At last there's a GFSP op run which not only handles things very much like ECM out to day 10 but avoids powering energy NE beyond day 10!
So here we go, the GFSP 18z op run day 10 on the left, day 14 on the right:
Notice how that nose of low heights going SE from the UK on day 10, this being less pronounced than on the ECM 12z op run, develops into something far more substantial that starts to undercut the Siberian High. Fair to imagine that the ECM run would have had a good go at it too, though it's not so clear on that run whether the low south of Greenland would track SE as smartly as it does on the GFSP 18z op.
Then, thanks to the absence of low pressure powering up in the western North Atlantic (which the 18z GFS really runs away with), this process is able to continue on to day 16 with no sign of stopping there.
It ends up giving a very nice illustration as to how the Siberian High can venture towards the Arctic:
Check out the low heights on their way to cutting off that area of higher heights which itself is nosing towards the pole. Meanwhile pressure is steadily rising across a large swathe of the Arctic as the low heights finally displace further into the mid-latitudes.
This is all well outside the reliable, but does a great job of outlining the sort of developments that MOGREPS and the EC Ensembles may be starting to explore... an element of guesswork in there of course as those model outputs remain behind closed doors. I might get to change that one day soon but of course I won't be allowed to start handing out freebies
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