My view of GFS is a consequence of years of watching it correct towards a more amplified flow from a flatter one.
As for GFSP, that's largely based on how poorly it handled the sliding low we have coming along now, which admittedly could just be a rough rock on an otherwise smoother road of performance for all I know.
Anyway, ECM's joined the flat parade this evening so it seems more likely that GFS will turn out to be along the right lines. This is the problem I was talking about earlier - my instinct does sometimes leave me with more hope than is perhaps justified. Thankfully, the disagreement tends to resolve far enough out to prevent a major short term letdown
It's not a given, but it increasingly looks as if we're not going to have any luck in the first third of December.
With the blocking to our east obliterated, we're left waiting for a weaker jet with an amplified ridge building towards high pressure in the Arctic that seems determined to keep coming back for the foreseeable.
With no sign of a persistent east U.S. trough to set up a strong thermal gradient and supercharge the Atlantic jet, we should see an opportunity come along sooner or later - last winter was truly exceptional in having none of that for two months straight (mid-Dec to mid-Feb).
Of course, with an increasing tendency for low heights over Scandinavia as the strat. vortex drifts or at least extends its influence that way (that much remains in place if nothing else), chilly polar maritime air masses should feature in our weather fairly often during the first third of December, and that, coupled with Atlantic ridges building into said air masses, may well produce below average temperatures overall. Nothing at all exciting to track if the pattern remains fairly flat, but not quite ordinary either.
Fact is though, we really could do with one of those Atlantic ridges dealing the strat. vortex a good blow. For that, a weakening of the Canadian polar vortex lobe would be mighty handy. Until then... might go into a slumber if tomorrow's runs are as flat as tonight's
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser