Taken from another of Tamara's NW posts, focusing on the final week of December (she then talks about the strat. developments and January but I feel we should get December sorted first!) with a few comments by me in italics:
"There is no surprise at all to see indeterminate suggestions from G5 and ECM ensemble data for the further outlook from Christmas itself and beyond New Year as blocking signals increase and jet strength reduces across the Atlantic with a panacea of solutions appear in the modelling.... including cold pattern solutions.
This suggested upstream change, courtesy of continued modelling of GWO heading to phases 1 and 2 in conjunction with falling AAM is well advertised now across the modelling.
I must admit I only have a rough idea about the mechanisms by which Global Weather Oscillations and Atmospheric Angular Momentum play into the pattern evolution. I'm just going to take her word for it!
The turn of the year and early part of 2015 is going to be very tricky to predict I think, and we should be prepared for quite possible sudden and significant changes of travel for that trend period in the lead up to Christmas.
I swear I have seen blocking disappear suddenly at 10 days range only to re-emerge in an altered guise at 7 days range. Just to give a sense of how crazy it can get! Obviously on some occasions the blocking goes poof all together and crying into cornflakes becomes a nationwide epidemic...
Falling tendency in angular momentum suggests that frictional torque overall is negative over mid latitudes and the sub tropics. This, aligned with a retrograded Pacific jet stream also backs-up the quietening trend in the Atlantic.
Slower flow leaves room for better jet amplification. However, taking into account present conditions over the polar field with zonal winds only just set to start falling once again over this period in response to fresh wave activity on the vortex, then calculating amplification equations is going to be difficult. Much easier for the models to handle much more predictable faster zonal flow.
I suppose this translates to the models having a very hard time pinning down the resilience and poleward extent of ridges, and the positioning and shape (for want of a better word) of the troughs.
If WAF really ramps up, as it may well do in the days to come - then the calculations will increasingly become more and more in our favour and the type of alluring GFS output we are currently seeing in FI may become more and more plausible sooner rather than later. Caution advises, as reasoned later in this post, that it might be a little premature at this time - but all bets are off as stated in the extended period."
What is WAF...?! That's a new one to me. Her words imply that the models may not do a good job of seeing any 'ramping up' before it takes place. I can't give an informed comment on the odds of that one.
What a read... Tamara's posting represents what I aspire to be capable of after a decade or so more experience in the field
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser