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Matty H
27 September 2014 16:57:23

The CFS model seems to have been pretty consistent in forecasting a low pressure anomaly below Alaska for the winter months, of course it was high pressure here last winter that caused the extensive cold for the US last winter.

Originally Posted by: Brendon Hills Bandit 


 


And it's affect on the jetstream that gave us such a mild winter. Hopefully more of the same but without so much rainfall, for obvious reasons. 


Medlock Vale Weather
28 September 2014 22:17:24

As I mentioned last week the expectation of a more widespread snow cover developing across Siberia is now happening and the forecast is for more over the next week so I expect that white to become even more widespread. 



Alan in Medlock Valley - Oldham's frost hollow. 103 metres above sea level.
What is a frost hollow? http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/reports/wxfacts/Frost-hollow.htm 
Gavin P
28 September 2014 22:54:54

We're certainly doing very well for so early in the season...


Rural West Northants 120m asl
Short, medium and long range weather forecast videos @ https://www.youtube.com/user/GavsWeatherVids
Matty H
28 September 2014 22:57:03


We're certainly doing very well for so early in the season...


Originally Posted by: Gavin P 


Damn right. Still feels like mid summer 


Gavin P
28 September 2014 22:59:31



We're certainly doing very well for so early in the season...


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


Damn right. Still feels like mid summer 


Originally Posted by: Gavin P 


Only for a few more day's.


Rural West Northants 120m asl
Short, medium and long range weather forecast videos @ https://www.youtube.com/user/GavsWeatherVids
Matty H
28 September 2014 23:04:52




We're certainly doing very well for so early in the season...


Originally Posted by: Gavin P 


Damn right. Still feels like mid summer 


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


Only for a few more day's.


Originally Posted by: Gavin P 


 


aye, although nothing too chilly. Tentative signs of a feel of last winter. The mild temps were amazing, although the amount of rain would be unwelcome 


Jonesy
29 September 2014 10:12:54





We're certainly doing very well for so early in the season...


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


Damn right. Still feels like mid summer 


Originally Posted by: Gavin P 


Only for a few more day's.


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


 


aye, although nothing too chilly. Tentative signs of a feel of last winter. The mild temps were amazing, although the amount of rain would be unwelcome 


Originally Posted by: Gavin P 


Agree, Because we have had low 20's still the fact in the SE for example we may drop down to mid teens people will say that's cold, but it's not really. Mid teens in March with some sun and people would be getting the shorts out.... its all in the mind laughing


Medway Towns (Kent)
The Weather will do what it wants, when it wants, no matter what data is thrown at it !
Stormchaser
29 September 2014 22:11:53

Some guy over on Wunderground posted that the current Pacific SST anomaly pattern - in particular the large positive anomaly in the NE Pacific and to a lesser extent up the west U.S. Coast - favours a long wave pattern that should produce a strong build up of Siberian snow area in October, and a negative AO this winter.


It's a nice idea, but I'm not sure how well the science supports it.


There was also a list of winters with an El Nino developed or developing, and their mean AO values. Curiously, though a real mix of +ve and negative values were in evidence, the negative values tended to be larger than the positive ones - for example the record breaking -ve AO of 2009/2010.


Trouble is, no two El Nino events are entirely alike.


Having said that, the 2009/10 one was more of an 'El Nino Modoki' with anomalies focused in the central Pacific rather than eastern, and that appears to be what's trying to unfold this winter. The main difference is in timing.


 


All interesting speculation... but not a lot more than that at this stage, to be honest!


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SEMerc
30 September 2014 09:59:51

So a cold winter it is then.

snowman93
30 September 2014 12:34:58

Hi everyone. This is my first post


I am a cold weather lover.  I remember the 2010 winter fondly (although the 2009/2010 wasnt bad either)


 


The heavy snowfall in nov/dec was just perfect not just in the amount given but also the timing of the whole snow. It was amazing. 


 


Hoping for the same this year. 

Medlock Vale Weather
30 September 2014 14:41:52


Hi everyone. This is my first post


I am a cold weather lover.  I remember the 2010 winter fondly (although the 2009/2010 wasnt bad either)


 


The heavy snowfall in nov/dec was just perfect not just in the amount given but also the timing of the whole snow. It was amazing. 


 


Hoping for the same this year. 


Originally Posted by: snowman93 


Not sure how old you are but the chances of another Nov/Dec 2010 are unlikely. But it's not impossible. I'm 64 and there hasn't been many times when cold and snow of that magnitude arrived that early.


Alan in Medlock Valley - Oldham's frost hollow. 103 metres above sea level.
What is a frost hollow? http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/reports/wxfacts/Frost-hollow.htm 
snowman93
30 September 2014 18:03:19



Hi everyone. This is my first post


I am a cold weather lover.  I remember the 2010 winter fondly (although the 2009/2010 wasnt bad either)


 


The heavy snowfall in nov/dec was just perfect not just in the amount given but also the timing of the whole snow. It was amazing. 


 


Hoping for the same this year. 


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


Not sure how old you are but the chances of another Nov/Dec 2010 are unlikely. But it's not impossible. I'm 64 and there hasn't been many times when cold and snow of that magnitude arrived that early.


Originally Posted by: snowman93 


 


Hi there.


Fair enough but a guy can dream cant he? :)


 


I am in my early 20's


 


Before the 2010 winter, was it clear it was going to be a very cold winter?

Medlock Vale Weather
30 September 2014 18:26:31




Hi everyone. This is my first post


I am a cold weather lover.  I remember the 2010 winter fondly (although the 2009/2010 wasnt bad either)


 


The heavy snowfall in nov/dec was just perfect not just in the amount given but also the timing of the whole snow. It was amazing. 


 


Hoping for the same this year. 


Originally Posted by: snowman93 


Not sure how old you are but the chances of another Nov/Dec 2010 are unlikely. But it's not impossible. I'm 64 and there hasn't been many times when cold and snow of that magnitude arrived that early.


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


 


Hi there.


Fair enough but a guy can dream cant he? :)


 


I am in my early 20's


 


Before the 2010 winter, was it clear it was going to be a very cold winter?


Originally Posted by: snowman93 


I'm not too sure, I think Gavin P may know the answer to that 


Alan in Medlock Valley - Oldham's frost hollow. 103 metres above sea level.
What is a frost hollow? http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/reports/wxfacts/Frost-hollow.htm 
Twister
01 October 2014 06:02:39
I'm clearly not Gavin, but i recall the Met Office 15-30 day forecast was very confident in a shift to very cold weather. I can't remember what their seasonal forecasting models predicted though.
Location: Egerton, Kent - 33m ASL
Thunder 2016: 12 (Apr 3,13; May 21; Jun 8,11,17,22,23,25, Jul 2,12, Aug 26)
Winter 2015/6: Snowfalls: 10 | Snowcover: 2 (Jan 17 (0.5cm)) | Air frosts: 39
Winter 2016/7: Snowfalls: 4 (Jan 12-3, Feb 10-11) | Snowcover: 2 (Jan 13, 2cm, Feb 11, 3-5mm) | Air frosts: 57 (2 in Oct, 10 in Nov, 13 in Dec, 19 in Jan, 6 in Feb, 3 in Mar, 4 in Apr)
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Matty H
01 October 2014 06:53:35

The answer is undoubtedly a resounding no. There has never been any season that has been clearly going to be anything in advance. No one has ever had a clue what any season is going to bring before it actually happens. 


turbotubbs
01 October 2014 07:30:06

+1 to that. There was no indication coming forward of what happened - if there had been then we wouold still be hearing about it. The MET's infamous 'BBQ' summer still echoes around - imagine if they'd called - 'worst winter month for 100 years' etc.


As yet there is NO predictive capacity for seasons. Up to 72 hours we've got very good, it gets hairier up to 7-10 days and after that you might as well throw darts at pictures of weather types on the wall to see where we are heading...

tallyho_83
01 October 2014 10:30:17
Gradual cool down in Yakutsk Siberia:

http://www.theweathernetwork.com/14-day-weather-trend/russia/sakha/yakutsk 

Tell me - Why does it need to cool down there for us to have a decent cold spell? Is this due to an easterly wind brining in colder air?

Novosibirsk?:

http://www.weather.com/weather/tenday/Novosibirsk+Russia+RSXX0077 


Home Location - Kellands Lane, Okehampton, Devon (200m ASL)
---------------------------------------
Sean Moon
Magical Moon
www.magical-moon.com


Gooner
01 October 2014 13:22:43


The answer is undoubtedly a resounding no. There has never been any season that has been clearly going to be anything in advance. No one has ever had a clue what any season is going to bring before it actually happens. 


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


Agreed


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


some faraway beach
02 October 2014 07:42:48
A one in six chance means that it is 5/1 against it occurring; a one in three chance represents odds of 2/1; and a one in two chance means there is an even chance of it happening.

If you want proof, offer someone 2/1 about rolling 1,2 or 3 with a die and see how long your bank lasts.
2 miles west of Taunton, 32 m asl, where "milder air moving in from the west" becomes SNOWMAGEDDON.
Well, two or three times a decade it does, anyway.
some faraway beach
02 October 2014 10:18:11
No argument that the chance of rolling a one on a six-sided die is one in six. That's obvious.
But that represents odds of 5/1. You can call it a 1:6 chance or a 5/1 chance. It means the same thing. But if you call it a 6/1 chance (as Essan did), then you're talking about a 1:7 chance.

Say we bet on the roll of a die. You say the number one will come up. I offer you odds of 5/1. You bet £1 each time. We roll the die 6 times. On average the number one will come up once out of those 6 rolls. Agree?

So after the roll when the number one appears I give you your winnings of £5 (odds of 5/1), but following each of the other five rolls you give me your losing stake of £1. Which means after 6 rolls we're both exactly where we started.

But if I'd offered you 6/1, then I would have had to give you £6 after your winning roll, but would have received only 5x£1 after your losing rolls.

Hence the correct odds are 5/1 for a 1:6 chance.

Mathematically a probabilty of x:y represents odds of (y-x)/x.

For example, odds of 11/8 represent a probability of 8:19, or approximately 42%.
2 miles west of Taunton, 32 m asl, where "milder air moving in from the west" becomes SNOWMAGEDDON.
Well, two or three times a decade it does, anyway.
Stormchaser
02 October 2014 11:11:51

Thanks for steering the debate away from this thread GTW 


I let it run for a few posts because it has some relevance when it comes to visualising what the pundits are up to when they give the odds for a white Christmas, but as you say, a long-winded debate would upset the thread.


 


Back to winter weather prospects and discussion - with some fantasising if need be! cool


If you have any problems or queries relating to TWO you can Email [email protected]

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T-Max: 30.2°C 9th Sep (...!) | T-Min: -7.1°C 22nd & 23rd Jan | Wettest Day: 25.9mm 2nd Nov | Ice Days: 1 (2nd Dec -1.3°C in freezing fog)
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Brian Gaze
02 October 2014 11:19:35

No argument that the chance of rolling a one on a six-sided die is one in six. That's obvious.
But that represents odds of 5/1. You can call it a 1:6 chance or a 5/1 chance. It means the same thing. But if you call it a 6/1 chance (as Essan did), then you're talking about a 1:7 chance.

Originally Posted by: some faraway beach 


This is correct.


6/1 can be calculated as 1 / (6 + 1)  = 0.142


5/1 can be calculated as 1 / (5 + 1) = 0.166


The odds of rolling any 1 number on a 6 sided dice are:
1/6 = 0.166 


Brian Gaze
Berkhamsted
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nsrobins
02 October 2014 12:32:09

I bet on last winter being a cold one, then got half my stake back because it refused to leave the stalls


Neil
Fareham, Hampshire 28m ASL (near estuary)
Stormchaser, Member TORRO
colin46
02 October 2014 15:13:35
what are the odds on someone mentioning sudden stratospheric warming (ssw) before 1st december.......odds on i'd say!

shine on you crazy diamond
192.104 m / 630.262 feet ASL
Skreever
04 October 2014 09:21:14
http://icelandreview.com/news/2014/10/04/first-snow-reykjavik 

Snow in Reykyavik last night - getting ever closer.
Veteran of winter of 62/63
By Scapa Flow, Orkney

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