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Yes. I just read a station is already forecasting next weeks wintertime weather. Talk about being a glutton for punishment. The egg will still be on their faces from this stacked deck they’ve been dealing all week. Live by the model, and be made a fool out of it.I think the chance for blown forecasts is off the charts with this one, both human and computer. I expect reality to slap some folks.
Yeah, he should have to pay people that were foolish enough to listen to his forecasts.He did a funny short/video on calling his stock broker about buying bread stock before going on air with a winter forecast.
The "wedge" is a different beast in GA than Alabama. I have seen Atlanta 30 degrees colder than Birmingham sometimes.I fully anticipate the models underestimating the westward extent of the CAD until the last minute, which looks to be in line with what the FFC is thinking. It happens nearly every time.
Can you knock it off? I realize you must have a grudge against either weather models or the tv weather enterprise as a whole considering you’ve posted non-stop about it for at least an hour.Yeah, he should have to pay people that were foolish enough to listen to his forecasts.
I say temps in North Alabama won’t plunge until Sunday, and the moisture will be gone before it does. All we get is rain. I’ll live with it if I’m wrong, but I’m confident.If you create a thread of nothing but your own personal weather forecasts for a specified area, I will pin the thread and leave it up through the end of May to wrap up winter and get through severe season in the southeast.
I get to keep score.
Definitely. My parents moved to Atlanta in 1986 after I had grown up mainly in Memphis and New Orleans. I didn't know what a wedge was until a drizzly AUGUST day there with cool temperatures (maybe even upper 50's, although my mind may be exaggerating how cool). I had never experienced anything like that. Then I lived in Durham, NC for two years in the 1990's and REALLY got introduced to the wedge!The "wedge" is a different beast in GA than Alabama. I have seen Atlanta 30 degrees colder than Birmingham sometimes.
You see this a lot during severe season; the wedge often helps diminish significant threats in the ATL metro especially in early spring versus Bham always seeming to be under the gun for tornadoesThe "wedge" is a different beast in GA than Alabama. I have seen Atlanta 30 degrees colder than Birmingham sometimes.
I have no grudge. I’ve been a member here since 2017, and until I violate the rules, you mind your posts and I’ll mind mine.Can you knock it off? I realize you must have a grudge against either weather models or the tv weather enterprise as a whole considering you’ve posted non-stop about it for at least an hour.
If you do have an issue, you’re totally free to do that. Go make your own thread crusading against what you see as the all greedy local tv revenue scheme. However, stop derailing this thread with your “dear diary” posts.
This event still has a ways to go and for some they are receiving important updates here. Let’s not turn it into a crusade against models thread.
Absolutely! The atmospheric condition that often spares NGA from severe weather is now the enemy.The "wedge" is a different beast in GA than Alabama. I have seen Atlanta 30 degrees colder than Birmingham sometimes.
Yep! It's a major boon in protecting us during severe weather season, very reliable at stunting instability via WAA.You see this a lot during severe season; the wedge often helps diminish significant threats in the ATL metro especially in early spring versus Bham always seeming to be under the gun for tornadoes
The wedge creeps into Al sometimes. hoping it does this time, given the warm nose is over blown.The "wedge" is a different beast in GA than Alabama. I have seen Atlanta 30 degrees colder than Birmingham sometimes.
Out west, the Baja low is easy to spot. It’s closed, well organized, and already showing a dry slot curling around the back side. That dry air tells you the system has matured. Lows that look like this before they start moving east usually spell trouble. To the north, the Arctic air shows up as a broad, smooth mass sliding south out of Canada. There’s very little texture to it, and that’s typical of cold this dense and dry. It undercuts warmer air instead of mixing with it, and once it settles in, it tends to stay put longer than forecast. Between those two features is where this storm takes shape. Southern stream energy is lifting out of northern Mexico, while the northern stream digs just enough to allow the two to interact instead of staying separate. You can see the gradient tightening from Texas through the Tennessee Valley and up the East Coast. That’s the zone where lift, moisture, and cold air all get forced together, and that’s where winter storms almost always turn complicated. This is why winter weather can’t be understood by models alone. Models offer scenarios. Satellite imagery shows what’s already happening. The cold air is advancing. The southern system is organized. The moisture feed is in place. From here on out, the uncertainty lives in the details - how far north the warm air noses in aloft, how fast the cold air bleeds south at the surface, and where snow gives way to sleet and ice. Winter storms reward attention. You watch how quickly the Baja low opens up, how clean the phasing becomes, and how stubborn the cold air is when warmer air tries to overrun it. In my experience, as one gets closer to the event, by the time the models finish running and the output comes out, much of the outcome has already been decided overhead.I have no grudge. I’ve been a member here since 2017, and until I violate the rules, you mind your posts, and I’ll mind mine.Can you knock it off? I realize you must have a grudge against either weather models or the tv weather enterprise as a whole considering you’ve posted non-stop about it for at least an hour.
If you do have an issue, you’re totally free to do that. Go make your own thread crusading against what you see as the all greedy local tv revenue scheme. However, stop derailing this thread with your “dear diary” posts.
This event still has a ways to go and for some they are receiving important updates here. Let’s not turn it into a crusade against models thread.
Hopefully not. I’d rather have 10 inches of snow than any ice.They are telling you that they don’t buy the model output verbatim. We’re really close to having an ice storm N of the TN river if the low tracks more S. I’m a bit nervous about this.