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Winter 2010-2011 outlook

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,996 ✭✭✭✭nacho libre


    Su Campu wrote: »
    Your name isn't Owen is it??!!



    Damn.:p I thought by lowering my expectations for Coleraine and being altogether kinder to forum members, it would enable me to hoodwink you all. Alas i've been rumbled!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,150 ✭✭✭Deep Easterly


    Kenring wrote: »
    Hmm..on the South island West Coast where they get 300 inches a year, 100mm in a day is not enough to put a coat on..:)

    :confused:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,150 ✭✭✭Deep Easterly


    While we all anticipate the forthcoming winter, here is a look back at the HIRLAM frontal analysis charts for last winter (1st December 2009 to 28th February 2010). It is interesting to see how the cold weather developed synoptically in mid December and how it sustained itself thoughtout the rest of the season.



    All images c/o KNMI


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,996 ✭✭✭✭nacho libre


    While we all anticipate the forthcoming winter, here is a look back at the HIRLAM frontal analysis charts for last winter (1st December 2009 to 28th February 2010). It is interesting to see how the cold weather developed synoptically in mid December and how it sustained itself thoughtout the rest of the season.



    All images c/o KNMI

    great post paddy1. it was nice to relive some memories there- the highlight from my perspective being the low that broke through in mid January, which signalled the end of the big freeze, yet caused snow in the west and northwest for 12 hours! i recall the radio forecaster at the time saying it was an exceptional event, because in normal circumstances it would have been a rain and wind event, but due to the sustained cold beforehand, the milder air was modified by residual cold air still over parts of the country!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,320 ✭✭✭snowstreams


    ... the low that broke through in mid january which signalled the end of the big freeze, yet caused snow in the west and northwest for 12 hours!!

    Yeah I remember the massive drifts that formed from the wind and snow in the inland parts of mayo & galway!
    I wonder will we get any of that type of snow again this year :D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,550 ✭✭✭Min


    The snowstorm/blizzard in January was a horrible kind of snow, we had real powdery snow before that, this snow was wet and it led to the satellite dish needing to be cleared of snow twice as it had stopped the signal.
    It gave several inches of snow but not as bad as the end of March blizzard.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,667 ✭✭✭WolfeIRE


    latest gfs shows atlantic sw pushing away the cold before a northerly wind takes control again at the end of the week (starting mon 25).

    Confidence: low (based on G*S)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,186 ✭✭✭Kippure


    While we all anticipate the forthcoming winter, here is a look back at the HIRLAM frontal analysis charts for last winter (1st December 2009 to 28th February 2010). It is interesting to see how the cold weather developed synoptically in mid December and how it sustained itself thoughtout the rest of the season.



    All images c/o KNMI

    Thats was class the way the Temp Euro high linked to the scandi high, then moved west to link up to form a classic greenland high in mid december.


  • Registered Users Posts: 515 ✭✭✭Kenring


    Last winter was our coldest in almost 50 years so you're hardly pushing the boat out with that prediction :rolleyes:
    Correction, I am pushing the boat out. I have been saying all year that a milder winter is in store , vs most other forecasters who have been declaring that another extreme winter just like that last one is already in the bag.

    It illustrates something about the human psyche. We are so easily spooked. When something extreme happens we often think it's going to be the pattern henceforth for all the foreseeable future. Really, it is a protective response called shock, which closes down objectivity. We saw it in Australia with the global warming argument two years ago. One very dry year and a severe drought on one State brings a media-crowing about drought setting in for the next 1000 years. When it rains two weeks later the "experts" and media suddenly change their minds.

    In NZ we also saw it a month ago with the Christchurch 7.1 mag earthquake followed by over 1000 aftershocks. Now folk there think equally destructive earthquakes are going to come anytime soon. They do not realise that very few severe earthquakes revisit the scene of a former crime with the same intensity and destruction within a lifetime. In fact for that reason Christchurch is probably now the safest place to be. Likewise, Ireland may be one of the least likely places to get a winter repeat of 2009/10.

    The trick is to train yourself to check each year on its own merits, and not compare to averages based on the solar calendar year, and not on their own wishlist or some group or peer consensual expectation.

    Not targeting anyone on this forum, but often one dummy says something, the other dummies copy the first one, and then it gets widely reported as "scientists say.." and before you know it we're all paying some carbon or climate tax. They haven't thought of a Cold Tax yet, but they will if you give them enough rope!

    Ken Ring
    www.predictweather.com


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 646 ✭✭✭yogidc26


    Kenring wrote: »
    Correction, I am pushing the boat out. I have been saying all year that a milder winter is in store , vs most other forecasters who have been declaring that another extreme winter just like that last one is already in the bag.

    It illustrates something about the human psyche. We are so easily spooked. When something extreme happens we often think it's going to be the pattern henceforth for all the foreseeable future. Really, it is a protective response called shock, which closes down objectivity. We saw it in Australia with the global warming argument two years ago. One very dry year and a severe drought on one State brings a media-crowing about drought setting in for the next 1000 years. When it rains two weeks later the "experts" and media suddenly change their minds.

    In NZ we also saw it a month ago with the Christchurch 7.1 mag earthquake followed by over 1000 aftershocks. Now folk there think equally destructive earthquakes are going to come anytime soon. They do not realise that very few severe earthquakes revisit the scene of a former crime with the same intensity and destruction within a lifetime. In fact for that reason Christchurch is probably now the safest place to be. Likewise, Ireland may be one of the least likely places to get a winter repeat of 2009/10.
    The trick is to train yourself to check each year on its own merits, and not compare to averages based on the solar calendar year, and not on their own wishlist or some group or peer consensual expectation.

    Not targeting anyone on this forum, but often one dummy says something, the other dummies copy the first one, and then it gets widely reported as "scientists say.." and before you know it we're all paying some carbon or climate tax. They haven't thought of a Cold Tax yet, but they will if you give them enough rope!

    Ken Ring
    www.predictweather.com

    I dont post to offen here but come on that is like saying it might rain but then again it might not. We all know that forcasting so far a head is nearly impossible and have to take with a pinch of salt what anyone says about a few months ahead.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 515 ✭✭✭Kenring


    yogidc26 wrote: »
    I dont post to offen here but come on that is like saying it might rain but then again it might not. We all know that forcasting so far a head is nearly impossible and have to take with a pinch of salt what anyone says about a few months ahead.
    Incorrect. The question is, will it be a winter as bad/cold/heavy snow as last winter. It's a simple yes or no question. I'm saying the answer is no. Somehow from that you interpret I am saying both yes and no. I'll say it again in case you missed it. Mild winter, much less snow this time.
    You say "we all know.." No we don't. I have a different view and I am part of the all.
    Nearly impossible? According to whom?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator


    Kenring wrote: »
    Incorrect. The question is, will it be a winter as bad/cold/heavy snow as last winter. It's a simple yes or no question. I'm saying the answer is no. Somehow from that you interpret I am saying both yes and no. I'll say it again in case you missed it. Mild winter, much less snow this time.
    You say "we all know.." No we don't. I have a different view and I am part of the all.
    Nearly impossible? According to whom?


    Thats not really a prediction, 9 out of 10 irish winters are mild and most with less snow than last year.


  • Registered Users Posts: 515 ✭✭✭Kenring


    Thats not really a prediction, 9 out of 10 irish winters are mild and most with less snow than last year.
    This is confusing, to say the least. Here in NZ any sentence that starts "I predict that..." is called a prediction. It is fairly easy to work out why. If equally I said "I guess.." around here we would call that a guess. Or if I said I think, why, that would be a thought! Voila! It is a straight forward system! So do please enlighten me on what would consititute a real prediction because on this board I would sincerely like to join other members in making them. What's more I have now read about 6 statements that claim to be predictions by different weather services, from Met Eirann to PWS and some on this board, all going for a worse winter than last year. Mine claims the exact opposite. Please kindly explain why mine is not really a prediction whilst theirs is.

    regards
    Ken Ring
    www.predictweather.com


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,693 ✭✭✭Redsunset


    Nina EAST
    825117717427871710.png

    Nina WEST:
    82511771742787197.png


    Looks like we're all having a go at "predictions"

    So here's mine.

    Im going for the top chart,a cold and mostly dry anticyclonic influence centred roughly over germany kicking up a south easterly continental airflow.We could be sitting at the edge of this so with the atlantic trying to break through we could be seeing one or two territorial battles thus creating a heavy fall of snow in places.

    Seems a plausible outcome as any, written by the so called "experts".
    And no im not taking a swipe at any one on this forum.

    I think the media are just being ridiculous lately with their snowmageddan portrayal of the coming winter all because of the last two.
    Not too much Global warming on their Front pages at the moment,until the next hiccup that his.

    Sensational rubbish will always grap attention unfortunately.
    Rant over...........


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator


    Kenring wrote: »
    This is confusing, to say the least. Here in NZ any sentence that starts "I predict that..." is called a prediction. It is fairly easy to work out why. If equally I said "I guess.." around here we would call that a guess. Or if I said I think, why, that would be a thought! Voila! It is a straight forward system! So do please enlighten me on what would consititute a real prediction because on this board I would sincerely like to join other members in making them. What's more I have now read about 6 statements that claim to be predictions by different weather services, from Met Eirann to PWS and some on this board, all going for a worse winter than last year. Mine claims the exact opposite. Please kindly explain why mine is not really a prediction whilst theirs is.

    regards
    Ken Ring
    www.predictweather.com


    Maybe i dont count it as a prediction as your predictions are generally for publicity. Remember the september snow prediction? (actually it was precipitation in sub zero temperatures which did not happen). anyway, you got great publicity out of it and nobody commented really when it didnt happen. Now you come out with a ''prediction'', a prediction that is very likely to happen. However you are only making this prediction because so many others are not. i.e., if everyone else was sayong a mild winter is on the way, you would be forecasting snow and a very cold winter.

    Your predictions would generally have more accuracy if you put all the conditions on a sheet of paper and poked a pin at it with your eyes closed.

    Maybe you should start doing that and stop claiming credit for events that happen within 2 weeks of when you predicted them . . .

    I'd take the donegal postman word more seriously.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,996 ✭✭✭✭nacho libre


    Kenring wrote: »
    What's more I have now read about 6 statements that claim to be predictions by different weather services, from Met Eirann to PWS and some on this board, all going for a worse winter than last year.

    regards
    Ken Ring
    www.predictweather.com

    that's not quite correct Ken. Other weather services, like positive weather solutions and weatheroutlook, have predicted a cold winter, however they also stated the cold was unlikely to be as severe and sustained as last year. also I don't think anyone here has seriously predicted that the 2010/11 winter will be worst than last year. while some of us may wish it were, we all know that last year was most likely a once in 40- 50 year event in terms of sustained cold.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,789 ✭✭✭BEASTERLY


    I remember hearing ken on today a few times , he is always predicting snow in may and june for ireland.

    lol


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,693 ✭✭✭Redsunset


    Anyone see these mad headlines.

    As another freezing winter looms, council hands out 2,000 spades and tells residents: 'Dig yourselves out when it snows'





    Council chiefs have sparked outrage after proposing residents dig themselves out of the snow as Britain braces itself for another winter of Arctic conditions.

    As long-range forecasts suggest the country will be hit by blizzards and temperatures plummeting to -20c, bosses at Camden Council prepared to hand out spades.

    But their solution to the bitter weather has been slammed by those who remember the headache of last year's gritting crisis which brought widespread disruption and left people trapped in their homes.

    article-1318765-07D1F6D9000005DC-954_468x308.jpg Dig yourself out: Residents attempt to shovel ice from the road in Hartley Wintney, in Hampshire, in January. This winter is expected to bring similar conditions

    The north London council's proposal involves a 'self-help' scheme in which people can ring and request a shovel.
    The authority plans to give out more than 2,000 spades to community centres and groups, shopkeepers and families to help clear clogged-up roads and pavements


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator




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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,550 ✭✭✭Min


    I don't know why some weren't clearing pavements outside their homes in Dublin, I remember watching the news and there was a group of people standing doing nothing but complaining that the council weren't remvong the ice.
    Hello, move to the countryside and wait for the council to do something....it would be a long wait.

    I think people in towns and cities should be encouraged to clear snow and ice from the pavements outside their homes or business.

    It would have been nice to have seen the politicians doing some work in the Dáil...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,548 ✭✭✭Harps


    As far as I know its mandatory in Germany to clear the pavement around your own house whenever theres snow.

    Really annoyed me last year with everyone complaining when it takes 5 minutes if you clear it before it compacts, we cleared and gritted our area every time it snowed but it made little difference as half the neighbours did nothing and once it compacted it was like an ice rink all winter


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,819 ✭✭✭✭peasant


    redsunset wrote: »
    As long-range forecasts suggest the country will be hit by blizzards and temperatures plummeting to -20c, bosses at Camden Council prepared to hand out spades.

    A spade is just about the most useless implement for moving snow ever. You can hack some ice with it, but that's about it. A snow shovel needs to be wide and have a long handle. The idea is to place it on the ground and then walk behind and push the snow on the shovel, pushing the snow in front of you like a plow. You only start shovelling when it gets too much and you can't push it anymore. (Just in case people are thinking about getting spades now)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 646 ✭✭✭yogidc26


    Min wrote: »
    I don't know why some weren't clearing pavements outside their homes in Dublin, I remember watching the news and there was a group of people standing doing nothing but complaining that the council weren't remvong the ice.
    Hello, move to the countryside and wait for the council to do something....it would be a long wait.

    I think people in towns and cities should be encouraged to clear snow and ice from the pavements outside their homes or business.

    It would have been nice to have seen the politicians doing some work in the Dáil...

    I did this last year and then when the sun went down the path iced over again, When my next door neighbor came out to get her kids she thought that it was fine to walk on she ended up in hospital with wiplash. It was not nice tell her it was me that cleared the path :(


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator


    Sometimes, unless youre going to salt or grit the path, the resulting ice is worse than the snow before it . .


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,548 ✭✭✭Harps


    Yeah just throw a bit of sand over it afterwards

    The ice is worse at night but if you leave it and the snow compacts it becomes literally impossible to walk on so its still better to do it


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,819 ✭✭✭✭peasant


    btw ...ashes from the fire leave a really nice, grippy surface on ice (and a bit of a mess afterwards ...but safety first)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,996 ✭✭✭✭nacho libre


    peasant wrote: »
    btw ...ashes from the fire leave a really nice, grippy surface on ice (and a bit of a mess afterwards ...but safety first)

    i do that as well.


  • Registered Users Posts: 515 ✭✭✭Kenring


    Maybe i dont count it as a prediction as your predictions are generally for publicity. ...you got great publicity out of it. Now you come out with a ''prediction'', a prediction that is very likely to happen. However you are only making this prediction because so many others are not. .
    What a strange thing to say. Do I run the media then? I don't know who quotes me, and I do my work for those who find it useful. I have no control over media reports, some of which misquote me severely and it turns up here as what I was supposed to have said and didn't.
    The other point is nonsense. How can both be true - the prediction is "fairly likely to happen" but many others are saying it will not. (????)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator


    Kenring wrote: »
    What a strange thing to say. Do I run the media then? I don't know who quotes me, and I do my work for those who find it useful. I have no control over media reports, some of which misquote me severely and it turns up here as what I was supposed to have said and didn't.
    The other point is nonsense. How can both be true - the prediction is "fairly likely to happen" but many others are saying it will not. (????)


    I suppose you had no control over what you said when you were interviewed on today fm?? the producer was standing there holding a knife to your neck telling you to predict snow or else?

    the vast majority of irish winters are mild, you're not exactly doing anything groundbreaking here predicting a mild winter . . .:rolleyes:


  • Registered Users Posts: 515 ✭✭✭Kenring


    I suppose you had no control over what you said when you were interviewed on today fm?? the producer was standing there holding a knife to your neck telling you to predict snow or else?

    the vast majority of irish winters are mild, you're not exactly doing anything groundbreaking here predicting a mild winter . . .:rolleyes:
    Well then, it's obviously too groundbreaking for the others because they're still saying the opposite.. you keep contradicting yourself man


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator


    Kenring wrote: »
    Well then, it's obviously too groundbreaking for the others because they're still saying the opposite.. you keep contradicting yourself man


    I'll keep contradicting myself, the weather will keep contradicting you.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,667 ✭✭✭WolfeIRE


    I have been thinking about the following point for a couple of weeks and am still struggling to articulate so apologies in advance if it is confusing. Those who read gfs, ecm etc may have an idea what i am on about.

    Basically, i am referring to a less aggressive atlantic system than previous years which may signal something for the coming winter.

    Looking at the long term models in the past four weeks I have noticed a pattern that is different to the previous two years (the time i have been looking at the models).

    Around this time of year the warmer Atlantic air mass, when it breaks through, tends to shunt colder air over Ireland and the UK away with ease. The warmer 850hPa uppers have always moved NE usually and extended many hundreds if not thousands of miles to our north and east.

    In the past 6-8 weeks the extremities of the Atlantic systems, when they do sweep over us and replace colder air mass, do not extend much beyond the north of the island of Ireland and east coast of Britain. This has happened on at least three occasions and each time the warmer uppers have been eventually been beaten back by an easterly/north easterly flow to be followed by a northerly wind flow.

    I have no way of comparing the past 6-8 weeks to anything other than 2009 and 2008 but they are certainly showing something different in terms of the potency of our 'gulfstream effect' climate.

    I have read about a possible slowing down and cooling of the Gulf Stream but i would not be knowledgeable enough to suggest a direct link between such a probability and less influential Atlantic weather systems on NW Europe, which i have alluded to above.

    However, I am noticing that the Atlantic is not as active or influential on our climate/weather in recent weeks and the coming weeks as in the corresponding periods during 2008 and 2009.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator


    @Wolfe

    The atlantic has had very few periods when it broke through consistantly for more than a week or so since last november. Apart from some of July that is.

    Could be a good sign for the winter, or could be a sign that this really isn't going to last much longer and we're set for front after front of rain and mild temps . . .


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,667 ✭✭✭WolfeIRE


    @Wolfe
    Could be a good sign for the winter, or could be a sign that this really isn't going to last much longer and we're set for front after front of rain and mild temps . . .

    July brought us full frontal assaults from the west and SW alright Tony but besides it has been less aggressive than previous years. My main point though is the extremities of systems when they do break through.

    the below being a case in point
    ECM0-168.GIF?16-0

    The above (i know it's a week out but it's an example of what has been happening) is happening on a regular basis. Atalntic systems, which in previous years would have swept many hundreds of miles to our north and south with us in between jumpoing in puddles, is now struggling to extend much beyond our northern coastline.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,234 ✭✭✭thetonynator


    Not even getting to our northern coastline in that example!!! Well if they'd go a few hundred miles less and not get to our southern coastline for the winter it would be great!!!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,279 ✭✭✭Su Campu


    I think a more negative NAO could be the reason for this. With high pressure in the north Atlantic, this leads to a more northwesterly steering flow over us, as opposed to a more southwesterly flow with a positive NAO. This means we get situations like your chart above, where the isotherms are aligned with the isohypses, resulting in little advection one way or the other.


  • Registered Users Posts: 515 ✭✭✭Kenring


    WolfeIRE wrote: »
    I have been thinking about the following point for a couple of weeks and am still struggling to articulate so apologies in advance if it is confusing. Those who read gfs, ecm etc may have an idea what i am on about.

    Basically, i am referring to a less aggressive atlantic system than previous years which may signal something for the coming winter.

    Looking at the long term models in the past four weeks I have noticed a pattern that is different to the previous two years (the time i have been looking at the models).

    Around this time of year the warmer Atlantic air mass, when it breaks through, tends to shunt colder air over Ireland and the UK away with ease. The warmer 850hPa uppers have always moved NE usually and extended many hundreds if not thousands of miles to our north and east.

    In the past 6-8 weeks the extremities of the Atlantic systems, when they do sweep over us and replace colder air mass, do not extend much beyond the north of the island of Ireland and east coast of Britain. This has happened on at least three occasions and each time the warmer uppers have been eventually been beaten back by an easterly/north easterly flow to be followed by a northerly wind flow.

    I have no way of comparing the past 6-8 weeks to anything other than 2009 and 2008 but they are certainly showing something different in terms of the potency of our 'gulfstream effect' climate.

    I have read about a possible slowing down and cooling of the Gulf Stream but i would not be knowledgeable enough to suggest a direct link between such a probability and less influential Atlantic weather systems on NW Europe, which i have alluded to above.

    However, I am noticing that the Atlantic is not as active or influential on our climate/weather in recent weeks and the coming weeks as in the corresponding periods during 2008 and 2009.
    What is confusing is that some say the Gulf Stream is slowing, creating cold northwards, others that it is speeding up, bringing warmer waters and air northwards before it has a chance to cool from Arctic systems. I believe both are red herrings. The key is in the average monthly speed of the moon between hemispheres, which is an apsidal function. The end of October may see some very cold temperatures in some places for this reason.

    Unlike last winter, this winter sees a very much slower moon around northern declination, meaning Arctic windflows stalling, thus allowing the Gulf Stream to bring warmer conditions further north. So it matters not what the Gulf Stream speed is, and mainstream science may be looking, as is common, in the wrong place. They should be looking at not at the Gulf Stream but the combination of moon speed and moon timing of declination.

    It was the same with the Russian heatwave. In August the perigee new moon was on the cusp of changing hemispheres, trekking from north to south since 6 August, drawing weather southwards. This draws the jetstream southwards. And the result was the type of flooding rains that have occurred in Pakistan and other equatorial regions, like S China, that get summer monsoons. On 6 August, on the exact day the moon started coming S, East Germany received intense rain and flooding.

    On the other hand, Russia is a long way from the equator and MISSES that lower jetstream, because the range of the moon's hemisphere change is only 28°N to 28°S, and when the jetstream dives S it displaces masses of high pressure north, so Russia copped it.
    Here's an example: The Russian heatwave of 2007 occurred right at the end of May, from May 27 to June. The perigee NM started moving S after May 20 in that year, displacing high pressure to the north, and the build-up of heat to the ground took a few days to develop and they got a heatwave. So did Greece, and they had massive widespread fires there.

    This same jet stream pattern led to flooding in the UK during June and July 2007, and to wet summers over western Europe in both 2008 and 2009. In June and July 2007 and throughout the summers of 2008 and 2009 new moon was perigeal. The pattern began in 2007 because in mid June of 2007 new moon was perigeal, whereas in June 2006 new moon was not perigeal. In July of 2007 Russia also experienced heatwaves, and particularly Greece, which suffered widespread fires. Even in 2007, South-East Europe's heat and the UK's wet weather were both blamed on changes in the jet stream - which had taken a more southerly path across Europe that year.

    During El Nino, precipitation usually increases where the N polar jet stream moves farther south and brings more storms with it and the S polar stream moves north. Conversely, during La Nina events, WHICH WE HAVE NOW, in the N hem the polar jet stream moves more NORTH and in the S hem the S polar stream moves more to the south. So what does that tell us? Less cold coming from the north, that's what!

    For full moon to be perigeal, which changes the trend and the position of the jetstream, we'll have to wait until N hem summer of 2012.

    So take your eyes off the Gulf Stream lads and lassies, and fix y'eyes on that there moon.


  • Posts: 31,118 ✭✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    yogidc26 wrote: »
    I did this last year and then when the sun went down the path iced over again, When my next door neighbor came out to get her kids she thought that it was fine to walk on she ended up in hospital with wiplash. It was not nice tell her it was me that cleared the path :(

    The number one reason why people are reluctant to clear paths! the fear of being sued if (when) it ices up afterwards and someone gets hurt.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,693 ✭✭✭Redsunset


    Interesting last 90 days,plenty of height rises to our North which are definately indicative of a negative NAO. Long may it last.


    500z_90a.fnl.gif

    This would also explain what Wolfe has been questioning,and has already been answered.


  • Registered Users Posts: 836 ✭✭✭derekon


    redsunset wrote: »
    Interesting last 90 days,plenty of height rises to our North which are definately indicative of a negative NAO. Long may it last.


    500z_90a.fnl.gif

    This would also explain what Wolfe has been questioning,and has already been answered.

    Forgive my ignorance but if this negative NAO continues, does this mean we could be in for a colder than average winter? :D

    Derek


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,279 ✭✭✭Su Campu


    derekon wrote: »
    Forgive my ignorance but if this negative NAO continues, does this mean we could be in for a colder than average winter? :D

    Derek

    In general, yes, it usually means colder weather for northwestern Europe, as the polar jet gets knocked southwards, bringing the winter storms to Iberia and the Med.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,693 ✭✭✭Redsunset


    A negative NAO is one of the essential ingredients of a colder than normal winter,however there's more to it than that.

    Lets just say myself and many others will be keeping a close eye on it.

    I post this again,

    http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/teledoc/teleintro.shtml


  • Registered Users Posts: 836 ✭✭✭derekon


    Thanks to both Su Campu and Red Sunset for the explanation on the NAO

    Is there any website that monitors the NAO and if so, is there a particular "number" the NAO should be under which demonstrated the gulf stream is heading further south towards Iberia , North Africa?

    Derek


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,693 ✭✭✭Redsunset


    derekon wrote: »
    Thanks to both Su Campu and Red Sunset for the explanation on the NAO

    Is there any website that monitors the NAO and if so, is there a particular "number" the NAO should be under which demonstrated the gulf stream is heading further south towards Iberia , North Africa?

    Derek


    I gave you one.
    Don't be afraid to click on the blue parts:)

    Jet stream not gulf stream


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,279 ✭✭✭Su Campu


    nao.sprd2.gif

    Interesting that the average J/F/M has been following a multidecadal pattern, reaching a peak in the 90s, and is now on a downward fall.

    season.JFM.nao.gif


  • Registered Users Posts: 836 ✭✭✭derekon


    redsunset wrote: »
    I gave you one.
    Don't be afraid to click on the blue parts:)

    Jet stream not gulf stream

    Apologies Red Sunset, oversight on my part :)
    Thanks for the reply, appreciated.

    Derek


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,693 ✭✭✭Redsunset





    A classic by Bob Dylan,

    For THE TIMES THEY ARE A CHANGING folks.

    Interesting second graph Su.

    Says it all really.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,550 ✭✭✭Min


    Su Campu wrote: »
    nao.sprd2.gif

    Interesting that the average J/F/M has been following a multidecadal pattern, reaching a peak in the 90s, and is now on a downward fall.

    season.JFM.nao.gif

    I am just wondering with the last graph if it is an indication that the NAO goes in patterns, I mean you had a period from the early 1950's to early 1970's where it was in negative territory.
    Did this lead to predictions of a coming ice age, I will make myself sound old but I'm not that old, but when I was going to primary school it was talk of a coming ice age that prevailed before it changed to global warming before it changed again to the present climate change.

    The positive NAO coincides with some very warm periods which led to CO2 being blamed, is all this a coincidence?

    I hope I made sense lol


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,667 ✭✭✭WolfeIRE


    the scenario of warmer uppers failing to extend much further north than our northen coastline are again showing in long range forecast.

    Thanks su and red for NAO explanation which does make sense.

    http://www.meteociel.fr/modeles/gefs_cartes.php?code=0&ech=72&mode=1&runpara=0


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,693 ✭✭✭Redsunset


    131339.JPG


    The future can only be one outcome in my eyes.:D

    Just look at the NAO singing from same Hymn sheet as ENSO phases


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