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Blessed Weather

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Posts posted by Blessed Weather

  1. 34 minutes ago, seaside 60 said:

    They pretty much know if its a def cold and snow event so that would attract all the locals not the tourists.

    Hit the nail on the head there seaside. Feldberg has the university town of Freiburg, with a population 240,000, just 40 mins away by car. The resort gets very busy on the weekends with local skiers. It'd be wonderful to live near a resort and be able to do that!

    • Like 1
  2. A lovely sunny start for most of the Region this morning - clearest in the east but thickening cloud in the west. Unfortunately for local gardeners and allotment holders, given the cold air mass we're under, the result has been an extensive ground frost as overnight temps fell to 2.4C.

    Satellite this morning: Satellite22April24.thumb.jpg.d3639bcb4012e123f377d7f612592e74.jpg

    https://www.sat24.com/en-gb/country/gb

    The occluded front just to our west not making much progress during the day, with areas near the east coast maybe holding on the clear skies all day. 🤞

    GFS cloud cover forecast:

    08.00 GFScloudcover22April2408_00.thumb.jpg.e3ff7e34c5ff30fca49398e30fb1cb6e.jpg 23.00 GFScloudcover22April2423_00.thumb.jpg.d0f81d7ccbd98f4a80c3abca1e5eda59.jpg

    https://www.meteociel.fr/modeles/gfs/royaume-uni/nebulosite/3h.htm

  3. You have to admire the small resorts around Europe who have the flexibility to make decisions about opening and closing based on current snow conditions. The small resort of Feldberg, Black Forest, Germany, 1,450m asl, that I've skied several times, was well and truly shut last Sunday 14th April. One week later with arctic air and heavy snow on the northerly wind and bingo, they're open again for skiing this weekend. 🙂

    Webcam stills of the nursery slope:

    14th Feldberg14April24.thumb.jpg.7561df716e42f4b7c81b8b2d47db905f.jpg 20th Feldberg20_04_24.thumb.jpg.06dd4a348dc55f8692bad7b9eff6c9fe.jpg

    • Like 5
  4. March 2024

    Overall for the Region a warmer and duller month compared with the long-term (1991-2020) average. Nevertheless, within that there was a mix of colder, frosty days to start the month, some pleasantly warm weather around the 20th, and even a few thunderstorms thrown in at various times. There was a real north/south split across the Region with regard rainfall amounts, with parts of Norfolk seeing only 50% of normal rainfall as rainbands fizzled out moving north, whilst parts of Kent and Surrey experienced more than double the normal average.

    UK extremes during the month were:

    Coldest: Benson, Oxfordshire, -4.6C on the 3rd.
    Warmest: Charlwood, Surrey, 18.8C on the 20th.
    Windiest: Needles, IoW, 81mph on the 1st and 28th.

    EAMarch24DanHolley.thumb.jpg.26c38a41f7248b2aadaf4ec88a4a2739.jpg

    Zooming in on East Anglia stats:

    • 4th warmest March on record (+1.8°C)
    • Slightly wetter than average (111%)
    • Duller than average (82%)
    • This is the 2nd warmest start to the year on record (behind 1990, data back to 1884).

    Chart and EA stats courtesy of Dan Holley, Weatherquest. X @danholley_

     

    • Like 2
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    • Insightful 2
  5.  carinthian

    Hi carinthian, I hope you're well. Yes, the Copernicus Climate Change Service report confirms that Europe has been mild this winter, and guess what? Yep, the Alps suffered the biggest anomaly versus the longer term average:

    "During the boreal winter of 2023/2024, there was a striking contrast across Europe. Above-average temperatures occurred over most of the continent, with the largest anomalies over the Alps and in southeast Europe."

    EuropeanWinterTempAnomalies1980-2024.thumb.jpg.3a97c10130c7772776e5375351e01b01.jpg

    Source: https://climate.copernicus.eu/surface-air-temperature-february-2024

    I was lucky to go skiing to the French Alps twice over the season and can confirm that pistes below around 1,800m have been frequently impacted by milder spells and periods of rain. Lots of snow to be had higher up, but as you say, the pisting teams have done a great job over the season keeping lower pistes open. Unfortunately the future looks bleak for lower level resorts, which is a great shame as it's the lower resorts that are usually the prettiest, with their beautiful buildings and delightful skiing through the trees.

     

    • Like 3
  6. Enjoying lovely weather here in Val Cenis, French Alps. Typical Spring conditions with the best skiing in the morning but very slushy on lower slopes by the afternoon. There's a suitable approach to the conditions - get on the slopes early for a long morning's skiing and then sit on the restaurant terrace enjoying a long lunch and beers in the sun. 😎

    View up to the end of the valley where in the summer you can drive up and over the col into Val D'Isere:

    VCMar24valleyeast.thumb.jpg.8d0f5d1096e61c58b68d615b0ed8b5a5.jpg

    Lots of snow at the top:

    VCMar24refugetop.thumb.jpg.5a3c0b2a806cf42975575e4b5ce2acd9.jpg

    La Fema restaurant terrace, lunchtime today:

    VCMar24fematerr.thumb.jpg.5b7332dbc9c279857c1b36b2725b42e6.jpg

     

     

    • Like 6
  7. February 2024

    It doesn't come as any surprise to see the stats for February 2024 which confirm the month was thoroughly wet, often mild (e.g. see previous post with Santon Downham reaching 18C on the 15th), and with below average sunshine amounts. All in all a notable month with several records for the Region broken. Met Office anomaly charts:

    2024_2_Rainfall_Anomaly_1991-2020.thumb.png.6fb9b726e2463c7066f7b39a980f91e8.png2024_2_Sunshine_Anomaly_1991-2020.thumb.png.712f34f843fc1d681dc4e38e752c14e8.png2024_2_MeanTemp_Anomaly_1991-2020.thumb.png.4d1973c02ee8daf4e5c3afe45825e7b6.png

    For East Anglia it was the wettest and mildest February on record whilst for the SE & Central England it was the mildest and 2nd wettest on record.

    EAFeb2024RoostWX.thumb.jpg.4bad4be978d64a7435bbfd30590b255d.jpgSEFeb2024RoostWeather.thumb.jpg.6a906ab910e7121cc2429480c121899f.jpg

    Furthermore, for East Anglia it was also the wettest October to February period on record and the 2nd warmest winter on record.

    EAFeb2024DanHolley.thumb.jpg.44552c68694338cf01b335b9f87e4aa2.jpg

    Whilst most locations across the Region saw over 100mm (4 inches) of rain during the month, there were many locations in the southern counties, namely Hampshire, W & E Sussex and Kent, that recorded over 200mm (8 inches) of rain. Wettest official station was at Plumpton, East Sussex, at 283mm (over 11 inches).

    EASEFeb2024RainfallRoostWX.thumb.jpg.ed8e371c32869fb7ec3b94eca99a696f.jpg

    Sources:
    Met Office: https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/research/climate/maps-and-data/uk-actual-and-anomaly-maps
    Dan Holley, Weatherquest, X @danholley_
    Dan Harris, Roost Weather, X @RoostWeather

    • Like 5
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  8. Please folks - I've just had two mugs of morning tea whilst editing and/or removing posts that were clearly breaking forum guidelines and had been reported. This topic has the potential to bring about strong opinions on either side of the climate change argument; if the thread is going to work we need to keep discussions respectful and free of personal digs please. Thanks.

    • Like 5
  9. Dreadful morning. Our Region is somewhere underneath that lot on the radar at 07.05 this morning. The three triangles show where Hastings (South coast), Hadleigh (Suffolk) and Sea Palling (Norfolk coast) are located. Some of this morning's hi-res models have upped the rainfall amounts before this lot clears later today to around 25 mm (an inch). No sign of a decent dry spell to let the saturated ground dry out; lots more rain later this coming week.

    07.05 Radar18Feb2407_05.thumb.jpg.039424f889e39ef308410c5de7e4446c.jpg Arpege accum arpegeuk-25-15-0cumrainfall18Feb24.thumb.png.f97d0037cfc4ba1186e021b899449cf6.png

    • Thanks 1
  10.  Mike Poole  Cheshire Freeze  Thanks both - excellent summaries of events through December and into January. Imho Cheshire Freeze captures the essence of why the winter of 2023/24 will be remembered as one which promised much but failed to deliver:

    "I believe that had a decent split of the SPV occurred, we’d have locked in to a blocked regime that benefited the UK in terms of cold, aided by the MJO. I honestly believe it would have been a noteworthy spell."

    Sadly this sort of let-down allows some to question the value of teleconnections. But hey ho, onwards and upwards - the scientific community is steadily moving forward with research and analysis and every year we better understand how multiple teleconnections, all in various stages of waxing and waning, interact with each other.

    Forgetting what happened down here on the ground, it's been a very interesting season for events up in the stratosphere, with Canadian Warming, minor SSW, major SSW and (in 2 days time) a second major SSW. Atmospheric scientist Dr Amy Butler rightfully excited by the prospect of 2 major SSW events in back-to-back months:

    "Pretty psyched about the possibility of a double #SSW year! Last one was in 2010 though the situation was a bit different because one was in late March and barely qualified. Other double #SSW years were 98/99, 87/88, 70/71, and 65/66. Fingers crossed it pans out this year!"
    https://x.com/DrAHButler/status/1755649856985567435?s=20

    • Like 4
  11.  bluearmy

    Apologies for being pedantic, but strictly speaking any SSW in March (assuming it's not the final warming) would be technical reversal number three. The SSW on the 4th Jan was a minor warming, i.e. no technical reversal of zonal winds at 10 hPa 60N. There was a full technical reversal on the 17th Jan and we're on course for the second technical reversal in a couple of days time. More info in the latest NOAA blog co written by Laura Ciasto and Dr Amy Butler:

    A polar vortex double header
    The majority of the forecast models say yes, the polar vortex winds will briefly reverse direction within the next week or so, commencing the second major sudden stratospheric warming in as many months.

    https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/polar-vortex/polar-vortex-double-header

    • Insightful 1
  12. On 14/02/2024 at 13:56, Blessed Weather said:

    I wonder if the initial Canadian Warming was a fail tho? It might actually have played a role in giving us the favourable (for cold) NH synoptics in the form of a Greenland High that could well have delivered a notable cold spell. But agree that unfortunately the second SSW that occurred around the 17th January seems to have been the factor that on this occasion messed up the favourable synoptics. Win some, lose some.
    Here's an extract from a NOAA blog dated 16th Jan discussing the Canadian event and imminent second event:

    The polar vortex is acting up
    .....But what makes the stratosphere’s current behavior unexpected and somewhat rare is that the polar vortex seems to be more disrupted at the lower levels, closer to the stratosphere-troposphere boundary. For more than a week, high pressure has been sitting in the troposphere over Greenland. It’s possible that the recent minor stratosphere warming reinforced this Greenland high pressure, which then drove a wedge into the stretched-out polar vortex in the lowest part of the stratosphere, splitting it into two lobes.

    Full NOAA blog: https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/polar-vortex/polar-vortex-acting

    @Mike Poole @Met4Cast As raised in the Model thread, if you wouldn't mind I'd like to discuss with you whether the first Canadian minor SSW warming was of benefit or hindrance to getting cold into the UK back in January. I've started by copying my post of the other day in which Dr. Amy Butler co-wrote a NOAA blog on the 16th Jan. There's a clear pointer in there that the minor warming may have contributed to a Greenland High over the previous week (to the 16th) and would likely have primed the sPV for a further fall later in the month (which subsequently happened around the 17th).

    Just look at the juicy charts that GFS and ECM were churning out at the time the minor warming was taking place on the 3rd Jan. These forecasts for the 13th Jan:

    GFSNH03Janfor13Jan24.thumb.png.4387710ebba9d7272573b98a250d4eed.pngECMNH03Janfor13Jan24.thumb.png.b05076e9892ab137c8dc194781ccf87f.png

    Next these series of tweets by Dr Simon Lee, highly respected atmospheric scientist, all made on the 4th January. He seemed quite clear that the minor warming was behind the forecasts for a negative NAM (AO). I won't copy the full tweet as I hate the way they make loading the Netweather pages jump all over the place. So instead the link is underneath:

    The temperature of part of the Arctic stratosphere at 10hPa/30km has rapidly risen to +2°C... that's some 60°C above normal! As zonal winds at 60°N won't reverse, this is a "minor warming", but it is still an example of one of the atmosphere's most dramatic natural phenomena.
    https://x.com/SimonLeeWx/status/1742830496998908272?s=20

    The minor warming leads to a negative Northern Annular Mode (aka Arctic Oscillation), which -- combined with the absence of any preceding +NAM, especially in the lower-stratosphere -- looks likely to couple to the troposphere, typically fostering Greenland blocking-type regimes.
    GFSNAM3Jan24.thumb.jpg.555a97b22e5a31baf81079662a2091bb.jpg
    https://x.com/SimonLeeWx/status/1742830501696593963?s=20

    Greenland Blocking-type regimes, favoured when the vortex is weak, drive colder conditions over northwest Europe, and to a slightly lesser extent over parts of the US & Canada. Exceptionally warm conditions also occur in the Labrador Sea & western Greenland, as in this forecast:
    EC462mtempanomalies03Jan24.thumb.jpg.33aa40a5888af11487be0e78b8d65c98.jpg
    https://x.com/SimonLeeWx/status/1742830503940530413?s=20

    Although the major SSW expected from a few ECMWF forecasts [https://x.com/SimonLeeWx/status/1739751236318920866?s=20] has not verified, this is a pretty decent minor warming (and better than nothing, if this is the sort of thing you enjoy!). It's taken the power out of the vortex right in the middle of winter.
    https://x.com/SimonLeeWx/status/1742830508386476543?s=20

    Furthermore: unlike major SSWs, minor warmings can be followed by further vortex disruption. Some forecasts hint that we could see another weakening of the vortex in mid-late Jan. For now, however, that's not worth fixating on: the vortex is weak, the NAM is negative. Enjoy it!
    https://x.com/SimonLeeWx/status/1742830511343456619?s=20

    I'll stop this post at that point and invite your thoughts. Needless to say the next discussion needs to be around what happened next, in particular surrounding the second strat event - i.e. the technical reversal / major SSW on the 17th Jan - and what went wrong to scupper expectations. But this tweet by Marco Petagna on the 23rd Jan suggests even the pros may have been taken by surprise? A strong reflection......?

    Difficult to believe that only 5 to 7 days ago we were witnessing a 'technical' major #ssw sudden stratospheric warming..what a bounce back in the strength of the #spv stratospheric polar vortex!..soon set to perhaps be stronger than normal once more.
    GEFS10hPaZMZW23Jan24.thumb.jpg.c9393db2a77913d88a2eac0118dacad5.jpg
    https://x.com/Petagna/status/1749903441567076604?s=20

     

    • Like 4
  13. 1 hour ago, Mike Poole said:

    Absolute codswallop from the models (all of them) re the strat evolution this year.  First the SSW that wasn’t (which did for winter in the view of many), then the January SSW which was watered down to a gnat’s fart, and now this equally pathetic fiasco!

    Sometime in the next day or two I'd like to discuss the bit in bold with you and @Met4Cast please Mike. That'll be best done over in the Winter Post Mortem thread, so I'll do a post and tag you both, but basically, from the info I can find, the Canadian warming and subsequent minor warming around the 4th Jan gave us a negative NAM and some terrific charts and it was the second SSW (major) on Jan 17th that screwed things? It'll be interesting to exchange some views with you both.

    • Like 5
  14. GEFS members have finally all made their mind up on this afternoon's 12z run with a SSW probability reaching 100%. But according to the Op run forecast it will be a 'blink and you'll miss it' 24 hour reversal with the mean zonal wind at 10hPa 60N dropping to 0 m/s at midday on the 18th, switching easterly (negative) at midnight by -2 m/s, but then back westerly again (+ 1 m/s) by midday on the 19th. Will this be the briefest technical reversal on record? The sPV remains  weak, taking until T384 to creep back up to + 9 m/s.

    So, a likely technical SSW, a displaced sPV and ongoing weakness. Unfortunately current model output showing little sign of any favourable impact for the UK if it's notable cold you're after.

    GFS10hPaGeoTempZMZW18Feb2412_00.thumb.png.dc821b7a58163f03765a23bcca1bbb2d.pngGFS10hPaGeoTempZMZW19Feb2400_00.thumb.png.0f51c736cd4d0611b839736218f2896f.pngGFS10hPaGeoTempZMZW19Feb2412_00.thumb.png.5df7eff8f7ae213ab66f72c366302a91.png

    Source: http://www.weatheriscool.com/prod/ztemp_multilevels.html

    • Like 5
    • Thanks 1
  15. 7 minutes ago, Metwatch said:

    BOM just doesn't work for me, phone or laptop or any browser

    Strange. The link works for me on my laptop (using Firefox browser). From your image it looks like the https protocol might be messing it up. Try copying in and pasting the link from Met4Cast into the url address line. It should look like my screen shot and not have 'https' showing on the address.

    BOMissue.thumb.jpg.5ead3eb77733c6593bfb46ede0a5e029.jpg

    • Thanks 1
  16. 26 minutes ago, Metwatch said:

    Also any idea where I may find those MJO reanalysis charts which i've seen posted by a fair few recently?

    I'm unsure exactly what you're after (I can't recall seeing reanalysis charts posted), but maybe the NOAA MJO archive going back to January 2006 may help? Don't look at the "file last updated" date, but go by the date embedded within the pdf file name.

     

  17. 3 hours ago, Met4Cast said:

    On the other hand, this will be the third SSW of the winter that has utterly failed to produce. A lot of hope is placed upon SSW's to produce but the truth is roughly 70% of split events produce colder weather across NW europe, that % is significantly lower for displacement events (as you know, I'm sure!)

    I wonder if the initial Canadian Warming was a fail tho? It might actually have played a role in giving us the favourable (for cold) NH synoptics in the form of a Greenland High that could well have delivered a notable cold spell. But agree that unfortunately the second SSW that occurred around the 17th January seems to have been the factor that on this occasion messed up the favourable synoptics. Win some, lose some.
    Here's an extract from a NOAA blog dated 16th Jan discussing the Canadian event and imminent second event:

    The polar vortex is acting up
    .....But what makes the stratosphere’s current behavior unexpected and somewhat rare is that the polar vortex seems to be more disrupted at the lower levels, closer to the stratosphere-troposphere boundary. For more than a week, high pressure has been sitting in the troposphere over Greenland. It’s possible that the recent minor stratosphere warming reinforced this Greenland high pressure, which then drove a wedge into the stretched-out polar vortex in the lowest part of the stratosphere, splitting it into two lobes.

    Full NOAA blog: https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/polar-vortex/polar-vortex-acting

    Whatever, for stratosphere watchers it's been a very interesting winter - three events noteworthy in itself (although strictly speaking we await to see if the third SSW happens or not!).

    • Like 1
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