What a Winter

No I had it correct :)

For those who like illustrations, follow the link below:

AccuWeather.com - Weather News | La Nina Vs. El Nino

What Does All of This Mean for the Weather?

... A typical La Nina winter will feature drier and milder conditions across the South, much like what we're seeing in the current Southeast drought and elevated fire conditions. The Pacific Northwest will become wetter than normal, while the Northeast will have cold periods, but these are usually short lived.

In an El Nino winter, we see what we had last season. The southern branch of the jet stream gets displaced across the Deep south, leading to wetter conditions from Los Angeles to the Southeast. The Northeast typically has stormy winters, which in the case of last season led to "Snowmageddon." Finally the Northwest is typically milder
 
We are just getting cold rain here. teh temps are expected to hit freezing until this evening with lows in the 20's overnight. Hopefully the rain will have stopped by then. Highs in the mid 40's tomorrow, so any ice that does form will not last long.

Texas has been under drought conditions of varying degrees for several years now. All this precipitation and colder weather is very beneficial.
 
No I had it correct :)

For those who like illustrations, follow the link below:

AccuWeather.com - Weather News | La Nina Vs. El Nino

yes that is a typical one, but because of this definition

[FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]"La Niña is characterized by unusually cold ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific, compared to El Niño, which is characterized by unusually warm ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific. [/FONT]"

I watched our local weather man explain that because the "La Nina"
is unusually further south the jet stream is lower in the US allowing the colder Canadian air to reach lower into the US and also taking a lot of the Northwest typical storms south.

well that's at least what i got out of watching it :D
 
I found a blog from our local guy ... he wrote this in November :eek:



A La Nina Winter Ahead (But What Does it Mean??)

Not a few people I spoken with are a little annoyed with the Winter Outlook for 2010-2011 that has been posted by NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center. For our part of the country they are non-committal, indicating “equal chances” for a milder or colder winter than normal and “equal chances” for a drier or wetter winter than normal. To some it’s not a forecast at all, but rather a “let’s take things as they come” type of outlook.
The problem is that we’re currently in a rather robust La Nina pattern. La Nina is El Nino’s tempestuous little sister, which history has shown locally can present two different versions of weather extremes in our part of the country. For instance:
We had a La Nina winter in 1998-1999, which contained some incredibly warm winter days. One stand-out was December 7, 1998, where temperatures soared to the mid 70′s for the entire Tri-State Area. I remember telling my wife that maybe we could fill the little wading pool we used to set up in the back yard and dress our then 5-year old daughter in her swim suit and have her take a little swim. We could then take a picture of her and insert it in our Christmas card with a note saying :”Happy December!”
On the other side of the coin, we can have some La Nina years feature some really unusual wintry weather. That was case back in March 1956, when the Northeast US was hit by two major snowstorms in less than a week’s time. Here’s an interesting anecdote about this by the famous science writer, Isaac Asimov:
“On March 16, 1956, it started snowing about noon. It kept on snowing. That in itself was not surprising. It had been a bitterly cold winter, following a bitterly hot, dry summer, and there had been much snow. But THIS snowstorm kept on snowing and storming and turned out to be the worst of the season. The wind blew it into the driveway and the retaining walls on either side kept it there, so that when I woke on Saturday morning, there was three feet of snow in the driveway. I am not exaggerating or being dramatic. I MEASURED the snow depth.”
“Whereupon on Monday, March 19, ANOTHER blizzard hit, and this time we ended with FOUR feet of snow in the driveway. It was the worst one-two snowstorm in the history of the Boston Weather Bureau, nor has anything like it been repeated since.”
So you see . . . the weather pendulum can take some pretty wild swings in a La Nina winter. So it’s still early to see which extreme this winter’s La Nina will prefer (hence the “equal chances” forecast by NOAA).
One interesting note is that the current La Nina is said to already be the most intense one since the winter of 1955-56.
And we did have a ” . . . bitterly hot, dry summer” didn’t we?
Hmmmmmmm . . .
Car
 
yes that is a typical one, but because of this definition

...I watched our local weather man explain that because the "La Nina"
is unusually further south the jet stream is lower in the US allowing the colder Canadian air to reach lower into the US and also taking a lot of the Northwest typical storms south.

well that's at least what i got out of watching it :D

Which makes it sound strangely enough like the anti-La Nina aka El Nino as described (almost verbatim)...

In an El Nino winter, we see what we had last season. The southern branch of the jet stream gets displaced across the Deep south, leading to wetter conditions from Los Angeles to the Southeast. The Northeast typically has stormy winters, which in the case of last season led to "Snowmageddon." Finally the Northwest is typically milder

But the forecast was for
As for this year's La Nina, forecast models are indicating slight strengthening through October and then a steady period in November and December. All of the models have the La Nina weakening throughout the spring and early summer.
 
isn't it wonderful that all these weather people can be well paid and not really have a clue until it's about to happen :lol2:
 
isn't it wonderful that all these weather people can be well paid and not really have a clue until it's about to happen :lol2:
Not unlike economists :) Like so many things weather forecasts (predictions) are based on computer modeling. At least, as we are told, the predicions are based on some science.

I've got a sure fire weather forecaster I brought home from west Texas. It is a simple piece of rope attached to a board. It even comes with instructions...
Rope is swinging back and forth - it's windy,
Rope is wet - it's raining
Rope is frozen stiff - it's cold and possibly snowing
Rope is gone... tornado!"
:D
 
I've got a sure fire weather forecaster I brought home from west Texas. It is a simple piece of rope attached to a board. It even comes with instructions...
Rope is swinging back and forth - it's windy,
Rope is wet - it's raining
Rope is frozen stiff - it's cold and possibly snowing
Rope is gone... tornado!"
:D

Haha my grandparents used to have a "weather rock" sign in there vacation house and the rock hanging outside. Said the same exact thing except for the tornado lol it was in CT
 
:howdy
De-lurking for a moment to say that it's 75 degrees and partly sunny here in Florida. :D

silly-kid-sticking-out-tongue.jpg
 
Woke this morning to the weatherman telling us that is 10o warmer in Bizmark, ND than here. :wow: Good news, forecast for the weekend back into the 60s and possibly 70 :yay Maybe Mrs. Clean's ride can get a much needed wash and touch up wax. The interior is just about as bad with sand and remnanst of melted snow and ice. Thank goodness for Monster Mats!
 
Woke this morning to the weatherman telling us that is 10o warmer in Bizmark, ND than here. :wow: Good news, forecast for the weekend back into the 60s and possibly 70 :yay Maybe Mrs. Clean's ride can get a much needed wash and touch up wax. The interior is just about as bad with sand and remnanst of melted snow and ice. Thank goodness for Monster Mats!


and we are pushing towards 50 but it won't last :passout:
 
Well if the forecast is correct, we won't make it to 50 today but should be in the mid 40s anyway. Man, after the cold snap we've endured the 40s sound like a heat wave right now. :redface: We can and do have cold spells, just don't seem to last this long. And luckily we don't often experience these low temps. This has been two years in a row, and this one feels colder than last year. I'm pretty sure I've lost a fair number of potted plants that would normally over winter with only a moderate bit of protection. Lots of aloe vera, but I had a lot to begin with, but it will tick me off if I lost the Turks Cap.
 
40's & 50's coming here in central Indiana the next few days. The weather guessers on TV said that 90% of our snow & ice should be gone in the next 144 hours. We shall see.....
 
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