i.imgur.com/3kZLc7x.png
Caribbean SST is now about where it would typically be on Aug. 30![]()
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Edit: added a dashed line for comparison
zzzh wrote:https://i.imgur.com/3kZLc7x.png
Caribbean SST is now about where it would typically be on Aug. 30![]()
![]()
Edit: added a dashed line for comparison
toad strangler wrote:https://twitter.com/dylanfedericowx/status/1787886881943814198?s=46
LarryWx wrote:I know it currently doesn’t seem likely based on this latest Euro, but I’ll reiterate that there’s still good reason to hope that the very active April CSU forecast is going to end up too high based on past very active April CSU predictions. They’ve been making April predictions since 1995. There’s been a pretty clear pattern when they’ve gone very active in April:
-NS days: They’re predicting 115. Prior to this the highest they predicted in April was 85-95 (four times). All four of those progs ended up too high. The highest actual of these four was only 58 and they averaged a whopping 40.5 too high!
-#H: They’re predicting 11. The prior highest predicted in April was 9 (six times). All of those 6 progs ended up too high by an average of 3.
-# MH: They’re predicting 5, which they’ve predicted three other times in April. All three of those progs came in too high by an average of 2.33.
-ACE: They’re predicting 210. The prior highest April progs were 160-183 (five times). Of these five, all progs ended up too high with even the closest being 34 too high! The five averaged a whopping 85.8 too high!
But OTOH even if they were to miss these 4 categories too high by these averages there’d still be 75 NS days, 8 H, 3 MH, and 124 ACE, not a quiet season. Also, it sometimes only takes only a few or even just one to make it a bad season for land impacts. So, a lot of luck will be needed, regardless!
chaser1 wrote:toad strangler wrote:https://twitter.com/dylanfedericowx/status/1787886881943814198?s=46
That's it! You went ahead and made me do it. Time to issue a Silver Alert for Uncle SAL.
Last seen in Western Africa and looking rather "hazy". Might be a good time to bring SAL home here in the Western Atlantic basin
a bit earlier then normal
TheWisestofAll wrote:LarryWx wrote:I know it currently doesn’t seem likely based on this latest Euro, but I’ll reiterate that there’s still good reason to hope that the very active April CSU forecast is going to end up too high based on past very active April CSU predictions. They’ve been making April predictions since 1995. There’s been a pretty clear pattern when they’ve gone very active in April:
-NS days: They’re predicting 115. Prior to this the highest they predicted in April was 85-95 (four times). All four of those progs ended up too high. The highest actual of these four was only 58 and they averaged a whopping 40.5 too high!
-#H: They’re predicting 11. The prior highest predicted in April was 9 (six times). All of those 6 progs ended up too high by an average of 3.
-# MH: They’re predicting 5, which they’ve predicted three other times in April. All three of those progs came in too high by an average of 2.33.
-ACE: They’re predicting 210. The prior highest April progs were 160-183 (five times). Of these five, all progs ended up too high with even the closest being 34 too high! The five averaged a whopping 85.8 too high!
But OTOH even if they were to miss these 4 categories too high by these averages there’d still be 75 NS days, 8 H, 3 MH, and 124 ACE, not a quiet season. Also, it sometimes only takes only a few or even just one to make it a bad season for land impacts. So, a lot of luck will be needed, regardless!
It was discussed here in a while ago, but it's generally recommended to separate CSU's forecasts between two different periods: 1995-2014, and 2014-Persent. Forecast skill has improved so significantly between the two that the first period isn't applicable to today, in which case 2022 is the only season where things didn't really pan out. Every other year either verified or over-verified the April forecast.
LarryWx wrote:TheWisestofAll wrote:LarryWx wrote:I know it currently doesn’t seem likely based on this latest Euro, but I’ll reiterate that there’s still good reason to hope that the very active April CSU forecast is going to end up too high based on past very active April CSU predictions. They’ve been making April predictions since 1995. There’s been a pretty clear pattern when they’ve gone very active in April:
-NS days: They’re predicting 115. Prior to this the highest they predicted in April was 85-95 (four times). All four of those progs ended up too high. The highest actual of these four was only 58 and they averaged a whopping 40.5 too high!
-#H: They’re predicting 11. The prior highest predicted in April was 9 (six times). All of those 6 progs ended up too high by an average of 3.
-# MH: They’re predicting 5, which they’ve predicted three other times in April. All three of those progs came in too high by an average of 2.33.
-ACE: They’re predicting 210. The prior highest April progs were 160-183 (five times). Of these five, all progs ended up too high with even the closest being 34 too high! The five averaged a whopping 85.8 too high!
But OTOH even if they were to miss these 4 categories too high by these averages there’d still be 75 NS days, 8 H, 3 MH, and 124 ACE, not a quiet season. Also, it sometimes only takes only a few or even just one to make it a bad season for land impacts. So, a lot of luck will be needed, regardless!
It was discussed here in a while ago, but it's generally recommended to separate CSU's forecasts between two different periods: 1995-2014, and 2014-Persent. Forecast skill has improved so significantly between the two that the first period isn't applicable to today, in which case 2022 is the only season where things didn't really pan out. Every other year either verified or over-verified the April forecast.
That’s not encouraging. And 2022 still had the beast, Ian.
skyline385 wrote:LarryWx wrote:TheWisestofAll wrote:It was discussed here in a while ago, but it's generally recommended to separate CSU's forecasts between two different periods: 1995-2014, and 2014-Persent. Forecast skill has improved so significantly between the two that the first period isn't applicable to today, in which case 2022 is the only season where things didn't really pan out. Every other year either verified or over-verified the April forecast.
That’s not encouraging. And 2022 still had the beast, Ian.
I mean, the AMO setup right now is just too good to imagine that 23/11/5 will under-verify in my opinion. I have a tendency to remain bearish typically but the setup this year just looks incredible to imagine anything holding the NATL back which is why we have got all our preparations in place already. The NATL just absolutely loves ENSO -ve transitioning years (2020, 2017, 2010, 2005, etc) and with a record warmth +AMO set up, its hard to stay bearish when you look at the numbers from the years I just mentioned and consider that they didnt even have that much warmth compared to what we have right now. 2023 NATL which had almost similar levels of SST managed to shut down the WPAC during September in a strong Nino year which is just an incredible feat to achieve so now as we are moving into a ENSO -ve season which as I mentioned earlier, the NATL absolutely loves and while maintaining the same levels of SSTs & transitioning into a very classic +AMO, its just hard to see how we will under-achieve.
Getting the rainy season underway would be goos, this is a tough time of the year, hot and dry, looks like moisture arriving over the weekend.Cat5James wrote:chaser1 wrote:toad strangler wrote:https://twitter.com/dylanfedericowx/status/1787886881943814198?s=46
That's it! You went ahead and made me do it. Time to issue a Silver Alert for Uncle SAL.
Last seen in Western Africa and looking rather "hazy". Might be a good time to bring SAL home here in the Western Atlantic basin
a bit earlier then normal
A sloppy tropical storm that brings needed rain to west coast FL wouldn’t be the worst thing.
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