Could be a NW meteorologist |
But the sun is weakening and nighttime is getting longer, and the impacts on temperature are being seen. Nighttime has lengthened from 8 to 12 hours since June. Nighttime temperatures are now dropping consistently into the 40s over much of the region (particularly away from the water and where they are less clouds) and some cool locations, particularly in mountain valleys or east of the Cascades in low spots, are heading down into the 20s. Frost has returned to the Northwest! Note that some ridge-top locations are still staying in the 50s.
Let me illustrate. Here are the minimum temperatures last evening (as of 6 AM). Dark greens (40s), light greens (50s), aquamarine (30s), light blue (20s).
The thirties are nearly all east of the Cascade crest...here is the same figure only showing locations of 35 and below:
Will rain return? Not in the near future. The latest forecast models suggest a very weak frontal passage, mainly north of Washington, on Friday...perhaps a sprinkle along the coast and over southern B.C. But then ANOTHER major ridge builds over the region. Great weekend and the early portion of next week.
Take a look at the upper-level forecast for next Tuesday at 5 PM. The coloring shows the anomaly (difference from normal) at this level (500 hPa--around 18,000 ft). Major positive anomaly (this means ridging) just off our coast. Folks...this is a dry pattern for us.
Looking at the North American ensemble forecast for Seattle shows the story over the next few weeks. The second panel shows precipitation and the bars indicate the range of the ensembles (running of many forecasts). Although a few ensembles suggest some very light rain, the overwhelming majority are dry. This suggests little if any rain through the first week of October.
Ideal weather for taking that fall hike in the mountains.
Appreciate this; will be sure to get out this weekend.
ReplyDeleteWhat's the long-term forecast for the region, ie, how is the outlook for the winter overall? Last I read, we were in an EPO-neutral phase -- neither Nina or Nino --- is that still the case? Or is it starting to tip one way or the other? And what exactly would we expect from an EPO-neutral winter?
Hi Cliff,
ReplyDeleteSeems to me that summer as a whole has been moving LATER- starting later and ending later- over the last several years. Witness how wet June was. Is this a real trend or just "noise"? I must say I prefer that the good weather coincide with the longer days and direct sunlight. For example, back East, June is always noticeably warmer that September- not here though...
As of mid-September, most (but not all) of the dynamical models predict El Niño SST conditions for the Sep-Nov season, and most of these show a continuation of El Niño through the remainder of 2012. Although most of the statistical models predict a weaker El Niño strength than the dynamical models, a minority show only warm-neutral condtions through the remainder of 2012 despite weak El Niño levels already in the latest seasonal average observed SSTs.
ReplyDeleteWasn't '08-'09 a "neutral" winter? Portland got more than a foot of snow in mid-December, the airport was closed at one point just before or during Christmas, and the snow seemed to last for quite awhile.
ReplyDeleteI'm kind of hoping for that again this year. Makes it more interesting than just rain.
How about that big "Cinnamon Roll" spinning up in Alaska. That'd make a good thread. Better than this dull weather
ReplyDeleteRead an article yesterday that said that it was going to be El Nino, but it hasn't quite kicked in yet. When it does kick in it's supposed to be weak, maybe moderate at best. They are calling for cooler than normal October through November and much cooler than normal for December. Here's the link....http://www.weather.com/news/weather-forecast/late-fall-early-winter-outlook-20120924...what's your take on this Cliff?
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