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JACKO4EVER
30 October 2014 19:48:00


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 


LOL Classic!

nickl
30 October 2014 20:21:13
joe b (weatherbell) refer to warmings in the strat and not ssw.
Essan
30 October 2014 20:35:08



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 



And there have already been frosts about this autumn! 


Andy
Evesham, Worcs, Albion - 35m asl
Weather & Earth Science News 

Anyone who is capable of getting themselves made President should on no account be allowed to do the job - DNA
Russwirral
30 October 2014 20:52:10

joe b (weatherbell) refer to warmings in the strat and not ssw.

Originally Posted by: nickl 


 


aye - im trying to find what hes referring to and when.  His screenshots must be of an internal Weatherbell form.  The ones on netweather point to a suttle warming over Alaska and East Russia.  But its very suttle, and i a different area to what ******i is reporting.


tallyho_83
30 October 2014 20:54:35


"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.


Originally Posted by: tallyho_83 


 


What do you make of that forecast!?


 


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


Medlock Vale Weather
30 October 2014 21:31:16

I, personally have never been a fan of weatheronline's long range forecasts as they are rarely right. Then again who's are? the weather makes fools out of us all from time to time.


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 
Gooner
30 October 2014 23:19:06

Waste of time Tally


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Matty H
30 October 2014 23:35:00



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: Whether Idle 


It was mild last year too...


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


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.


Originally Posted by: sriram 


As soon as everyone acknowledges that pattern matching alone is bollox, the sooner we can all accept LRF forecasting is also bollox at this current time, and I'll sleep easier. 


Solar Cycles
30 October 2014 23:54:30




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: Whether Idle 


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.


Originally Posted by: Matty H 


As soon as everyone acknowledges that pattern matching alone is bollox, the sooner we can all accept LRF forecasting is also bollox at this current time, and I'll sleep easier. 


Originally Posted by: sriram 

+1

Medlock Vale Weather
31 October 2014 15:39:01

People often talk about November 2010, but November 2005 was pretty good too, at least here......quite a few days of snow lying at the end of the month. 


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 
Tree & Snowman
01 November 2014 13:01:04

Its been a while since Brian made a call for a mild winter at this stage !! Can anyone remember when the extreme cold events of 2009-10 started to develop on the charts as they are poor reading for coldies just now? Was it within 72hrs or was the potential there for weeks?


Scott


Penicuik 188 ASL

Matty H
01 November 2014 13:20:20

Pattern matching "alone" IS bollox. It's not at all an accurate way to forecast in solidarity. Having said that, even with other factors it can't really be called accurate, but that's the same as any other LRF. I accept that trend forecasting is far more likely to succeed than specific weather-type forecasting. Anyone who pins specific weather types to specific days months out is as big a muppet as those that bother to read it and then get excited if it shows their favourite weather


Gooner
01 November 2014 17:20:22

A LRF is really and only should be 7-10 days after that and you might as well get a 5 year old to write it IMO


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Medlock Vale Weather
02 November 2014 00:11:57

I think we need to be patient too, Winter 2012-13 got off to a slow start with most places seeing no snow until mid January, most people in this forum were worried about it being a mostly snowless Winter. But it turned out to be a decent Winter and it lingered into the Spring. 


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 
llamedos
02 November 2014 08:51:22

"So what about winter 2014/15?
I'd be very surprised if it's as mild and wet as last year's! That's not really saying much of course as 2013/14 was exceptional. At this stage of the autumn if I was forced to make a call I'd go for milder and wetter than average season"


Richard Desmond might have to call in an Administrator......... 


"Life with the Lions"

TWO Moderator
Solar Cycles
02 November 2014 08:54:28


"So what about winter 2014/15?
I'd be very surprised if it's as mild and wet as last year's! That's not really saying much of course as 2013/14 was exceptional. At this stage of the autumn if I was forced to make a call I'd go for milder and wetter than average season"


Richard Desmond might have to call in an Administrator......... 


Originally Posted by: llamedos 

Lets face it it's hardly a brave call going for what is the UK's default weather pattern.

Gooner
02 November 2014 09:46:43


"So what about winter 2014/15?
I'd be very surprised if it's as mild and wet as last year's! That's not really saying much of course as 2013/14 was exceptional. At this stage of the autumn if I was forced to make a call I'd go for milder and wetter than average season"


Richard Desmond might have to call in an Administrator......... 


Originally Posted by: llamedos 


Blimey, very daring of you John 


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Medlock Vale Weather
02 November 2014 15:39:09

I do think expectations are high looking at posts in the model thread and over on Netweather talking about later in the in month - most probably because of November-December 2010. Pretty much a once in lifetime event in our maritime climate. I would be very surprised if we had something similar again any time soon. I think when something like late 2010 happens people think it will repeat most years. Move the UK 800-1000 miles east and it would.


But certainly I would not discount it happening completely, that would be foolish. There is always a chance.


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 
Quantum
02 November 2014 15:51:15

I'm not overly optimistic, the only reason that people seem to be excited is the OPI and I have a few issues. It is possible to construct a model that perfectly fits past data if the degree of freedom is sufficiently reduced, so the 0.9 Correlation might be misleading, I'm not saying it is; but I suspect its a little optimistic. And also a -ve AO like I say is useless if we have a +ve NAO which was exactly what happened last year (january), and yielded one of the mildest and wettest winters on record. 


Composite PlotComposite Plot


To be fair the jet was to the south of the UK but only just. Anyway you can see the cold air did indeed spill well out of the arctic, but in the wrong places. While E America and Eurasia saw the jet well to the south, W america and the mid atlantic saw it well to the north. The radial pattern was right, but the angular pattern was very wrong. When you get a -ve NAO aswell both the angular and radial pattern works.


 


2023/2024 Snow days (approx 850hpa temp):
29/11 (-6), 30/11 (-6), 02/12 (-5), 03/12 (-5), 04/12 (-3), 16/01 (-3), 18/01 (-8), 08/02 (-5)

Total: 8 days with snow/sleet falling.

2022/2023 Snow days (approx 850hpa temp):

18/12 (-1), 06/03 (-6), 08/03 (-8), 09/03 (-6), 10/03 (-8), 11/03 (-5), 14/03 (-6)

Total: 7 days with snow/sleet falling.

2021/2022 Snow days (approx 850hpa temp):

26/11 (-5), 27/11 (-7), 28/11 (-6), 02/12 (-6), 06/01 (-5), 07/01 (-6), 06/02 (-5), 19/02 (-5), 24/02 (-7), 30/03 (-7), 31/03 (-8), 01/04 (-8)
Total: 12 days with snow/sleet falling.
NDJF
02 November 2014 16:20:29

some very interesting comments from Steve Murr (if you can read the font...) on the other channel, lets hope he is correct in his projections, equally wonder why the contrast between SM and the Meto 30 dayer, fact or fiction?

roger63
02 November 2014 16:44:43


I'm not overly optimistic, the only reason that people seem to be excited is the OPI and I have a few issues. It is possible to construct a model that perfectly fits past data if the degree of freedom is sufficiently reduced, so the 0.9 Correlation might be misleading, I'm not saying it is; but I suspect its a little optimistic. And also a -ve AO like I say is useless if we have a +ve NAO which was exactly what happened last year (january), and yielded one of the mildest and wettest winters on record. 


Composite PlotComposite Plot


To be fair the jet was to the south of the UK but only just. Anyway you can see the cold air did indeed spill well out of the arctic, but in the wrong places. While E America and Eurasia saw the jet well to the south, W america and the mid atlantic saw it well to the north. The radial pattern was right, but the angular pattern was very wrong. When you get a -ve NAO aswell both the angular and radial pattern works.


 


Originally Posted by: Quantum 


 Quantum think you are right to be cautious about the correlation.You mention the problem of different NAO and AO signs in the same winter In practice the AO and NAO are closely correlated-the figure is r= 0.82 for the 50/51 to 13/14 data series.There were only 9 out of 64 years where the signs were different.In 6 of the years the NAO + over ruled the AO- and warmer than average winters resulted


 


 


 

Medlock Vale Weather
02 November 2014 16:49:09


some very interesting comments from Steve Murr (if you can read the font...) on the other channel, lets hope he is correct in his projections, equally wonder why the contrast between SM and the Meto 30 dayer, fact or fiction?


Originally Posted by: NDJF 


I take notice when the Meto say something like this - like they did in previous Winters: "There are some indications later in the period of temperatures becoming below or well below average with the increasing chance of snow on high ground, but at all levels at times."


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 
Medlock Vale Weather
02 November 2014 18:06:10

Snowing in New England. http://www.crownofmaine.com/camsky.php


 


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 
Whether Idle
02 November 2014 19:38:25


Snowing in New England. http://www.crownofmaine.com/camsky.php


 


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


they are carrying on where they left off in March.  We meanwhile continue frost free though perhaps Wednesday night will be the first air frost for a year in some paces in England?


Dover, 5m asl. Half a mile from the south coast.
Gooner
02 November 2014 19:56:31



Snowing in New England. http://www.crownofmaine.com/camsky.php


 


Originally Posted by: Whether Idle 


they are carrying on where they left off in March.  We meanwhile continue frost free though perhaps Wednesday night will be the first air frost for a year in some paces in England?


Originally Posted by: Medlock Vale Weather 


I cant recall having frost on the car at last winter


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


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