Sunday, March 8, 2009

Back in the Saddle

Haven't been able to post for a couple of days due to my sick child, but thankfully that is better now so I'm getting back into the routine now where I can fully focus on weather (which is good since my job depends on it!). I'll try to get into some more interesting things late this week, like reviewing the winter, and of course looking ahead more.

This week is pretty interesting though in and of itself. There is a minor snow event for parts of New England tonight into tomorrow. We also have a lot of warm air from the Midwest (some severe weather today, which I haven't really had time to analyze) into the South that will battle (and lose out in many areas) to some very strong cold sitting to the north, which pushed south and east this week. Parts of Canada are looking at temperatures over 30 degrees below normal early this week! Below I have posted one model's prediction of temperatures by Tuesday evening, and you can see the battle underway.











That is 70s showing up in parts of the lower Midwest, and below zero up in parts of North Dakota! The Dakotas in fact will get quite a blizzard out of this. To most people, this isn't interesting since not that many people live there. Fine. But I will say that as this cold pushes east, a lot of folks especially from the Midwest to Northeast may be surprised by its intensity, especially given the warm start to the week in a lot of areas. This, by the way, is in response to the AAM spike I talked about a couple of posts back, which is temporarily taking us out of the la nina base state (yes I stole this whole "base state" talk from NOAA's Ed Berry, as I think it is a good way to describe things). Can we get a storm to arrive as the colder air is here for any late snow threats? Nothing definite is showing up on the horizon, but watch a southern stream wave next weekend that could pull some funny stuff from, say, Kansas to the Mid-Atlantic.

The nina base state I think should come back later in the month though, and models are starting to fall into line with this idea (maybe that should worry me given how bad they've been at times?). This nina state in Spring typically means warmer than normal from Central Rockies to western Midwest and down to Texas, though leaves a risk for coolings along both coasts. Going a little IMBY here (you weather board folks know what this means!), la nina base states in spring with a very dry Texas already in place do not please me when thinking about summer, but that is for another time.


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