When high pressure shows signs of turning up to our NE, this sort of model chaos often ensues...
ECM shows us what might happen if we see a particularly weak jet next week; the ridge doesn't get as much support next week and the position is a bit touch and go, but then when the jet stream wakes up during the weekend, we're positioned well for escaping those Atlantic storms and seeing a better defined ridge build across instead.
GFS has toned down the jet a bit in the longer term, but not changed it much in the mid-range. That's had the effect of producing day 8-10 charts close to an average of ECM's last two efforts, but with the preceding period seeing high pressure placed more to our E/NE than ECM has it, resulting in a warmer setup, though only by a degree or two I reckon.
That UKMO run just seems to be hyper-progressive for some reason. With the charts pre-96 hours gone AWOL from all the sites I use, I can't really look into possible causes
I seem to recall that in 2012, the tendency to overcook the jet often led to troughs across the UK at initialisation (i.e. the current situation at the start of the model run) being shunted away from us in the longer range of the model output, with a ridge building in behind, giving us cause for hope - only for the jet to then be toned down and the trough left lingering across us.
By complete contrast, the same toning down of the jet from longer range predictions seems to be resulting in the modelled breakdown of ridges and arrival of troughs being much reduced or negated altogether.
Of course, I'm only talking about three weeks of June 2014 in this case, and there's no reason to believe that the same behavoural traits will stick around for two more months...! Hoping is permitted, though
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