AbbyJr wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 10:07 am
To be fair, it's very rare for the Euro to fail at 120hrs and for at least several runs, the GFS was a big outlier.
Its ok buttees. The models are understandably struggling with the Mid/LR deets during this noticeable #patternshift. I'm sure the picture will become much more clear in the next several days. I'm still thinking a NW chilly flow/dry arctic outbreak towards the end of this month
#climo
#patternshift mid Jan leads to #beginningofFeb...again.
Willoughby Langley at ~320ft / Similkameeeens ~3400ft
Canada Goose wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 11:46 am
That's the worst thing of our miserable winter...
I expected a 2007-08 kind of winter. A super ENSO outcome like 2015-16 was probably the last thing I envisioned and the fact that every long-range climate modeling got this so wrong is insane.
Phil can find every excuse in the book but this is climate change in action.
Rubus_Leucodermis wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 7:58 am
The streamers that come down the Strait from NW to SE are my faves.
Very sharp gradient with those. UBC, YVR, Ladner, Tsawwassen, White Rock could get 20-30cm while Inland areas have less than 10cm. Last time we saw something like that was early Feb 2019, but late Feb 2018 also had that setup of the extreme variety as it was very notable. 2cm in east Coquitlam and 20cm+ near Boundary Bay as temps were sufficiently cold enough, we had a weak slider down the coast, and the winds aligned perfectly.
Give me a stalled surface low in the strait during a period of cold onshore flow. January 27th, 2002 repeat.
wetcoast91 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 12:06 pm
I expected a 2007-08 kind of winter. A super ENSO outcome like 2015-16 was probably the last thing I envisioned and the fact that every long-range climate modeling got this so wrong is insane.
Phil can find every excuse in the book but this is climate change in action.
2005-06 and 1966-67 were among the top analogues for this winter, and they have been bang on thus far.
Typeing3 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 12:19 pm
2005-06 and 1966-67 were among the top analogues for this winter, and they have been bang on thus far.
Similar but not quite. We did have a polar maritime airmass deliver some wet snow to higher areas in early December 2005. Had some modified arctic air that lead into an inversion a week after. We also had a few good ARs in that winter as well.
This NDJ period has featured zero arctic air. RH has probably been over 70% the entire time.
wetcoast91 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 1:48 pm
Similar but not quite. We did have a polar maritime airmass deliver some wet snow to higher areas in early December 2005. Had some modified arctic air that lead into an inversion a week after. We also had a few good ARs in that winter as well.
This NDJ period has featured zero arctic air. RH has probably been over 70% the entire time.
yup..its been very sad. Thank you for the continual reminders of how sad it is week after week Nito!
#patternshift mid Jan leads to #beginningofFeb...again.
Willoughby Langley at ~320ft / Similkameeeens ~3400ft