My name is Grant LeBlanc and I am the creator of McMinnville Weather.com. I like to give my opinions on the current weather or anything that catches my eye and so I will post it all here. I will also post any project related updates and budget related updates periodically.
Friday, November 18, 2005
Food for Thought....
Thanks to whoever submitted this piece to me, it would be nice if you could leave a name for I can give the credit to you and not just some stranger. This writing below is not by me, but it is very very good in information for those of you who worry too much about this ridge!
--Looking back at a some of the consistently coldest winters in NW Oregon and SW Washington, 1949-50 and 1985-86 actually stand out with similarities to this season so far. Both of these years had very mild preiods, most likely assoicated with anomalously strong high pressure ridges, in the month of November. In fact,the November of 1949, before one of the coldest winters ever recorded in Portland, was actually quite dry and mild, with temperatures in the mid and even upper sixties for the first six days of the month and temperatures remaining well above normal the entire month. Same with November 1985. Just weeks before the notorious Thanksgiving cold snap and snowstorm of '85, PDX was basking in temps in the mid sixties for consecutive days. This leads me to wonder, do mild November spells mean a sudden plunge in temperatures to come? Well this has been the setup so far this year, and by the looks of it was probably the same in 49-50 and 85-86. Zonal flow through October and some of November allows arctic air to beome bottled up to the north and grow colder and colder. Check out the temps in Fairbanks the past couple weeks if you don't believe me. Suddenly, a ridge pops over the west, dislodging this icebox and bringing chunks of it down over the east. After this ridge sits over us for a couple weeks or more, giving a dry, mild period, like we're in now, retrogression occurs and bam, we've got ourselves a ridge out over the mid-pacific, directing on its western flank airmasses of arctic origin straigt from the Yukon to the Northwest. By the looks of it this is what happened by the end of November '49 and '85, and it may happen again by the end of November '05. Check out the latest GFS and accuweather.com forecast for Portland for the weekend after Thanksgiving. Snow, highs in the thirties? Food for thought...
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ok, one question and perhaps you have considered this....but the water off of the PNW appears to be warming over the last 10 days or so....cause for concern? or is this a temporary setup from the ridge we are in?
ReplyDeleteif you review the current anomolies with the recent archive you will see this..
https://www.fnmoc.navy.mil/PUBLIC/
sigh....i have not given up hope but again this is all to familiar
thankyou for your encouragement
Grant, I need to make an important correction. The KOMO site did originally say that the huge ridge was in 1995, but their web site discussion said 1985. I emailed them, and it was 1985, and not 1995 like I had posted. Still, I think that was a good winter overall, and one that was mentioned by the other person whose message you published.
ReplyDeleteBrian