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SJV
27 January 2016 18:48:59

Hmm, could be changes afoot at t168? Will be interesting if we have a good cluster of cold solutions on the ensembles later 

Gooner
27 January 2016 18:50:26

Good from ECM at 216



Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


nsrobins
27 January 2016 18:53:16


ECM 168...


Some of the posters this morning may want to switch to scrambled eggs tomorrow morning


Originally Posted by: Nordic Snowman 


I prefer eggs benedict 😉


To be fair Mike it's still only two runs with the 00Z version having very little support but it's now on the radar under 'very loose potential long term'.


Neil
Fareham, Hampshire 28m ASL (near estuary)
Stormchaser, Member TORRO
Nordic Snowman
27 January 2016 18:54:07

Maybe a new trend from ECM as you can't get better consistency than that. Virtually down to a T.


All about the trends, as mentioned this morning


Bjorli, Norway

Website 
Quantum
27 January 2016 18:56:47

People probably won't be interested in this in light of the amplification shown on the EC and UKMO later. However here is the UKMO saturday chart with fronts and 850hpa -5C estimates.


UKMOlines


Cold, wintry showers, snow with any elevation at all and potentially something more wintry for N scotland.


 


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.
Nordic Snowman
27 January 2016 18:57:56


 


I prefer eggs benedict 😉


To be fair Mike it's still only two runs with the 00Z version having very little support but it's now on the radar under 'very loose potential long term'.


Originally Posted by: nsrobins 


Yes, just 2 op runs but one cannot argue that it has 'gone off on one' now. Maybe gone off on two but not one


P.S Yes.... give up on the nut crunch cornflakes and sub it for eggs  Cereal spikes your sugar/insulin and sets you to crash an hour or two later. Poison!


Bjorli, Norway

Website 
David M Porter
27 January 2016 18:58:51


Good from ECM at 216



Originally Posted by: Gooner 


Notice how the prevalence of purples over Canada is very much diminished here.


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
Shropshire
27 January 2016 19:09:22

Strange for the ECM to go off on one,  but we did see it the other week when it went for a return to mild T96 wrongly.


 


That run was pretty much an outlier on its ensembles and I'm sure this will have little support post day 6


From December 27th 2020, zonality will be banned from mixing with the UK. We appreciate that this may come as a shock to younger people and old Uncle Barty. This ban will last for a minimum of ten days.
doctormog
27 January 2016 19:11:27


Strange for the ECM to go off on one,  but we did see it the other week when it went for a return to mild T96 wrongly.


 


That run was pretty much an outlier on its ensembles and I'm sure this will have little support post day 6


Originally Posted by: Shropshire 


And if it does have support...? Will you still back the GFS?


LeedsLad123
27 January 2016 19:22:19


 


And if it does have support...? Will you still back the GFS?


Originally Posted by: doctormog 


Do you honestly need to ask that?


Whitkirk, Leeds - 85m ASL.
Bertwhistle
27 January 2016 19:23:44

GFS ens pert 4 has got all excited.


http://www.theweatheroutlook.com/twodata/chart.aspx?chart=/charts/gefs/4_294_850tmp.png?cb=746


Bertie, Itchen Valley.
Retire while you can still press the 'retire now' button.
AIMSIR
27 January 2016 19:25:40


GFS ens pert 4 has got all excited.


http://www.theweatheroutlook.com/twodata/chart.aspx?chart=/charts/gefs/4_294_850tmp.png?cb=746


Originally Posted by: Bertwhistle 

Warm air rises.

WMB
  • WMB
  • Advanced Member
27 January 2016 19:46:55


I mentioned a few days ago the possibility of a 1998 type of February with exceptional temperatures and a Super Bartlett to the south and that us exactly what is being modelled on some of the output. It was in February 1998 that Pauul Bartlett christened his creation and there are some huge Bartletts around during the next two weeks, it's not so much a Uncle Barty as Grandad Barty and all his cousins!


 


Originally Posted by: Andy Woodcock 


 


Er no on two counts.  IIRC "Bartlett high" was christened from Paul's comments on the winter of 1988-89  and is nothing like a single feature such the euro high of Feb 98.  I think it was used to describe the semi permanant belt of high pressure that kept forming and moving from south of Newfoundland, through the mid Atlantic and into southern Europe.  It was not a description of a single high in "the wrong" place for a few days producing mild conditions in the UK.  I think it was more describing the broad features over an entire season thus being something that waxes and waned over short tiem periods. So a Feb 98 high could be an offshoot of a Bartlett, but it is not a Bartlett high!


 

The Beast from the East
27 January 2016 19:46:57


 


but it's now on the radar under 'very loose potential long term'.


Originally Posted by: nsrobins 


Or "another trip up the garden path"


I'm afraid all the signals do not indicate a strong ridge can be maintained and enough energy diverted south. Maybe later in the month, but not so soon


 


"We have some alternative facts for you"
Kelly-Ann Conway - special adviser to the President
Gooner
27 January 2016 19:55:41

UK and ECM very similar .....................there is hope yet


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


Jim_AFCB
27 January 2016 19:57:07


 


 


Er no on two counts.  IIRC "Bartlett high" was christened from Paul's comments on the winter of 1988-89  and is nothing like a single feature such the euro high of Feb 98.  I think it was used to describe the semi permanant belt of high pressure that kept forming and moving from south of Newfoundland, through the mid Atlantic and into southern Europe.  It was not a description of a single high in "the wrong" place for a few days producing mild conditions in the UK.  I think it was more describing the broad features over an entire season thus being something that waxes and waned over short tiem periods. So a Feb 98 high could be an offshoot of a Bartlett, but it is not a Bartlett high!


 


Originally Posted by: WMB 


 


 


That is correct.


Jim, Bournemouth, Dorset. Home of the mighty Cherries
Bournemouth Weather Onine - Click here. 
Gandalf The White
27 January 2016 20:03:03


Er no on two counts.  IIRC "Bartlett high" was christened from Paul's comments on the winter of 1988-89  and is nothing like a single feature such the euro high of Feb 98.  I think it was used to describe the semi permanant belt of high pressure that kept forming and moving from south of Newfoundland, through the mid Atlantic and into southern Europe.  It was not a description of a single high in "the wrong" place for a few days producing mild conditions in the UK.  I think it was more describing the broad features over an entire season thus being something that waxes and waned over short tiem periods. So a Feb 98 high could be an offshoot of a Bartlett, but it is not a Bartlett high!


Originally Posted by: WMB 


That's pretty much spot on - it's a pattern, not a solitary feature.   I do think you might be 1,000 miles too far north in the origin of the high pressure cells though.


My strong recollection of those winters was of a raging jet coming across north of Scotland and barrelling through Scandinavia with successive high pressure cells moving east and settling over central Europe.  A contributor of many years ago used to forecast the weather based on the SLP over Berne in Switzerland.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


Gandalf The White
27 January 2016 20:09:43


 


I prefer eggs benedict 😉


To be fair Mike it's still only two runs with the 00Z version having very little support but it's now on the radar under 'very loose potential long term'.


Originally Posted by: nsrobins 


Although we all look for the comfort of ensemble support it doesn't mean necessarily that the Op evolution is wrong; all it means is that the evolution is delicately balanced. It's the opposite of when there's very good ensemble support and then the Op and the ensembles all flip together, like when the Greenie high suddenly wasn't in the build up to the recent cold spell.


When two successive Op runs end up with almost identical evolutions then I'm interested.  Nothing conclusive obviously at this range.



 


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


David M Porter
27 January 2016 20:09:43


 


And if it does have support...? Will you still back the GFS?


Originally Posted by: doctormog 


I somehow get the feeling that if the roles were reversed and ECM showed a milder outcome and GFS a colder one, Ian would likely go with the ECM in such an instance.


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
Shropshire
27 January 2016 20:12:11

I agree with Beast, this evolution seems too early.


 


The GFS is very good at handling the Iceland/Greenland area, often picking out northerlies way in FI. Its not on board with this, and for now neither am I


From December 27th 2020, zonality will be banned from mixing with the UK. We appreciate that this may come as a shock to younger people and old Uncle Barty. This ban will last for a minimum of ten days.
picturesareme
27 January 2016 20:14:28
I've been dismissive and cautious all winter RE cold, and thankfully in return remained un-disappointed when things have gone tits up 😋 But this time I have the feeling emc is onto to something, and I'm trying hard to restrain myself from getting to hopeful just yet.
David M Porter
27 January 2016 20:16:50


 


 


The GFS is very good at handling the Iceland/Greenland area


Originally Posted by: Shropshire 


It wasn't in successive op runs over the course of 2-3 days during the first week of January, Ian. Surely even you can't take issue with that fact.


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
Hippydave
27 January 2016 20:19:46


GFS ens pert 4 has got all excited.


http://www.theweatheroutlook.com/twodata/chart.aspx?chart=/charts/gefs/4_294_850tmp.png?cb=746


Originally Posted by: Bertwhistle 


I missed that first time round - it's quite a striking member all round. A long cold easterly fetch with plenty of instability, some epic LP vs HP battles that would probably bury someone in the North and a chilly end with cold air in situ under a ridge of HP, extensive Northern blocking and an absence of the PV.


Just one member of one run but would be lovely if it attracted a few like minded fellows


On the ECM front, colour me stunned


Before I checked that I was convinced this morning's optimistic outcome would be washed away in banal zonality and instead it goes and carbon copies it


Worth raising half an eyebrow but would suspect that things would have to go exactly right to get that evolution and it's much more likely they'd go a bit right and we'd end up with a brief toppling ridge or something


Still, being the straw clutching type at least some of the reason why GFS isn't showing similar is the strength of the Atlantic which GFS often gets carried away with, particularly mid-term. Maybe it'll show something similar on a few runs time if it is currently modelling things with too much oomph


Home: Tunbridge Wells
Work: Tonbridge
Gandalf The White
27 January 2016 20:42:37


I agree with Beast, this evolution seems too early.


 


The GFS is very good at handling the Iceland/Greenland area, often picking out northerlies way in FI. Its not on board with this, and for now neither am I


Originally Posted by: Shropshire 


But nodody is suggesitng a protracted cold spell, are they?  ECM shows the real potential for several days of cold weather.  Nothing more, nothing less.  So talk of 'too early' is a classic red herring, IMHO.


Your fondness for GFS might be coloured by your fondness for a certain style of posting, perhaps, but does not reflect the very poor performance of GFS during the last cold spell when it was astonishingly slow to pick up on the obstacles to a raging jetstream blowing away our cold spell.


You could argue that GFS is actually not to good at handling northerlies because it repeatedly waters down the synoptics or drops them altogether.


 


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


WMB
  • WMB
  • Advanced Member
27 January 2016 20:56:29

Found the source discussion that spawned the term Bartlett high.


https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!msg/uk.sci.weather/OWaVXlmYlis/cskUin3H5kAJ


Sorry if it's going a bit OT, but I really wish we had a sticky so people would use the term correctly. Oh the source is quoted as labrador, rather than Newfoundland, so nearly correct!

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