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SEMerc
28 October 2014 11:47:45


Hi All,


Has Noaa removed it's daily snow and ice details for USA/Europe/Northern Hemisphere ?


I can't seem to access the details anymore using my regular link.


Graham


 


 


Originally Posted by: Graham.W 


I think it has been down since October 20th. Joe Bas tardi mentioned this in his winter forecast for North America.

Solar Cycles
28 October 2014 12:11:34


Since it related to winter and all...


Cold winters have been caused by global warming: new research


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/climatechange/11191520/Cold-winters-have-been-caused-by-global-warming-say-scientists.html


So can we take it that this unusual warm spell is down to global cooling!


Originally Posted by: Charmhills 

You should know by now that any warming, cooling, droughts, floods and everything else in-between is down to global warming.

Gray-Wolf
28 October 2014 13:50:19


You should know by now that any warming, cooling, droughts, floods and everything else in-between is down to global warming.


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 


Duh-Huh??? if the planet has warmed by more than the naturals alone then that impacts all weather types surely? Can you explain why a warmer world only impacts some of the weathers?


Koyaanisqatsi
ko.yaa.nis.katsi (from the Hopi language), n. 1. crazy life. 2. life in turmoil. 3. life disintegrating. 4. life out of balance. 5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
VIRESCIT VULNERE VIRTUS
turbotubbs
28 October 2014 14:00:39



You should know by now that any warming, cooling, droughts, floods and everything else in-between is down to global warming.


Originally Posted by: Gray-Wolf 


Duh-Huh??? if the planet has warmed by more than the naturals alone then that impacts all weather types surely? Can you explain why a warmer world only impacts some of the weathers?


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 

I think you missed the sarcasam behind this. Far too often every departure from the average in recent times has been blamed on global warming/climate change, often by people who should know better (the floods of last winter serve to illustrate this point - I believe Julia Slingo initially blamed CC only for a more considered review to say that this is not justified). To be sure its mostly the media that is at fault, but not always.

Saint Snow
28 October 2014 14:04:43

Quick!! Medic!!! The Climate Forum contagion is spreading!!!! Somebody do something!!!!!!


 




Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Gooner
28 October 2014 15:08:43



You should know by now that any warming, cooling, droughts, floods and everything else in-between is down to global warming.


Originally Posted by: Gray-Wolf 


Duh-Huh??? if the planet has warmed by more than the naturals alone then that impacts all weather types surely? Can you explain why a warmer world only impacts some of the weathers?


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 


Oh dear


Me thinks he was kidding ...just a bit


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Medlock Vale Weather
28 October 2014 15:17:47


Quick!! Medic!!! The Climate Forum contagion is spreading!!!! Somebody do something!!!!!!


 



Originally Posted by: Saint Snow 


I stay out of there otherwise my blood pressure would rise 


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 
roger63
28 October 2014 15:53:05

The OPI has correlation of 0.9 with the AO -but how well does the AO relate to Winter CET?


The AO data covers the  the period from 1950 to 2014 a total of 64 winters(DJF).Of these 64 winters 24 (37%)) had a +ve  sign, 40 (63% )  having an AO - sign.The mean of winter CET's from 1950/51 to 2013/14 was 4.3C.


The correlation between the values of the AO and CET for the whole 64 winters is 0.66.For the smaller sample size of the AO + and AO - correlations are lower  figures are AO + ,0.46, AO-,0.48.


If we look at the the below mean/above mean winter  CET's and how they relate to AO- and AO + winters we find;


Of the 40 AO - winters 65% had below average CET's,35% above average CET's.


Of the 24 AO + winters 83% had above average CET's, 17% below average CETs.


Finally a brief look at the stronger AO signal winters >1 and <-1 we find the following years.


AO + winters >1  72/73 CET 4.9,88/89 CET 6.5,89/90 CET 6.2,91/92 CET 4.6,92/93 CET 4.7,99/00 CET 5.4,06/07 6.4. The seven years all have above average CET.


AO - winter <-1 52/53 CET 3.5,55/56 CET 2.9,59/60 CET 4.6,62/63 CET -0.3,64/65 CET 3.3,65/66 CET 4.4,68/69 CET3.2,69/70 CET 3.3,76/77 CET 3.3, 77/78 CET 4.1,78/79 CET 1.6,84/85 CET 2.7,85/86 CET 2.9,95/96 CET 3,00/01 CET 4.5,09/10 CET 2.4,12/13 3.8. The CET in these 17  AO years was below average on 88% of occasions.


Maybe the OPI method will prove a better predicter of the AO than predictions of the NAO.It would be interesting if METO were to release figures showing  how successful their forecasts of winter NAO have been. Be it NAO or AO forecasts  the link with CET is still not very precise with the majority of years having but a weak link. 


 

Solar Cycles
29 October 2014 09:10:08


The OPI has correlation of 0.9 with the AO -but how well does the AO relate to Winter CET?


The AO data covers the  the period from 1950 to 2014 a total of 64 winters(DJF).Of these 64 winters 24 (37%)) had a +ve  sign, 40 (63% )  having an AO - sign.The mean of winter CET's from 1950/51 to 2013/14 was 4.3C.


The correlation between the values of the AO and CET for the whole 64 winters is 0.66.For the smaller sample size of the AO + and AO - correlations are lower  figures are AO + ,0.46, AO-,0.48.


If we look at the the below mean/above mean winter  CET's and how they relate to AO- and AO + winters we find;


Of the 40 AO - winters 65% had below average CET's,35% above average CET's.


Of the 24 AO + winters 83% had above average CET's, 17% below average CETs.


Finally a brief look at the stronger AO signal winters >1 and <-1 we find the following years.


AO + winters >1  72/73 CET 4.9,88/89 CET 6.5,89/90 CET 6.2,91/92 CET 4.6,92/93 CET 4.7,99/00 CET 5.4,06/07 6.4. The seven years all have above average CET.


AO - winter <-1 52/53 CET 3.5,55/56 CET 2.9,59/60 CET 4.6,62/63 CET -0.3,64/65 CET 3.3,65/66 CET 4.4,68/69 CET3.2,69/70 CET 3.3,76/77 CET 3.3, 77/78 CET 4.1,78/79 CET 1.6,84/85 CET 2.7,85/86 CET 2.9,95/96 CET 3,00/01 CET 4.5,09/10 CET 2.4,12/13 3.8. The CET in these 17  AO years was below average on 88% of occasions.


Maybe the OPI method will prove a better predicter of the AO than predictions of the NAO.It would be interesting if METO were to release figures showing  how successful their forecasts of winter NAO have been. Be it NAO or AO forecasts  the link with CET is still not very precise with the majority of years having but a weak link. 


 


Originally Posted by: roger63 

Good posts Roger, I think the success rate for the MetO  NAO predictions were around 2/3 if my memory serves me right.

David M Porter
29 October 2014 09:59:40

Met office stopped writing long range forecasts around that point didnt they? there was a string of consecutive failures, the bbq summer being a final nail in the coffin before someone in PR aptly pulled the plug.
It would appear their output/ methods have not improved much at all.

Originally Posted by: White Meadows 


The last seasonal forecast I can clearly remember the MetO issuing was the one for winter 2009/10 which they predicted to be a milder one than 2008/09 turned out to be. From what I recall though, a number of independent forecasters at the same time went for a colder than average winter. In the end, it turned out to be the coldest one in this country for about 30 years.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
tallyho_83
29 October 2014 10:33:49

The Month Ahead:


A bit of uncertainty and contradiction come the end but I guess this means High pressure - warm during the day and maybe foggy and frosty at night!?

http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/cgi-app/reports?LANG=en&MENU=205&FILE=tma&DAY=20141028


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


Solar Cycles
29 October 2014 11:56:19
All global models have this inbuilt into them due to the fact they are programmed to include the warming of the 20th century, it's no conspiracy theory but simple physics.😉
TomC
  • TomC
  • Advanced Member
29 October 2014 12:09:02

All global models have this inbuilt into them due to the fact they are programmed to include the warming of the 20th century, it's no conspiracy theory but simple physics.😉

Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 


I am not sure what you mean by 'programmed to include the warming.......' Weather forecast models start from the current state of the atmosphere and integrate forward in time for days to weeks to months. Long term climate change has no role.

Solar Cycles
29 October 2014 13:25:33


All global models have this inbuilt into them due to the fact they are programmed to include the warming of the 20th century, it's no conspiracy theory but simple physics.😉

Originally Posted by: TomC 


I am not sure what you mean by 'programmed to include the warming.......' Weather forecast models start from the current state of the atmosphere and integrate forward in time for days to weeks to months. Long term climate change has no role.


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 

There was an article on this very thing a few years ago from either the ECMF or UKMO and the baseline starting point incorporated 20th century warming Tom, this isn't a point scoring exercise  as you would appreciate that said warming should be included but it's this starting point which IMO skews long range modelling as every ENSO event is predicted to be higher than the actual outcome. This upcoming Nino event has shown it to be the case as many long range models were going for a super Nino type event, which is nigh on impossible with a negative PDO in place.

Brian Gaze
29 October 2014 13:44:26

Can we stay on topic please. If not please leave this forum and go and discuss whatever you like elsewhere before you're banned! 


Brian Gaze
Berkhamsted
TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 
"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan
some faraway beach
29 October 2014 14:09:31


All global models have this inbuilt into them due to the fact they are programmed to include the warming of the 20th century, it's no conspiracy theory but simple physics.😉

Originally Posted by: TomC 


I am not sure what you mean by 'programmed to include the warming.......' Weather forecast models start from the current state of the atmosphere and integrate forward in time for days to weeks to months. Long term climate change has no role.


Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 



Daily Telegraph 6 Feb 2009:



Dave Britton, a meteorologist at the Met Office in Exeter, said that the signals for a mild winter all changed as the season progressed. "There was always a 25 per cent chance that this winter would turn out colder than average but, yes, we got it wrong. Every seasonal forecast is reviewed at the end of the period, this one will be no exception."




The forecast is put together using observations of sea temperatures in the preceding summer, data from the Met Office's northern hemisphere weather modelling systems, those of the French national weather service and that of the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting in Reading. That is then assessed alongside predictions about the North Atlantic Oscillation – a measurement of pressure patterns and seasonal variations in the jet stream across the Atlantic. The Met Office then raises the temperature prediction for the winter by including the long-term warming signal caused by climate change.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/weather/4534358/Snow-Britain-Further-snow-and-ice-forecast-for-rest-of-the-winter.html



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.
Brian Gaze
29 October 2014 14:43:07



All global models have this inbuilt into them due to the fact they are programmed to include the warming of the 20th century, it's no conspiracy theory but simple physics.😉

Originally Posted by: some faraway beach 


I am not sure what you mean by 'programmed to include the warming.......' Weather forecast models start from the current state of the atmosphere and integrate forward in time for days to weeks to months. Long term climate change has no role.


Originally Posted by: TomC 



Daily Telegraph 6 Feb 2009:



Dave Britton, a meteorologist at the Met Office in Exeter, said that the signals for a mild winter all changed as the season progressed. "There was always a 25 per cent chance that this winter would turn out colder than average but, yes, we got it wrong. Every seasonal forecast is reviewed at the end of the period, this one will be no exception."




The forecast is put together using observations of sea temperatures in the preceding summer, data from the Met Office's northern hemisphere weather modelling systems, those of the French national weather service and that of the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting in Reading. That is then assessed alongside predictions about the North Atlantic Oscillation – a measurement of pressure patterns and seasonal variations in the jet stream across the Atlantic. The Met Office then raises the temperature prediction for the winter by including the long-term warming signal caused by climate change.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/weather/4534358/Snow-Britain-Further-snow-and-ice-forecast-for-rest-of-the-winter.html



Originally Posted by: Solar Cycles 


That suggests Tom is right and the computer model is not programmed to include warming. Please take this discussion elsewhere now. 


Brian Gaze
Berkhamsted
TWO Buzz - get the latest news and views 
"I'm not socialist, I know that. I don't believe in sharing my money." - Gary Numan
tallyho_83
30 October 2014 00:12:36

"A Significant snow event to occur for a few days mid month!?" - According to the Weather online:

http://www.weatheronline.co.uk/cgi-app/reports?LANG=en&MENU=206&FILE=sea&DAY=20141029

BUT as always - to be taken as a foot of salt! - I agree about the drier & colder weather end of Nov/Beginning Dec! Time will tell. January is not even worth looking into - it's too vague!





Seasonal outlook - October 29, 2014

Cooler December

Unsettled January



*December*
Note low confidence levels in our long range forecast for December and January.
Current indications for December are that the month may start chilly with high pressure to the east, and a southeast flow affecting many areas.
This will bring dry weather to Scotland and much of northern and eastern England, but more unsettled to the west.
There is the possibility of a breakdown into more unsettled conditions through the middle and later stages of the month, this thanks to the westerly winds breaking through for a time as the high pressure retreats. It is possible that a significant snow event may occur for a few days mid month as the milder Atlantic air, battles with the cooler continental air.
By the end of the month, several models indicate a trough established to the west, high pressure to the east and a southerly flow as a result. This brings mostly mild conditions, drier weather in the east, although a wetter west. Note that at times there could be some incursions of colder weather from the east.

*January*
A more unsettled month is indicated for January. The break through of strong westerly winds bringing heavy rain and strong winds, and there is and a risk of gales, particularly so in the north and west.
However, it may be that the jet stream does push further south for a while mid month, allowing high pressure to build through the UK, and introduce a much drier and cooler spell, and perhaps bringing the threat of some snow, especially to northern England and Scotland.


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


sriram
  • sriram
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
30 October 2014 07:20:47
all this exceptionally mild weather is good news for winter - there are so many examples of this in history leading to good winters - 1978 1985 1990 1986 etc
Sriram
Sedgley, West Midlands ( just south of Wolverhampton )
162m ASL
Matty H
30 October 2014 07:42:05

all this exceptionally mild weather is good news for winter - there are so many examples of this in history leading to good winters - 1978 1985 1990 1986 etc

Originally Posted by: sriram 


It was mild last year too...


Whether Idle
30 October 2014 08:19:31


all this exceptionally mild weather is good news for winter - there are so many examples of this in history leading to good winters - 1978 1985 1990 1986 etc

Originally Posted by: Matty H 


It was mild last year too...


Originally Posted by: sriram 


Mild autumns are no guarantee of winter cold.  Its too easy to focus on the exceptions and to forget the run of the mill.  IMHO mild autumns more often than not lead to mild winters, by the standards of our maritime climate.


Dover, 5m asl. Half a mile from the south coast.
ITSY
30 October 2014 12:06:50
matt H and joe b saying a SSW event is soon to take place. certainlinteresting y
picturesareme
30 October 2014 13:43:32


all this exceptionally mild weather is good news for winter - there are so many examples of this in history leading to good winters - 1978 1985 1990 1986 etc

Originally Posted by: Matty H 


It was mild last year too...


Originally Posted by: sriram 


no, there was some frost about during the autumn..

Ally Pally Snowman
30 October 2014 17:56:14

Quote from Matt Hugo below from Twitter. Really rate this guy so very good news indeed for coldies.


 


Almost a text book Cohen Nov setup - wetterzentrale.de/pics/Recm2161.… - Call it a fcst but I have high hopes for early-mid Dec onwards.


 


 


Bishop's Stortford 85m ASL.
four
  • four
  • Advanced Member
30 October 2014 18:17:05



all this exceptionally mild weather is good news for winter - there are so many examples of this in history leading to good winters - 1978 1985 1990 1986 etc

Originally Posted by: picturesareme 


It was mild last year too...


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


no, there was some frost about during the autumn..


Originally Posted by: sriram 




   Averages\Extremes for the month of October 2013

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average temperature = 10.9°C; diff from climate av: +1.1°C
Average humidity = 90%
Average dewpoint = 9.3°C
Average barometer = 1007.8 mb
Average windspeed = 10.3 mph
Average gustspeed = 14.7 mph
Average direction = 221° ( SW)
Rainfall for month = 100.6 mm
Rainfall for year = 556.4 mm
Maximum rain per minute = 0.8 mm on day 19 at time 19:33
Maximum temperature = 19.0°C on day 04 at time 14:47
Minimum temperature = 2.4°C on day 18 at time 03:00
Maximum dewpoint = 16.8°C on day 04 at time 14:08
Minimum dewpoint = 1.7°C on day 09 at time 16:13
Maximum pressure = 1027.9 mb on day 11 at time 19:35
Minimum pressure = 978.3 mb on day 28 at time 06:40
Maximum windspeed = 31.1 mph from 225°( SW) on day 25 at time 21:54
Maximum gust speed = 51.8 mph from 338°(NNW) on day 10 at time 18:41
Maximum heat index = 19.0°C on day 04 at time 14:47
Avg daily max temp :13.5°C
Avg daily min temp :8.3°C

 


   Averages\Extremes for the month of October 2014

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average temperature = 10.5°C; diff from climate av: +0.6°C
Average humidity = 89%
Average dewpoint = 8.6°C
Average barometer = 1008.4 mb
Average windspeed = 9.2 mph
Average gustspeed = 13.0 mph
Average direction = 230° ( SW)
Rainfall for month = 85.0 mm
Rainfall for year = 746.0 mm
Maximum rain per minute = 0.6 mm on day 28 at time 17:48
Maximum temperature = 18.2°C on day 03 at time 16:11
Minimum temperature = 0.4°C on day 02 at time 07:48
Maximum dewpoint = 14.7°C on day 18 at time 12:07
Minimum dewpoint = -0.3°C on day 02 at time 7:48
Maximum pressure = 1030.3 mb on day 02 at time 07:52
Minimum pressure = 987.6 mb on day 08 at time 19:37
Maximum windspeed = 32.2 mph from 315°( NW) on day 21 at time 15:45
Maximum gust speed = 51.8 mph from 315°( NW) on day 21 at time 17:15
Maximum heat index = 18.2°C on day 03 at time 16:11
Avg daily max temp :13.7°C
Avg daily min temp :7.1°C

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