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Phil G
23 February 2018 10:39:31

Still a few trying to cast their dark shadow. It's like a disease. Lighten up a little and rather than looking for an end which MAY be a whole week away enjoy charts you may never ever see again.

jhall
23 February 2018 10:41:01


 


I'm quite worried about the building collapse next week due to the shoddy "appendages" that have been added to many houses in recent years. That and central heating problems due to external condensate pipes could be real issues, although the strengthening sun may mitigate.


Originally Posted by: Brian Gaze 


ISTR that it was in January 1982 that the flat roof of a leisure centre in either Swansea or Cardiff collapsed under the weight of snow. Fortunately it happened overnight, and there was nobody in the building at the time.


Cranleigh, Surrey
Maunder Minimum
23 February 2018 10:41:01


Deep in FI but it is not until Sunday next week that some milder stuff makes it into the far SW


 


Originally Posted by: Justin W 


As long as any snow lasts through next weekend so we can enjoy it, I expect most of us will be looking forward to spring weather come 5th March.


New world order coming.
Jiries
23 February 2018 10:42:51


 


First time since mid 1997, anyway.... I didn't know about ensembles before then.


 


Originally Posted by: Retron 


I advise you to screen shot this because this is the best graph ever and my long waited to see proper ice days and powdery snow since 1991 to be happening again.  

tallyho_83
23 February 2018 10:55:44


 


As long as any snow lasts through next weekend so we can enjoy it, I expect most of us will be looking forward to spring weather come 5th March.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


Op run doesn't know what it wants to do after Sunday - looks very messy indeed. 


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


Hippydave
23 February 2018 10:56:51

Checked the 00z charts this morning and was borderline stunned at how cold they were. The ECM FI is just a crazy set of charts


Fun to think that today is quite cold, with a hard frost, and next week it'll be even colder


I'll be watching the shorter range models soon to check if I'm going to see snowfall - can be a doubt for me if the winds are straight easterlies, so hoping for a more ENE or NE tilt to steer showers across and through Kent. If we do see snowfall given the ground is being nicely chilled it should settle readily and won't be melting due to the ground temps at least.


Longer term and I see the idea of an incursion from the SW remains strong with the GFS Op at least. Be interesting to see how that plays out - usually things correct south and most of the precip misses us. 


It's certainly been a fun couple of weeks model watching - seeing the easterly signal waxing and waning in the GFS ens and the ECM once we got to the 10 day range.


Now we're basically there - chilly/cold until late Sunday, cold for at least 5 days or so with the likelihood of ice days for many 


P.S Did anyone fancy having a go at a snow map thread? Would be a case of people posting in it just once to confirm if they have lying snow, where they're based and how much snow. They can edit their posts to update if they get more snowfall and the map can be marked with a circle at their location and a number for the CMs of lying snow. Would be quite cool to see, if anyone good with doing such things fancies it?


Home: Tunbridge Wells
Work: Tonbridge
jhall
23 February 2018 11:04:42


What do you think will happen if spring is put back a month over continental Europe?


Brian makes the connection; others too. 


Originally Posted by: polarwind 


We should remember that Europe is only a small proportion of the world's (or even of the Northern Hemisphere's) land surface. Also if Spring is delayed by a month over Europe, it could be at least partly counterbalanced by it being brought forward by a month over eastern North America.


Cranleigh, Surrey
Saint Snow
23 February 2018 11:14:40

 


As long as any snow lasts through next weekend so we can enjoy it, I expect most of us will be looking forward to spring weather come 5th March.


Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum 


 


Pffft! Are you mad? Perhaps 5th April. Maybe. If it's been a historically severe March.


Given how successive model runs have forecasted in the longer term, there's potential for the north at least to continue to enjoy a cold airflow well into March.


I also remember how in Jan 2010 (which followed a fortnight'ish cold/snowy spell in December), we had snow on the ground from the fall on the 5th (?) into Feb, despite us getting no top-up amounts and the air temp not being particularly cold.


 



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Snowedin3
23 February 2018 11:36:40
Short ens looking very cold


Dean Barnes
Finstock, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire
160m ASL 525 Ft
nsrobins
23 February 2018 11:38:02
The GEFS might be a further upgrade this morning. Many of the members flirt with -17 into the SE and a few even colder.
These numbers are not unprecedented, but they are very very rare.
Neil
Fareham, Hampshire 28m ASL (near estuary)
Stormchaser, Member TORRO
moomin75
23 February 2018 11:38:53
http://old.wetterzentrale.de/pics/MT8_London_ens.png 

Continuing to trend colder IMO. And although not an outlier, the operational is one of the mildest options with little support.
Thinking this will be a 2 week severe spell at least.
Witney, Oxfordshire
100m ASL
White Meadows
23 February 2018 11:39:02

The GEFS might be a further upgrade this morning. Many of the members flirt with -17 into the SE and a few even colder.
These numbers are not unprecedented, but they are very very rare.

Originally Posted by: nsrobins 

 


👍👍👍👍


nice to have you back Neil.

White Meadows
23 February 2018 11:41:21
After years of hibernation, here cometh the beast

http://www.natice.noaa.gov/pub/ims/ims_gif/DATA/cursnow_asiaeurope.gif 
Stormchaser
23 February 2018 11:41:29

The trouble with any snow predictions Mon-Wed is that the showers will tend to line themselves up and affect some areas much more than others, but due to uncertainty regarding the exact wind direction, it's impossible to specify which areas will be the lucky/unlucky (delete as appropriate) ones.


For example, where I live, I know that the famous 'Thames Streamer' is capable of bringing frequent spells of light snow, but only if the wind direction is just right and of course of sufficient strength, plus the upper air is cold enough (sufficient instability).


At this stage it appears the wind will be stronger and the upper air colder than when I last saw snow from a Thames Streamer (Feb 2009) so it looks hopeful - yet I'm not counting my chickens as I know that a kink in the flow related to a disturbance moving through could either cut off the streamer and leave me high and dry, or replace it with a more prolonged spell of snow, depending on where the disturbance is going.


Such disturbances will crop up at short notice in such an unstable situation over the N. Sea, as very small-scale imbalances amplify rapidly (chaos theory at its finest!). These are so hard for models to capture that it's not unknown for the high-res runs on the morning of the day itself to miss them!


 


So no wonder that the Met Office can only put out a yellow, low impact warning for easternmost areas at this stage, as it would be ridiculous to try honing in on specific zones and issuing higher-level warnings in distinct bands extending inland from the east coast.


Meanwhile the model output itself can only explore one possibility per operational run or ensemble member, and tends to fall short on capturing the full extent of shower development in cold setups anyway, so there will indeed be a lot of applications depicting a very dry spell of weather, as they are typically taking data directly from these model runs - and not only that, usually GFS, which has among the worst track records with convection!


So please, don't take anything they show seriously - but equally, don't go expecting a substantial dumping of snow unless you're within the already Met Office-warned areas - you may as well flip a coin as to whether a disturbance in the flow will pay you a visit or not (yes, even if you're a good way west; the flow (currently, at least ) looks strong enough to carry them a good way inland).


 


Rant over 


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2023's Homeland Extremes:
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
White Meadows
23 February 2018 11:43:36

Brian may be right about this having more semi-permanent affects on the NH bigger picture

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/CFSv2/htmls/euT2me3Mon.html



ALL of the above average values have disappeared!? (In our neck of the woods)

moomin75
23 February 2018 11:51:06


Brian may be right about this having more semi-permanent affects on the NH bigger picture

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/CFSv2/htmls/euT2me3Mon.html



ALL of the above average values have disappeared!? (In our neck of the woods)


Originally Posted by: White Meadows 

Well an average summer (as long as it's not too wet) would be very pleasant as we look forward to winter 2018-19.


Witney, Oxfordshire
100m ASL
JACKO4EVER
23 February 2018 11:52:14
Morning all, steady as she goes. Not sure about the longevity but some very cold uppers progged for next week, should hopefully be some good hefty snow showers around in places
rickm
23 February 2018 11:53:38


Brian may be right about this having more semi-permanent affects on the NH bigger picture

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/CFSv2/htmls/euT2me3Mon.html



ALL of the above average values have disappeared!? (In our neck of the woods)


Originally Posted by: White Meadows 


 


Looks like Switzerland retains it's neutrality with temperatures as well - cold all around

tallyho_83
23 February 2018 11:54:14

http://old.wetterzentrale.de/pics/MT8_London_ens.png

Continuing to trend colder IMO. And although not an outlier, the operational is one of the mildest options with little support.
Thinking this will be a 2 week severe spell at least.

Originally Posted by: moomin75 


 


The op strops on 5th March!?


Also i can't seem to get this 06z  ensembles up despite refreshing the page!?


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


Joe Bloggs
23 February 2018 11:57:59

The automated MetO forecasts are really ramping things up now.


Check London out!


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast/gcpvj0v07#?date=2018-02-28


Wednesday and Thursday both ice days with heavy snow showers Wednesday AM.


 



Manchester City Centre, 31m ASL

tallyho_83
23 February 2018 12:01:22


The automated MetO forecasts are really ramping things up now.


Check London out!


https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/public/weather/forecast/gcpvj0v07#?date=2018-02-28


Wednesday and Thursday both ice days with heavy snow showers Wednesday AM.


 


Originally Posted by: Joe Bloggs 


Good news but why does it only show precipitation of up to 10% or whatever until Thursday? Hopefully upgrades to come. 


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


Maunder Minimum
23 February 2018 12:02:34


Brian may be right about this having more semi-permanent affects on the NH bigger picture

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/CFSv2/htmls/euT2me3Mon.html



ALL of the above average values have disappeared!? (In our neck of the woods)


Originally Posted by: White Meadows 


Also worth considering is the enhanced volcanic activity in the Indonesian archipelago - the effects are mostly felt in NH summers with depressed temperatures.


New world order coming.
Maunder Minimum
23 February 2018 12:06:35


 


Good news but why does it only show precipitation of up to 10% or whatever until Thursday? Hopefully upgrades to come. 


Originally Posted by: tallyho_83 


Checked quite a few locations - very little snow in the current outlook, but that will change as the resolution increases - we need to wait until Sunday to get a clearer picture of snowfall locations and amounts.


New world order coming.
Jeff
  • Jeff
  • Advanced Member
23 February 2018 12:08:01



UKMO extended looks a bit more southeasterly bulk of the precipitation looks to be more focused Yorkshire northwards


ukm2.2018030200_168_lant.troplant_prp_fcst.gentracker.thumb.png.f1f48b3cd8c3f799ce045b94864a15b3.png



Originally Posted by: Gavin D 

And the return of a phenomenon we all thought was extinct, the elusive, secretive Winter Azores Low 


On the East/West Sussex Border
70m ASL
JOHN NI
23 February 2018 12:13:19


The trouble with any snow predictions Mon-Wed is that the showers will tend to line themselves up and affect some areas much more than others, but due to uncertainty regarding the exact wind direction, it's impossible to specify which areas will be the lucky/unlucky (delete as appropriate) ones.


So no wonder that the Met Office can only put out a yellow, low impact warning for easternmost areas at this stage, as it would be ridiculous to try honing in on specific zones and issuing higher-level warnings in distinct bands extending inland from the east coast.


Meanwhile the model output itself can only explore one possibility per operational run or ensemble member, and tends to fall short on capturing the full extent of shower development in cold setups anyway, so there will indeed be a lot of applications depicting a very dry spell of weather, as they are typically taking data directly from these model runs - and not only that, usually GFS, which has among the worst track records with convection!


So please, don't take anything they show seriously - but equally, don't go expecting a substantial dumping of snow unless you're within the already Met Office-warned areas - you may as well flip a coin as to whether a disturbance in the flow will pay you a visit or not (yes, even if you're a good way west; the flow (currently, at least ) looks strong enough to carry them a good way inland).


 Rant over 


Originally Posted by: Stormchaser 


We need to understand that yellow warnings are not all low impact. Warnings should be read in their entirety and on this occasion the early yellow warnings are for medium impacts, albeit with a very low likelihood at this range.


 


Rant over.


John.
The orange County of Armagh.
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