The toning down of the westerly momentum continues for the 6-10 day period... GFS has responded by shifting the HP cell NW to bring about a strong UK high which would probably hang out across the UK for longer than the run shows, as nearly all models have tended to move such features east too quickly when they have come along in times past.
The polar vortex is still in pieces days 7-8, so it wouldn't take much more amplification to get that high nosing into Greenland as a taller, slimmer feature - which would raise the chances of the diving trough days 9-10 (which has turned up in the output much as anticipated) to land closer to our shores.
As it is, UKMO is already backing the Atlantic trough a good deal further west than GFS by day 6, which is a striking new development in itself, though on this particular run the pattern in the western North Atlantic doesn't look amplified enough to prevent the high toppling very soon after - though a Euro trough in the way would help to draw that out at least a little.
The shift away from the idea of a rapid and sustained flattening of the pattern is proving almost as fast as the shift toward it.
Unless, that is, ECM doesn't follow suit
Here's a not so fun fact... GFS brings me bone dry conditions to large parts of the south right out to 12th February
As much as I enjoy heavy frost and persistent ice, I can't say I'd be too happy with a grand total 10 minutes of transient wet snow for the entire cold spell. Not looking too hopeful with even the high-res NMM showing nothing falling from the skies out to noon Wednesday. Previous hints at some disturbances in the flow seem to have vanished.
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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)
Keep Calm and Forecast On