I think the SSTs closer to us have the most effect on marginal events, but I could be wrong. These SSTs have cooled a bit in the last week. Also just going off of my general observation, our winter patterns seem to start as very wet and mild for a few weeks, followed by some level of ridging, followed by that ridge moving north west and allowing arctic air to flow in. This was part of what led to last years arctic blast, was that extreme rainfall towards the end of December, when we started getting teased with model potential, which kept getting pushed back until the pattern was in place. It seems related to that GOA low building is very important for us, but once again that is anecdotal.AbbyJr wrote: ↑Sun Oct 25, 2020 7:09 pm I agree. However, having a cold North Pacific does help us get low elevation snows during marginal onshore flows, which tend to be more common than true continental air masses. That said, I do think we will see at least one legit arctic air mass this winter. I could be wrong but I hope not.
I'm just hoping that if this rings true this year, we can get the wet/mild out of the way in November and try our luck in December, maybe getting an early season cold blast which historically seems like a good sign. Perfect example would be December 2016, early December cold blast leads to good times for everyone.