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Sunday, December 31, 2023

Colder air and potential storms to kick off our 2024

Happy 2024 everyone. Hope your holiday was safe and joyous and I certainly hope the new year brings with it some snowfall. One thing I've learned staring at too many weather maps over the year is to never get too caught in the moment. Model data is fluid and can signal an overly abysmal outcome one day and an amazing one two days later. It can provide a signal, but one needs to boil that down from the persistent noise. On New Year's eve, the afternoon suite of models provided a sensational outlook for Vermont winter weather lovers during the first half of January, but only three days ago the same set of indicators has us shooting blanks, averting much of the snow and struggling to attain the persistent cold we've been waiting for, over the last month. Boiling this "noise"  down, we can certainly conclude that trends over the last 24-48 hours are very positive. We have some concerns, but the weather maps show an abundance of storminess to go along with a much healthier pool of cold to work with on our continent. It's a new year and certainly a new day when it comes to the prevailing weather pattern. 

As promised I think some sunshine returns for New Year's day. A chilly, but seasonable start to 2024 with a clipper system passing too far to our south to provide any chance for snowfall. That same clipper will intensify some out over the ocean and provide a beautiful starry Monday night across Vermont followed by a sun-drenched Tuesday to go along with more sub-freezing temperatures. Clouds will return for Wednesday and it was certainly all of our collective hopes that these clouds would come in advance of the first chance for significant snow coming out of our recent holiday misery. This was the "split flow" storm I had such high hopes for, but the southward advancing polar jet appears to be moving any potential amplification out over the ocean. Still, we have a first and rather healthy batch of cold advancing upon us and some lingering moisture with the associated clipper. Snowfall, albeit light, remains a likely outcome late Wednesday, Wednesday night into Thursday and it should be enough to yield an accumulation of a few inches. The incoming cold certainly rivals the coldest of the season and ensures a very sub-freezing first full weekend of Jan though that won't be the biggest story of that period. 

The 2nd in the series of southern streamers will dominate weather talk in the coming few days. It has an impact date of Jan 7 and 8 (first weekend of Jan), appears more potent, has a supply of antecedent cold air and does not have the trailing polar disturbance to kick if offshore. What makes this storm more certain than others ? It doesn't require a phase or any specific interaction with the polar jet. It will all just down to the track and just how far north this particular system decides to deposit its moisture. There have been some historic nor'easters during super nino winters that have managed to avoid Vermont entirely (looking at you '83 and '16) and that's always a possibility, though the overall jet stream configuration suggests both interior and coastal New Enland are in play. Get ready, this one will be heavily discussed in the coming days. 

Ensembles have been signalling (with lots of noise)  two major themes during the 2nd week of January. Another possible storm around the time of January 9th/10th and a more widespread and sustained outbreak of cold of an uncertain intensity behind this storm. The storm on the 9th/10th is a product of the somewhat problematic Pacific and threatens to amplify the jet too early and too far west. These are the moments when we need some downstream blocking over the Davis Strait or over Greenland to prevent such a storm from charging at the Great Lakes and indeed we have it ! So although such a storm may make a bid to cut well west of New England, it will make every effort to make an energy transfer to the coast. 

And yes we have a more sustained round of cold weather to follow. Even the Pacific was shown to weaken considerably after the 10th allowing the negative AO/NAO combination to do its work in peace. Just the way I like it !

Friday, December 29, 2023

Some wet snow for Saturday and then a couple possible storms for Jan 4 and Jan 9 as we begin to travel down the 2024 road

Temperatures on Friday are moving in the right direction, but it remains damp and cloudy with terrible visibility and very little snow on the ground. Add this holiday to the large list of rain-drenched Christmas holiday thaws we have seen this century. Very strange how that works. 

A swath of moisture over Quebec will rotate southward in association with the last of this recent train of low pressure areas. This particular storm, had it manage to strengthen faster, could have reinvigorated the wintry spirit for New Year's weekend. It won't do that, but temperatures will slowly cool, enough to allow rain to change to snow over the high elevations Friday evening, base areas later in the evening and even valley locations by Saturday morning. The mountains should see a several hour period of snow from this extending through midday Saturday and this means an elevation sensitive 2-6 inches before we close out the ski day on 12/30. The snow consistency should remain relatively wet in most places, but certainly an improvement over the rain. Another improvement in the short term outlook relates to the cloud clover. A clipper system diving through the Great Lakes Sunday appears a little better defined and will move south of Vermont. This should suck some of the cloudiness with it and allow for a few breaks in the overcast to appear on New Year's Eve. As the storm intensifies offshore on New Year's Day,  it will help produce what I think will be a predominantly sunny day to start 2024. Temperatures on Saturday will be in the 30's under the clouds, near 30 Sunday under less clouds and upper 20's with excellent visibility Monday with the sunshine. 

We remain stuck in the Pacific air to start 2024 so temperatures will remain mild in a relative sense, though mostly below freezing on the mountain. More clouds are expected to return for Tuesday and Wednesday and some light snow could accompany that on Tuesday. The more important item on the weather map is a potential storm for Thursday. This would result from the split flow setup I've been excited about for well over a week now. We've got a southern streamer near the Gulf Coast and a clipper near Lake Superior late Wednesday evening (Jan 3) that will try and merge and do so something special for us for Jan 4. Models have struggled to get on board with this idea but have finally begun to show a possibility for such an occurrence. It remains "a chance" for now, but certainly not yet likely. At the very least, the clipper system and cold air behind it ensures sub-freezing temperatures through the first full weekend of January. 

Thanks to the support of the AO particularly a blocking ridge indicated to set up just north of Alaska in the Arctic Circle, we finally have a mechanism in place capable of bringing polar air into Canada. The Hudson Bay is set up to have its latest freeze (on record I believe) thanks to all the mild air, but arctic sea ice has actually been closing in on a 20-year high thanks to a healthy buildup in areas not near the Hudson Bay. In spite of the Canadian chill down, we still have some conflicting indicators in the teleconnection indices with a slightly charged Pacific and a negative PNA. Lots of storminess is expected to descend on the west coast late next week and then Rocky Mountains for the weekend of the 6th and 7th. The American GFS has repeatedly shown this evolving into an inland runner for us to contend with around the time of January 9th, though other ensemble guidance has shown some potential here. Our best defense against an inland runner is the -NAO and we have that working for us by January 8th, so we could certainly turn any potential storm into something positive at our latitude. It will certainly help to have a bit more cold nearby though it would certainly also be nice if the Great Lakes aggregate was colder and would be less of a northward drag on storms. 

Beyond January 9th has a colder look, at least for a few days with some of the Arctic air over Canada indicated to move south into the United States.

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Big New Year's holiday surprise looks less likely, but first half of January continues to look promising l

 Keeping score at home, I have Wednesday, December 27th as the 5th consecutive day of overcast conditions. It's an ugly stretch for many reasons and the clouds are largely going to be with us through the New Year's holiday with just a chance for a few breaks in the overcast on Sunday (New Year's eve) and Monday (New Year's day). Lets just hope we are prepaying our cloudy tax now, in advance of the solar eclipse in April. More importantly, we've also been paying the warm/rain tax on another holiday. The intermittent rain along with the poor visibility will continue through Friday. I hoped we could bring snow summit areas as soon as the 29th, but the persistent warmth in the lowest several thousand feet of the atmosphere promises to be with us until Friday evening, when at that point it is expected to get erased allowing for the potential of some light snow at the highest elevations first, and then at base areas later in the evening. 

So can we manufacture a New Year's holiday surprise ? Doesn't appear as it if will happen unfortunately. We will be cold enough for snow on Saturday and we should receive at least some light snow throughout the day with a couple inches accumulation possible. Unless we can get some more robust development of this dragging low pressure area, it will be tougher to generate a) the heavier snowfall and b) the sub 30-degree temperatures we would need for the powdery snow at the higher elevations. The door remains open for a holiday miracle and storms that require phase such as this one can always surprise. 

I hope we can begin an extended stretch of sub-freezing temperatures to the northern Vermont mountains beginning on Sunday. A clipper type system dives southeast that day and is expected to mostly disperse but it will bring clouds, some snow showers to go along with that chance of a few breaks in the overcast. New Year's day has a better chance for a few sunny breaks and should at least feature improved visibility with temperatures remaining in the 20's on the mountain. 

The split flow being indicated for the end of next week would win a beauty contest in my geeky world. It looks magnificent, but we still need to execute as to creating a storm out of all this. We also have to bring more cold air into the picture and although we begin flooding the North American continent with polar air, this is a process that needs time to play out. Most of the air over Vermont next week is more Pacific in origin and will allow 2024 to start on the above side of normal though it should remain mostly below freezing on the mountain (not so in valley areas). Still watching for something in that January 4th-6th time frame since that is when that aforementioned split flow could result in a big east coast jet amplification and storm. Coastal areas will need more cold for a big accumulation, but Vermont appears cold enough for a sizeable snow but we need a storm to make all that happen. 

The longer range has strong support from the NAO which is appears poised to make a decisive push into negative territory and more tepid support from the AO which should continue to allow arctic cold to push southward over North America. The NAO becomes a bigger ally when it comes to storminess by doing two key things. 1) Becoming an active participant in the Inland Runner Prevention Program (IRPP and also my poor attempt at humor) and 2) Allowing east coast storminess to linger in the maritimes allowing for extended periods of snow for the interior New England mountains. I have always been an skeptic that a -NAO correlates well to east coast cold (AO, PNA and EPO are better IMO), but Vermont doesn't need that as much in January. Speaking of the EPO and the Pacific more generally is where I am less enthused. We can tolerate what is being currently indicated in the aggregation of ensemble guidance but the feistier Pacific that is indicated after January 6th does favor the best action over the Rocky Mountains. Taken together though, the first half of January looks pretty good for most of ski country throughout North America and I remain optimistic.


Monday, December 25, 2023

Short term rainy outlook could be overshadowed New Year's weekend surprise !

 I hope everyone enjoyed this year's Christmas holiday even without the deep snow we once had. The holiday season has had a recent history littered with thaws and rain events and we can add 2023 to the list. A very disorganized and slow moving storm system is telegraphed to approach interior New England Tuesday night and promises to continue the stretch of cloudiness we have seen through the end of the week and even into New Year's weekend. More on that in a minute. There remains very little cold air to work with as has been advertised for several updates. Even a more favorable trajectory of this storm will fail to alter another wet outcome at least initially. Rain will arrive Wednesday morning and continue sporadically through Wednesday night into Thursday. No flooding risk with this event as the rain appears lighter, more intermittent colder and will be falling over minimal snow cover. The storm responsible for the initial dose of wet weather is anchored by a slow moving upper level closed low and as it moves a little closer to the area Thursday we might begin to see some mixed precipitation and snow above 3,000 feet but accumulations by Thursday night will be light and mostly insignificant. In short, the first 72 hours is the worst part of the current outlook; after that, things get better. 

Right off the bat, we have some big question marks that still remain unanswered and will determine the fate of New Year's weekend. The same closed upper low pressure center will slowly continue to spin eastward on Friday and as it does so, it gets a big shortwave injection of jet energy diving south out of the Hudson Bay. This is all part of a realigning weather pattern that can't happen soon enough, but this late Friday infusion of energy is critical and if we can achieve the right kind of phase, it will result in an amazing result for the weekend. We've had one model hammering away at this solution Christmas day, the Canadian model while another, the European model has been showing hints. What's this result you ask ? How about any rain or drizzle Friday turning to heavy snow and continuing through a good part of Saturday yeilding a foot-plus of powder for the northern Vermont high country ? Yes, this result is in play ! I can't make any promises yet, as this outcome is entirely contingent on the timing of that "kicker" system diving south out of the Hudson Bay which brings both the energy and the late supply of colder weather that's been missing all week. After glancing at the Christmas evening run of the Euro ensemble, I am willing to place chances for heavy snow at about 30 percent while the remaining 70 percent consists of either a lighter snow or a miss. We aren't categorically "cold" yet this weekend but we should stay sub-freezing on the mountain whether or not we receive the goods with temperatures staying mostly in the 20's or low 30's with clouds limiting daily temperature ranges. 

More generally, the playing field after the next few days has plenty of prospects. Case in point, the American GFS model has us missing the event on Saturday but potentially scoring a few days after that. Meanwhile, colder arctic air will get a chance to envelop northern parts of the North American continent and finally get a chance to have a greater say on weather in Vermont by the first full weekend of January. We have just a picture perfect split flow look just ahead of this aforementioned weekend and this gives us an excellent chance to spin up a substantial snow event of some kind between January 4th (a Thursday) and January 6th (a Saturday). After that, it becomes a mixed bag of indicators with help coming from the NAO which appears lined up to be solidly negative for the first 10 days of January and some lesser help from the AO which is expected to gently support more arctic air over much of Canada. I am a little bothered by action in the Pacific as we move toward January 8th (2nd Monday of the month), but conflicting teleconnections have proven to be an effective combination during the middle of winter.


Thursday, December 21, 2023

Storm after Christmas is most likely to start wet but could still finish snowy while pattern to start 2024 looks promising

Happy winter solstice folks ! Nice to be able celebrate the occasion with some bright sunshine, something we should be able to do again on Friday, a chilly day embedded within our current mild weather pattern. Most of the North American continent with the exception of Alaska has gotten in on the mild air and much of central Canada can expect an unusually mild Christmas next few days as above freezing temperatures surge northward deep into the provinces of Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontarios. Vermont will get milder as well beginning with some 30 degree readings on Saturday afternoon and upwards of close to 40 on Sunday, Christmas Eve. Cloudiness associated with this warmer push of temperatures is expected to advance into the region for the weekend and some light snow or mixed precipitation is expected to make it as far as western and central NY late Saturday but is not indicated to advance eastward from there. Thus, the dry forecast through Christmas day (and even beyond) continues to hold and so does the mild weather with temperatures expected to reach the mid 40's both on the 25th and Tuesday the 26th. 

The latest on the potential storm for next week is this. We remain in search of our lost cold because there's very little to be found in Canada. The track of next week's storm looks promising, but the cold is in such short supply across Quebec as low pressure approaches from the south and west, that a first chapter in the story of this storm appears to be rain. The wet weather would arrive would arrive late on Tuesday or on Wednesday December 27th and persist for several hours. As this is happening the jet stream will be undergoing a bit of a realignment and this will allow allow chillier air to move southward, giving the storm in question a potential infusion of much needed cold before it slowly departs. Lots of questions remain unanswered, but our hope is that a 2nd chapter in this story could be a snowier one late in the holiday week. The storm appears to be moving slow enough for this to be a reasonable possibility, especially over the high country though we need a few things to fall into place. The IPhone is telling me rain for the Thursday/Friday time frame (28th and 29th) and I don't think this paints a complete picture of the various possibilities. 

I really like the outlook for the New Years holiday into the early part of 2024 though I am surprised at the amount of social media weather personalities are talking up the cold. The pattern does support "colder" outcome than the mild December we are experiencing but there is no indication that the polar vortex is gearing up for a major assault on the midwest or northeastern United States through the first week of January. This is actually a good thing for Vermont snow lovers because the combination of just normalized temperatures and the split flow regime setting up across western North America is fantastic for big storm potential. It is more likely we are confined to lighter snowfall amounts for the New Year's holiday weekend along with the seasonable day time temperatures, but I would certainly expect talk of something bigger to enhance as we advance a few days into 2024.

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

5 days of mostly dry weather through Christmas, a possible storm next week and an encouraging outlook start 2024

To those impacted by Monday's flooding, my sincerest sympathies. I've been on the receiving end of a few floods and the cleanup is not a fun existence, especially when one has to deal with it multiple times in a year.  Rainfall amounts were impressive in many areas totalling 2-3 inches, but it was the intensity of the melt-off, much of it fueled by the combination of high winds and high dewpoints that was the catalyst for this event. Without the deep early season snow across the northern VT high country, I think the flooding would be fairly minimal. 

River levels are dropping quite rapidly as of Tuesday and an extended period of dry weather will help them drop further. Starting Wednesday, we are looking at 5 days with minimal precipitation chances. This takes us through Christmas with many of those day, including the winter solstice, featuring sunshine. We actually have some arctic air working its way into eastern Canada late this week and some of this will work its way into Vermont Thursday and Friday. This will be a big assist to snowamaking operations which can expect an extended duration of sub-freezing temperatures beginning Wednesday night and persisting through early Saturday. Temperatures are expected to moderate during the day Saturday, and the sunshine which will be a big part of the Thursday/Friday weather picture is likely to fade behind some high cloudiness. Saturday, would be the one day we could see some warm advection induced light snow, but chances of this are low and chances of an accumulation are lower. Christmas Eve and Christmas Day will feature milder days with sub-freezing nights which is weather more typical of March. Both appear comfortable for getting outside though it would certainly be a lot better with more snow on the ground. 

Our next shot at that aforementioned snow comes in the days after Christmas. Models are converging on the significant east coast storm idea and its again being fueled by El Nino and it will again arrive with only minimal amounts of available cold air. Fortunately "minimal" is not zero, at the risk of sounding like Jim Carrey, and significant snowfall is certainly a possible outcome. By Tuesday, December 26h, mild air will be encompassing a large portion of the eastern seaboard and will include most, if not all of interior New England. As the conglomeration of storminess makes its approach either Tuesday, Tuesday night or Wednesday, colder air or at least that minimal amount of it, will have the capability of becoming a significant part of this winter storm and providing us with "a chance". Elevation is likely to play a role in snowfall amounts and consistency and a more rainy outcome is also still on the table. 

Our chances for snow with the system next week appear better as teleconnection indices gradually become more favorable. The biggest ally next week will be the PNA as the expanded ridge in the jet stream responsible for the large swath of North American warmth is pushed west. Looking toward New Year's weekend and beyond we get some additional support from the EPO and AO, both of which become favorable. It's the specific structure of the indicated jet stream which is most encouraging and includes a ridge isolated to western North America with  the pineapple express tunneling underneath and colder arctic air pushing south towards the eastern part of North America. It will take some for the cold to get anchored on our continent, its been sitting in Mongolia and eastern Russia for much of this month and this is why the snow/rain situation remains tenuous next week. Beyond that storm though, we should have better cold air support yielding an outlook for the early part of 2024 that is pretty encouraging.


Sunday, December 17, 2023

Better outlook remains as we head closer to 2024, but so does the windswept heavy rain at all elevatios for Monday

Though the holiday season is certainly in full swing, the sea of green on the NWS BTV forecast map is not bringing out my festive spirit. Those "greens" indicate that a flood watch has been issued for most of the state with heavy rain expected for much of Monday. We won't pull any magic tricks with this storm with El Nino bringing us its very worst personality traits. Encouraging signs are still on the horizon as we approach the start of 2024, but the shorter range outlook is not looking especially wintry. 

Here are the gory details regarding the rain. It arrives Sunday evening as a light rain along with calmer winds. By Monday morning, the heavier rain and stronger winds will have arrived and when combined with the mild, near 50 degree temperatures and high dewpoints, the snow will melt very quickly. The high resolution model data is converging on the 2-plus inch of rain scenario; which, when combined with the snow melt will produce the flooding potential that the National Weather Service is highlighting. Rain will end abruptly Monday evening and colder temperatures will arrive by Tuesday morning though with substantially less snow on the ground. Elevation won't save us from this rain, even at the top of Mt Washington.

The rest of the upcoming week will manage to feature mostly sub-freezing temperatures across the northern Vermont high country though valley locations will continue to climb above freezing on the afternoons of Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. I can't promise much snow, but there is a strong jet impulse associated with the arrival of Tuesday's cold. Had this feature arrived a little sooner it might have inspired a snowy finish to the Monday storm, but it still appears capable of bringing snow showers and snow squalls to the MRV during the day on Tuesday. I get the sense that someone in Vermont will get lucky with this snow and see 6 inches but most areas will see 3 or less with a dry outlook Wednesday to Friday. 

With growing confidence, the dry weather forecast mentioned above can be extended into the Christmas holiday weekend, a period that looks very tranquil with above normal temperatures, but no torching. Across North America, the days leading up to Christmas will feature a massive jet stream ridge over the central part of the continent, a classic feature of El Nino that will will cause record breaking temperatures across the upper Midwest and central Canadian provinces. Northern New England will escape the record temperatures and also be on the receiving end of some much needed sunshine during the darkest period of the year. By Christmas Day, our next storm will be organizing and gathering strength and certainly could spread clouds back into the region though precipitation might be able to hold off until Monday night or Tuesday, though there remains some uncertainty as to the timing. 

The potential storm on the 26th certainly looks colder than December 18tth, but the glaring lack of arctic cold remains. The pattern will gradually be undergoing a more favorable transformation with the large North American jet stream ridge retrograding toward the western part of the continent. At the same time, Pacific storminess is showing the potential to undercut this ridge producing the split flow setup that I just love. That said, we still need just a little arctic cold and it's going to take a little time to build up a decent pool of said cold to our north. This makes a potential storm on the 26th appear marginal in terms of rain or snow, but the odds appear better with a possible next storm around the New Years holiday weekend time frame. Close your eyes and take a deep breath and have faith that we will get through this.


 

Friday, December 15, 2023

El Nino showing off the worst version of itself on Monday but longer range outlook has a bit more promise

Much of the central part of North America has been getting the wrath of the current El Nino for much of this month consisting of much above average temperatures and little snowfall So far Vermont has managed to escape much of this, we've continued to get snowfall over the northern Vermont high country and temperatures have been at least shouting distance from average though not especially cold. 

Unfortunately, mother nature is sending us its own past due notice and is seeking repayment. Monday's storm has all of El Nino's worst elements and Vermont does not appear positioned to escape any of it. The best news I can provide readers regarding this storm is that the nasty weather should avoid weekend skiing activities. Intervals of sunshine on Saturday with excellent visibility and calm winds can be expected to go along with temperatures in the 30's. Sunday will be cloudier and a little milder but the rain is expected to mostly hold off until the evening. 

Monday's big storm is a powerful southern streamer originating in the Gulf of Mexico. It will bring with it an abundance of moisture and then continue to intensify along the east coast, grabbing relative mild marine Atlantic Ocean air and depositing it deep into interior sections of the northeast and a large chunk of Quebec. There was already a glaring lack of cold air in the existing weather picture and the model consensus is taking this powerful storm and tracking it up the Delaware Valley and ultimately west of the entire state. If this holds, it will produce an ugly result of windswept heavy rain. The precipitation would begin Sunday evening in more tranquil fashion but winds will be gusty by Monday morning and both temperatures and dewpoints are expected to rise into the 50's. We will need to find a way to avoid the wind, the heaviest rain and the high dewpoints because this combination will wipe out much of what was an outstanding start to the season it pains me to say. Still a slight bit of room for this storm to maneuver into a less disastrous outcome, but some wet weather will be hard to avoid and the current outlook could feature over an inch of rain and even some isolated flood risks.

There's a small area of cold that will become entrained into the departing storm from the west. Prior to Friday, sporadic model output was suggesting that the incoming cold could ignite a 2nd, colder low pressure area capable of producing snowfall. Models took much of this away Friday, but this remains a possible scenario in the mid-week time frame. 

There is some better news in the long range. Though there isn't a mechanism, or a high latitude blocking element present to really chill the North American continent down, the pattern still appears more promising toward the holiday time frame because of an emerging positive PNA structure and the potential to produce split flow out of this jet stream structure. When I talk about split flow in the jet stream, I understand I might be spinning a few heads, but I love split flow and this is why. You have one part of the jet stream producing a ridge in the jet stream over western Canada while the other provides a continuous flow of moisture across the southern and central Rocky Mountains sometimes referred to as the pineapple express. When the two branches of the jet stream converge you have one component (north) capable of delivering some Canadian chill while the other delivers the moisture. It's a good combination and it looks we could manage to work  ourselves into such a setup around the holiday and especially toward the New Year. Not a cold outlook, but we are entering a part of the season where we don't need an overwhelming supply of cold, just need a little.


Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Non-arctic outlook for the remainder of 2023, but the door remains open for some storminess

The series of elevation sensitive snow storms we've received over the last several weeks has made for some great early season skiing in northern Vermont, but we've also earned ourselves a trophy for featuring some of the best snow in the whole country. Yeah a few spots in the west might argue but I am selfish and I want the crown since we don't get it often. We've also got challenges ahead while the holiday outlook looks very good in the southern and central Rocky Mountains. 

Light snow showers and wintry temperatures can be expected Tuesday night into Wednesday across the northern Vermont high country. It will also be a little blustery through Wednesday. If you enjoy a good wintry bluebird day with lighter winds, I got one for you on Thursday, a day that is likely to feature some of the best visibility of the month with afternoon temperatures in the 20's. The shorter term outlook beyond Thursday doesn't feature any rainfall issues, but I am concerned that we get hit with a Pacific torch on Friday. I always get the sense we get more of these days during El Nino years and they are characterized by warm, windy conditions with some sunshine along with temperatures well into the 40's. We are specifically exposed to warmth on days such as this because of the shape of our local topography and the wind will eat away at recent snowfalls particularly in exposed areas and in the warmer valley locations. The weekend outlook should feature slightly cooler and certainly less windy weather with afternoon temperatures in the 30's and some decent periods of sunshine. 

Though there will be some colder interludes over the next 10 days or so, arctic air across North America will be in retreat mode and temperatures across Canada will be exceptionally warm to finish out 2023. Arctic air is a required element for below normal temperatures in Vermont by late December so without it, we are pretty much guaranteed to see milder than average temperatures for the rest of the year, much like our northern neighbors. So far however, there are no glaring indications of an extended and severe thaw. The pattern also supports the presence of storms especially as we approach the holiday, more on that below. Our next weather event is likely to occur or not occur after the upcoming weekend as an El Nino fueled  southern streamer gathers moisture and tries to head up the eastern seaboard. There won't be a lot of arctic air to work with, but there are indications of a minimal amount of chill entering the forecast picture around the time of Tuesday. We need the track of this storm to cooperate which seems probable and we also need this storm to entrain some of that colder air which may be a more difficult ask. The storm could also just stay out over the ocean. Sometimes in these situations in best to place your money on the rinse and repeat scenario of another elevation sensitive event which is certainly a possible outcome. 

The aforementioned warmth across Canada is indicated to focus on eastern Canada as we approach the holiday. Storminess in the Pacific is expected to really attack California and the southern and central Rockies bringing rain and mountain snowfall which is great news for skiers there. That storminess, some of it anyway is likely to cross the country and impact the northeast. With cold air in short supply this will mean rain for coastal areas but interior areas are capable of pulling off more elevation sensitive snowfall much like we have been. It's not an ideal setup, but certainly are capable of scoring a touchdown.  I am hoping we can push the AO back into negative terrirtory for the new year, but I don't see much arctic help before that. 



Sunday, December 10, 2023

A turnaround for the ages as 1-2 feet now expected for the high country by late Monday

It has been one of the more astounding turnabouts I can remember and it certainly had me fooled. What looked like a completely miserable weather situation to start the 2nd full week of December, consisting rain and a major melt off has almost completely turned around. Using baseball parlance, this is analogous to being down 8 runs in the bottom of the 9th inning and scoring 9, culminating in a walk-off grand slam. It's that miraculous, but you can never say never with weather, as I managed to do the other day. 

I spent some time looking at this remarkable storm and I think current our El Nino has an outsized role in this rapidly changing weather picture and the poor performance of medium range model data in handling it. I suppose that much of Sunday's weather will occur as advertised with both mild weather and some rain which could begin lightly during the morning but enhance later in the ski day as temperatures rise into the 40's. Both the rain and mild weather is hardly a headlining act with this winter storm and even the flooding threat which appeared legitimate as recently as Friday has mostly been eliminated for Vermont and moved to southern and eastern New England early Monday. The initial storm system that is tracking well into Canada could have flooded the region with mild air, but by midday Sunday a new low pressure center will be taking shape in the piedmont areas of Virginia and North Carolina. This storm will explode late Sunday, quickly consuming and consolidating surrounding available energy, rendering the low pressure area to our north insignificant and creating a dynamic weather situation for the entire east coast late Sunday into Monday. 

Temperatures across the MRV will already be cooling down as the rain continues to fall Sunday evening and by around midnight a changeover the snow will commence. About a half inch of rain is now expected to fall, though much of it will have fallen with temperatures in the 30's and the snowpack on the upper mountain will only get a bit dented and certainly not destroyed. And then it gets fun. The snow becomes heavy during the pre-dawn hours Monday, potentially very heavy for a time as the storm cranks into high gear and tracks just west of Boston. The track of this low pressure center is certainly close enough to Vermont to allow some sleet to mix with the snowfall and hold accumulations down somewhat, but we appear to be in a pretty good spot overall. Areas of southern and eastern New England could experience problems with high winds, flooding rain and even thunderstorms but Vermont looks positioned to steer clear of most of that though winds are expected to get blustery out of the northwest Monday. Speaking of that northwest wind, this will allow the snowfall to continue through much of Monday as Lake Champlain enhances lingering moisture over the mountains. The snow consistency will be dense Monday morning but powdery throughout the day Monday and it would be fluffy were it not for the gusty winds. Total accumulations will be in the 1-2 foot range by late in the day Monday with a 6-12 inch storm total more likely in valley locations. 

We'll have a few wintry days to enjoy this during the upcoming week with some light snow likely late Tuesday into Wednesday. Temperatures are not expected to make a run at the freezing mark until Friday.   Longer range weather picture still looks similar (not very cold, but storm potential remains) and I'll have an update on that in a few days. 

Friday, December 8, 2023

Snowfall potential is "eye opening" on Monday even after all the heavy rain and wind late Sunday.

There's certainly some bad news to discuss in this update. We are not looking at a particularly "arctic" outlook as we move toward the winter solstice and  Christmas holiday and we have some heavy rain to deal with in the short term. This follows what was both a successful and early (by normal standards) opening day at Mad River Glen. But with the bad news out of the way, I can focus on the positive and surprisingly positive in the case of this upcoming storm, a situation that I had pretty much written off as a disastrous outcome for the northern Vermont high country and all of its early season snowpack. 

Saturday still has a tranquil outlook and although clouds are expected to increase throughout the day, visibility should remain outstanding and the lighter winds and 30-40 degree temperatures should rank it pretty high on the comfort scale. The early part of Sunday also remains dry but with higher winds and milder temperatures. The rainfall will begin in the afternoon making it a wet end to the first full weekend of skiing at MRG. 

Here is the latest regarding the evolving situation with this upcoming storm. As expected, an initial primary low pressure center is taking a miserable trajectory, and appears headed toward the southeast part of the Hudson Bay. It tracks so far north of us, in fact, that it will actually lose some potency and ability to a continuous driving force of weather conditions throughout the storm. Over the  last several days, models have been hinting at additional waves of low pressure developing along the temperature boundary with the track and strength of these lows having a big impact on results for northern Vermont. We haven't reached a complete consensus yet, but there are increasing indications of a low pressure area taking shape east of the Appalachian mountains and tracking through central New England and then off shore north of the Cape early Monday. This would certainly bring additional moisture and enhance the heavy rain and wind Sunday evening which we kinda already expected. The expected track and developing strength of this storm however will pull cold air into Vermont quicker and potentially cut down the period of heavy rain over the high country, changing it to snow in the predawn hours Monday. A very favorable wind direction would then allow snowfall to continue through much of the day Monday, falling in powdery fashion after initially changing to a wetter snowfall. The rain and wind will do a lot of damage Sunday evening but the snowfall could be significant with an elevation sensitive 3-9 inches falling by late in the day Monday. Some uncertainties need to be ironed out as always, but if nothing else, I'll appreciate the ability to keep our mountains white for another week if we can pull it off. 

Like the first full week of December, the 2nd is expected to also feature generally wintry temperatures, but free of significant precipitation after Monday. Sunshine should return on Tuesday with sub freezing temperatures while some clouds and some very light snow are possible on Wednesday. Warmer air will try and work its way into New England later Thursday into Friday, but I think the milder temperatures stay west of Vermont for the upcoming week. 

Those aforementioned areas farther west will be consumed by Pacific air as we get to later next week  thanks largely to the loss of high latitude blocking which can be seen in the forecasted Arctic Oscillation index (AO) late next week. The Pacific is also getting angrier, but not overwhelmingly so, with the EPO turning unfavorable through the middle of the month but then neutralizing beyond that. This theme is actually evident in the AO index which also begins to improve or at least neutralize after the middle of the month, The problem after the middle of the month will be finding a mechanism to bring the cold arctic air south into mid latitude North America with all this neutrality. I have my doubts we can do it in a meaningful way before the holiday. The storm possibility is a different animal however. There are indications of a potential storm around December 18th (a Monday) and a minimal amount of leftover cold in eastern Canada. Can we mix those two things together and spin up something significant ? Maybe. The lack of strong arctic air also doesn't guarantee a blowtorch either even if  I would place my money on above normal temperatures through Christmas. 

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

MRG opening moved up to Thursday, a chilly Day 1, but the outlook beyond that looks milder and an ugly late Sunday rain looms

A healthy batch of refrigerated Canadian air was able to establish itself over northern New England early  Tuesday and will keep it wintry for the remainder of the work week. Readings are likely to stay below 25 on the mountain Wednesday and Thursday and then climb into the low 30's for Friday. Overnight low temperatures will fall to near 10 Wednesday morning and make a bid for zero Thursday morning on top of our snow cover. Approximately 4 feet of snow has fallen above 3,000 feet at Mad River Glen and I am sure this, combined with the efforts of the mountain ops folks has pushed opening day up to Thursday. It's a good day for an opening and perhaps the coldest weather we might see for a while and I would certainly encourage folks pick one of the first three days to get out and enjoy it. Saturday will see moderating temperatures (near 40), but winds should remain on the lighter side, visibility will remain excellent and much of the fallen snow will remain. 

Is there a more miserable SOB than an inland runner during a Vermont winter. It was a fool's errand to think we could escape such an occurrence in December and mother nature is nice enough to grace us with one a few days after the Mad River Glen opening. The overall pattern fundamentals are worsening, more on that later, and Saturday's strengthening storm in the central plains, is going to get too jacked up too early and will track through the central Great Lakes by early Sunday. We will be able to keep a percentage of Sunday dry, but expect winds to increase as the day progresses and temperatures will make a run at 50 degrees. And then we get the rain, potentially a lot of it, Sunday evening and night and if current indications hold, it will do serious damage to the snow currently on the ground. Colder weather and minimal amounts of snow can be expected to return for the duration of next week beginning late Monday but this is a tough body blow to endure.   

The late Sunday rain is part of a larger scale pattern realignment  where much of the high latitude blocking is eradicated and the AO turns positive. Some blocking is indicated to establish itself over the northeastern Eurasian continent, but this mechanism will focus much of the cold on Alaska beginning next week and when Alaska gets cold typically we are not. A jet stream focusing cold on Alaska is also not too friendly to the Pacific which is expected to get a little angrier by next week. With this in mind, the temperature outlook appears milder and after what should be a few sub-freezing days next week, we should anticipate another round of milder weather of an uncertain magnitude between December 18 and 21. 

Though the 10 middle days of December will certainly not feature a great weather pattern, I was actually someone surprised that one of my favorite indices, the EPO, appears to be fighting for neutrality throughout the forecast period. I alluded to the fact that the Jet Stream in the Pacific looks tighter in the weeks ahead, but we've seen a lot worse last year and during some years prior. This keeps the door open for a storm and some snow even with the milder temperature outlook.

Sunday, December 3, 2023

10-20 inch snow on track for much of the northern Vermont high country !

Our upcoming storm is, for the most part, on track to deliver us additional snow and leave us in really fantastic shape going into our upcoming opening weekend. We can speed up the timing of precipitation by a few hours with mixed precipitation arriving in the MRV around 1 PM and then changing to all snow by 3 PM. The snow has the potential to fall heavily for a time early this evening before subsiding for a few hours later this evening. We can categorize this entire weather situation as fairly garden variety for northern Vermont with competing low pressure centers, one trying to develop along the southern New England coastline and another tracking through the eastern Great Lakes. The initial, western low pressure area is not going to cede ground so easily and this puts a ceiling on the upside snow potential. Still, the early evening snow burst combined with another decent round of snow during the overnight hours and then additional snow showers during the day Monday is going to put the high country in that 10-20 inch total snowfall category. The snow will be wet to start, but get a bit drier during the overnight hours and temperatures on the mountain should stay in the 20's for much of Monday. It will be a different story in valley locations with mostly a wet snow falling throughout much of the event and temperatures rising into the 30's Monday afternoon. The Champlain Valley will experience a similar drill to last weekend with more rain and a minimal gloppy snowfall Sunday night. 

The rest of the upcoming week looks wintry with sub-freezing temperatures on the mountain through Friday. Again, I would like to promise additional snow showers and we have a supportive wind direction for such throughout much of the week, but action in the jet stream to our south will put a limit on that activity. We can certainly see flurries, but I like the idea of decent amounts of sunshine Tuesday to Thursday with temperatures remaining in the 20's during the days and falling into the single numbers potentially on top of all that snowcover Thursday morning. 

I was hoping we could fend off any mild instrusion for opening weekend, but this appears more challenging as of this update. The reemergence of clouds are likely to keep temperatures in check for the Friday-Saturday period but the Sunday Monday time frame looks dangerous in terms of mild temperatures and the potential for some rainfall. Still some time to change some of this, but this would be my face value assessment at the moment. 

I wasn't especially happy with the longer range trends either. We do have some colder, somewhat wintry weather returning for the December 11-14 period, but the large Greenland block which helped power the NAO deep into negative index territory, and no doubt helped produce that historic snowfall in Munich, Germany, will vanish. One of the bigger features in jet stream is colder, more unsettled weather in Alaska which will tighten the jet stream in the Pacific in a unwelcome way. If this materializes we will have challenges to deal with in the December 15-20 time frame, but this is certainly not atypical for many of our Decembers. 

Friday, December 1, 2023

Though not a lock, a 1-2 foot snowfall is the most likely outcome late Sunday into Monday !

Mild southwesterly breezes brought temperatures up past the 40 degree mark early Friday effectively ending the wintry paradise of late November. A period of light rain Friday night is unavoidable at this point but should mostly be out of the way for what will be a cloudy Saturday. Milder above freezing air will remain for early Saturday but winds are expected to become northeasterly as the day progresses and temperatures will cool toward the freezing mark Saturday night. 

There remains a lot of critical disagreement regarding the upcoming storm late Sunday into Monday, but I don't think the confusion is as bad as it seems and I am ready to render a "most likely outcome" verdict and I think readers of the blog will be happy with it. Avid followers of the New England Patriots certainlly remember coach Bill Belichick's famous remark after getting blown out in week 4 of the 2014 NFL season. We are "on to Cincinnati" he said and a billboard in the stands during the ensuing game read "In Tom and Bill we trust !". They blew out the Bengals last night, only lost 2 regular season games the rest of the way and eventually beat the Seattle Seawhawks in the Super Bowl . I don't know why I remember that handmade billboard so vividly (I am not even a Pats fan), but it serves as a good analogy for this situation. In the Euro I trust !,  at least given the circumstances. Over the course of the last several days it has established a consistency regarding the simulation of this storm,  so I am throwing up my own little billboard  and yelling "snowstorm !!". Lots of things need to happen to make a big snow work in northern Vermont. We need the cold air to bleed south, the track of the storm to remain close to the southern New England coastline, and most importantly, we need an orderly and efficient transition of energy from the initial primary low pressure center, to the new coastal low pressure center. The Euro, continuously has illustrated that. Other models have been substantially more hesitant on many of these aspects but they've all been inconsistent and over the last 24 hours, they've all made some small steps in the Euro's direction so although it's not a lock, a big snow for Monday is looking more and more likely

Most of the ski day on Sunday is expected to just be cloudy and precipitation-free but conditions will change by early Sunday evening. If we hitch our wagons to the Euro as disucssed above, any early mixed precipitation becomes all snowfall and continues into the overnight and into Monday. Other models, as mentioned, track the initial primary low farther north or don't show an orderly transition of energy to the coast and are thus producing a less snowy outcome either because we miss the heaviest precipitation or we receive a substantial initial period of rain and sleet. In this case, I believe the Euro will win the day resulting in a 1-2 foot snowfall for the northern Vermont high country thanks to the addition of continuous light snow persisting through Monday night. I should mention a blurb about snow consistency which is likely to start wet and likely stay wet in the valley, but become powdery above 2000 feet.

The rest of the next week looks sub-freezing but not bitterly cold with temperatures falling into the 20's on Tuesday and Wednesday morning and teens Thursday and Friday mornings while daytime temps remain generally below 30 on the mountain. I would love to promise more snowfall from snow showers but there is action on the weather map well to our south and this should reduce the convective snowfall potential during the mid-week period. 

The longer range outlook continues to show a loss of high latitude blocking in jet stream but it looks like northern New England will retain some Canadian-style chill for MRG's opening weekend. After that, the temperature outlook appears normal with the loss of the aforementioned blocking counter-balanced by what continues to appear to be a favorable situation in the Pacific. The Madden-Julian Oscillation which gets a lot of discussion among the winter weather enthusiast crowd will actually be progressing through some milder phases over the next week and then work its way back toward colder phases by the middle of December. Either way, I've been encouraged with how the EPO index has been behaving throughout much of November and now what it's expected to do in December and this points toward what should be a fun month ahead for us.

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Stretch of wintry weather continues with more potential snowfall early next week

Though we could not quite replicate late November 2018, the coverage and depth of snow across the high country is really fantastic and I got a first hand experience in it Tuesday ! The Sunday night snow event was terrific, delivering over a foot of snow and much of it coming within a few hours.  We managed to dodge a lot of the heaviest snow squalls Tuesday, but we remain in the midst of a nice stretch of sub-freezing temperatures that should persist through Thursday. 

There are some milder days mixed into the outlook over the next two weeks but excessive torching does not look like a concern. Just as temperatures make a push toward the 40-degree mark on Friday, colder air will make a southward, reinforcing push accompanied by clouds and possibly an additional round of wet snowfall. Clouds are expected for much of the remainder of the weekend and more snow or a snow/sleet conglomeration is expected by as early as late in the day Sunday. 

There's been some excitement surrounding the event for early next week with a few of the model runs showing a healthy, consolidated storm along the southern New England coastline. Another more commonly indicated scenario is for a more disorganized storm and lighter snowfall amounts. Either way, I am pretty convinced this will be a mostly frozen event with the worst case scenario involving a compressing period of sleet. The Greenland blocking is just beast-mode this weekend and although this feature is expected to weaken next week, it will have the impact of keeping the Monday 12/4 event, safely to our south. Conditions could dry out next week if the storminess shifts southeast as some models indicate or we could see some limited instability get put to use in the form of snow showers. Temperatures will sneak above the freezing mark across valley locations but the outlook for the high country looks very sub-freezing next week and that's fantastic with MRG announcing a Saturday 12/9 opening day! 

Speaking of Saturday 12/9, early indications are for more sunshine than clouds with moderating but not especially mild temperatures. Some hints that another weather system could approach for Sunday and this would obviously bring more clouds for the 2nd half of the weekend. The most threatening part of the outlook for the next two weeks is the chance that we manufacture some sort of warmer precipitation event around  the time frame of 12/11. The Euro ensembles are hinting at this, but they are off in their own little corner as other models aren't handling that situation the same way. More generally, the pattern looks decent, powered by the Greenland block/negative NAO situation through the weekend and though we lose most of that by late next week, I am very, very encouraged that the Pacific appears cooperative as we move toward the middle of the month. There are no indications of any type of angry mood with the jet in the Pacific jet this will allow cold continue to build across Canada and stay involved in the day to day weather situation in Vermont.

Friday, November 24, 2023

November to finish wintry with some wet snow early on Monday and chances for fluffier snow after that !

I tried not get overly distracted with short term weather when constructing the seasonal outlook, but I am free to do that now. There have been a few El Nino events in recent years that have featured a blowtorch December and I am feeling better and better about the notion that this will be different. It certainly appears very different in the coming week with plenty of winter weather to talk about and a potentially decent event to start the upcoming week. 

Some early season arctic air enveloped the state of Vermont as of early Friday with snow showers dusting much of the northern Vermont high country. Earlier this week, temperatures dropped to 10 degrees in a few spots and clearing skies and slackening wind speeds will allow for the same to occur by Saturday morning. We can then look forward to a nice early season winter weekend with healthy amounts of sunshine and near 30 degree temperatures on Saturday followed by a cloudier though still a good visibility Sunday with readings climbing into the 30's. 

A couple of weather systems now appear ready to converge and consolidate into a respectable storm by Monday, November 27th. The cold air which is firmly entrenched as of Friday will become a bit stale by the end of this weekend temperatures in the lowest several thousand feet can be called "marginal" as a storm begins this consolidation near the Jersey shore. For now, I am of the opinion that our little section of Vermont will be on the right side of this marginal classification, but it's a close enough call to be impacted by any additional forecast changes so stay tuned. This means that snow should begin in the Mad River Valley late on Sunday night and continue for several hours into Monday. This storm appears garden variety in nature and won't reach a peak maturation until most of the snowfall has left us. We also have to leave the door open for alternative types of precipitation Sunday night, but again, I am of the opinion we can minimize this. If you live in the Champlain Valley however, I certainty wouldn't make that statement. 

We have another surge of early season polar air in the wake of Monday's storm and with it comes a really impressive pool of low level instability. Whether it be the Great Lakes, Lake Champlain or even the largely unfrozen Hudson Bay, all are capable of providing moisture in this type of environment and it gets deposited as snowfall in the Vermont high country. For Mad River Glen and Sugarbush, the amount of snowfall is highly dependent on the wind direction. Northwesterly flow can produce really impressive snow totals while westerly flow helps out areas like Stowe, Smuggs and Jay Peak more. Models agree on a mostly westerly wind Monday and then we try to turn those winds more northwesterly on Tuesday though models disagree on how much. Still we will have the opportunity for some substantial additional snowfall especially on Tuesday. My early guess on all of this is a 3-6 inch dense and wet snow Sunday night and early Monday and 2-6 inches of additional fluffier snow later Monday into Tuesday. 

Model simulations, for the time being, are bullish on a clipper system providing some additional snowfall Wednesday night into Thursday but the clipper has been tough to bet on in the longer range outlook so I would anticipate expectations to evolve over time. Subsequent to this is some indications that the cold will soften for the first few days of December but this appears temporary as the NAO index is expected to fall. Indications are that the jet stream at high latitudes will be somewhat blocked for the first full week of December. A current face value snapshot does not suggest an overwhelmingly cold first 10 days of December, but playing fields appears inviting for an early season winter storm and there have been indications of such on a few of the longer range model simulations.

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

2023-2024 Winter Outlook - El Nino with a twist !

Welcome back for year 20 and Happy Thanksgiving everyone !This November has featured some inviting, crisp cold air and a few dustings of snow which I hope has elevated everyone's anticipation for the upcoming winter. While we haven't managed to mimic the snowvember 2018 performance and we likely never will in my lifetime, New England has been ground zero for cold air this month and I am hopeful this serves as one of those atmospheric "tells". More on that later. For me, it's always just good to be back doing this for another season, skiing the mountain obviously but also hopefully providing some helpful intel as to the snowfall situation in the MRV. 

El Nino announces a 2023-24 world tour ! 

2023-2024 brings a significant El Nino back as a headlining act. It is easily the most dominant player on the playing field and has been flirting with Super Nino status this fall. More on that in the next paragraph. This year's ENSO (El Nino) is throwing a knuckle ball at us this year and I am going to use that adjective to honor former Red Sox pitcher Tim Wakefield who passed away way too young early last month. So why is this pitch a little harder to pick up ? The Pacific Decadal Oscillation's (PDO) warm phase is often coupled with El Nino and without looking especially close, I was hopeful that the 4-year streak of negative or cool phase PDO's would abruptly end. Though the PDO has weakened in the past month, it remains negative putting the Pacific Ocean in a counter-intuitive state going into the winter. After an initial sense of dread, I started researching winter's with this occurrence and to my surprise, we've seen a few in the last 75 years and almost all of them, incredibly, have had very good results.  


 

ENSO Specifics 

Let's discuss the El Nino situation first. The anticipation of this ENSO switch has been an ad-nauseum topic going back to the end of last winter. In this case, forecasts have been largely accurate, the critical regions of the equatorial Pacific Ocean have warmed to nearly 2 degrees C above average which nearly places this ENSO in what I like to call "Super Nino" status. By way of comparison, this El Nino remains a little weaker than the last two big ones. The horror show of 2015-16 was 0.8 C warmer, measured in temperature and the decent snowfalll winter of '97-98 El Nino was half a degree warmer. Though I have a general affinity for El Nino especially for the east coast storms they tend to produce, this one is coming in a bit too hot for my liking. I would prefer to see the equatorial regions closer to 1 degree C above average since the adverse impacts of the stronger ones have often included month-plus stretches of super mild weather. More generally El Nino has a propensity to weaken the onslaught of arctic air on northern latitudes of North America. We've seen this anyway thanks to the impacts of climate change so there's certainly some cause for concern. To reiterate, the benefit of El Nino has to do with storminess and specifically the type of storms. The southern branch of the jet stream is energized and is capable of producing juicy east coast storms infused with both Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean moisture. I should mention that the inland runner problem, a seemingly invariable fixture of the recent -PDO / La Nino winters during the last World Cup cycle are not nearly as prevalent during El Nino. I am sure we will manage to drum up a few of those because we like to do that in Vermont, but the chances of going a month or more without one is higher than usual. 

The PDO knuckler 

So now lets move the discussion back to the PDO because as I mentioned, we've been dealing with a sea surface temperature configuration in the Pacific which is making it very difficult to sustain cold in eastern North America. No winter was that more evident than the last which saw a varying iteration of the same story with cold weather confined to the west and western ski areas while the east coat was fending off one onslaught of mild weather after another. Since the epic winter of 2018-19 which included that epic Snowvember, the PDO has been showing us one negative result after another. It's a much worse issue for snow lovers across southern New England and points south, but even at 43 N, it's been tiring playing defense against mild air week after week. I've gone over the warm phase / cool phase PDO state a few times so I'll provide a link here to a more academic definition and move on.  

Can El Nino finally break the cool or negative phase of the PDO ? It hasn't yet ! There's finally been some evidence that the index is neutralizing at least anecdotally looking at this animation. 

SST 2-week animation !

A positive phase consists of the horseshoe of relative warmth in Pacific Ocean SST's that, across the north, follows the outline of the west coat of North America all the way to Alaska. This has the benefit of weakening the mid-lattitude latitude potency of the Pacific jet stream and encourage a more favorable positive PNA structure to the jet configuration. Having not gotten to that positive or warm phase of the PDO yet, I would be inclined to believe that this year's ENSO will be of that counterintuitive variety I mentioned above. 

My initial reaction to these developments wasn't positive, but upon further review the data appears quite encouraging. Yes, I have the cool/negative PDO fatigue but as former NBA player Rasheed Wallace once famously told a referee - "ball don't lie!". The cool/negative phase PDO is a problem for areas farther south during an ENSO but there are several instances over the last 75 years where we've been graced with this combination (ENSO/cool phase PDO) and almost all of them have been good interior New England snow years and a few of them have been the cooler version of El Nino. Here is the list which includes a surprising basket of really good years and only one bad one (1994-1995). 1972-73 might be the best comparison and it was infamous because of Philadephia which only recorded a trace of snow for the entire season. Vermont in contrast, has a terrific winter ! 2006-2007 is another really good looking similar year (not on the list because Nino was a little weaker) which had a horrible start,  but produced 7 amazing weeks beginning in the latter half of January. Interestingly, El Nino years featuring the warm phase PDO have been memorable for the I95 corridor, but have featured very mixed results in Vermont and the horror show that was 2015-16. 1957-58 and 2015-16 were two of the worst winters in the history of MRG operations and both had the typical strong ENSO/+PDO distinction. 


 

Snow/Ice expansion

Nothing extraordinary regarding the buildup of snow and ice in the northern hemisphere this autumn. The southern hemisphere made some news this summer for setting records for low sea ice in the antarctic region. The buildup of ice in the arctic is running well below what it would 50 years ago but appears relatively healthy relative to the last 10 years. One can play around with this interactive link to validate my assessment if you so choose. 

Interactive Sea Ice Graph  

Snowcover across the northern hemisphere appears very normal, chiming in at an 18.73 millions of square km for October which is slightly above the last two Octobers, but short of the big numbers we saw for several years prior to that. This number is well within a normal range however so the data can't provide many clues moving forward. 

Additional clues ? 

So while fretting about the strength of El Nino, I've also been watching closely to see if the atmosphere might be tipping its hand in another way and there are encouraging signs here as well. No longer has the west been hoarding the cold ! The recent World Cup cycle of cool phase PDO has left the east coast and New England specifically as the warmest spot relative to average in more months than I care to remember. This recent October was another example, but the recent summer finished magnificently with one of the best weather months in recent memory - August. We were the cool spot then and once again in November are likely to be one of the coolest locations in North America, a clear break from recent trends and a reminder that things like this actually do happen. I am also really encouraged to see the relative warmth in the Atlantic Ocean near the New England coastline subside. There is plenty of warmth in the Atlantic Ocean, don't get me wrong, and the oceans are making news for their warmth and will continue to do so, but at least this warmth is not, at the moment concentrated near us. This would certainly be a change from recent winters. 

 



Blog content moves from "X" to "Threads" 

Indeed, I've decided to move all the blog related content from Twitter/X over to Threads the offshoot of Facebook/Instagram. The Twitter account will remain active and alive with some weather stuff, news, music and last but certainly not least, a complaint machine for New York Mets baseball. The blog related stuff moves to Threads with the handle "singlechairwx" and the talk will be confined to weather and skiing in the MRV. Followers of the blog are fully encouraged to follow me on Threads, but I've considered it a mission to make the blog and information related to the blog available outside the social media ecosystem and that mission continues. All of the latest "threads" will be available to see on top of the blog. I'll avoid a discussion about certain reasons for moving content off "X" , but aside from those, I was encountering issues getting the feed to load automatically on the blog. Add to that were the randos hitting me up on the latest Crypto scam or other randos hitting me up for, well..... nevermind, but you get the point. Either way, I was always pretty impressed with how the Vermont weather and skiing community remained insulated from the toxicity that surrounds so hopefully we can build that up again on "Threads".

The Solar Eclipse on April 8, 2024

What would a seasonal outlook be unless I tried to forecast the weather almost 5 months from now. I can't obviously, but still excited about the solar eclipse next year. I am also here to report that many of the El Nino springs I've experienced have featured early spring months that are sunnier and warm relative to average. It makes sense if you assume weather might be confined to the southern part of the US eliminating the cloudiness across the north. I've never conducted any real study so this is purely anecdotal and I might add that I don't want the south to hog all the weather this winter.   

Summarized 2023-2024 winter outlook 

I've tempered my warm expectations for the winter because of the research suggesting it seems unlikely to go entirely that way. Still however, we have a big El Nino and those usually are milder than average as a whole. The last several El Nino's have been mild because of a 3-4 week horrific torch and I feel this to be the likeliest outcome. The '06-'07 and 2015-'16 El Nino both featured very warm December's and this appears a bit less likely this time looking at the current weather pattern going forward. The Rasheed Wallace "ball don't lie" says it will be snowy and I am going with it. The reluctance of the PDO to turn completely positive should help the interior at the expense of the coast and bring some really nice storms to Vermont and fewer inland runners. Temperatures as a whole will be above average by 1-2 degrees but snowfall will also be little above average depending on how it's measured. Admittedly, I remember taking a similar stance prior to the 2015-16 El Nino and face-planted off a covered bridge, but lets try this again since we have a decent sample size of data backing us. Hope to see you all on the hill and again, hope everyone enjoys their holiday.  


Wednesday, April 26, 2023

The 2022-23 snow season recap and the fight to achieve respectability

The 2022-2023 ski season has concluded at Mad River Glen and having lasted some distance into April and 114 total days, I can officially declare it a decent year. There was a time not too long ago when it didn't feel that way and after several mid-winter gut punches, we seemed primed to get KO'd, but we clawed our way back, slowly at first, but finally earned ourselves respectable snow season following yet another Ides of March storm. The whole "think snow" mantra might seem tired after so many seasons, but I thought we put in a really good effort in that regard this year and the nearly 200 inches of seasonal snowfall felt pretty darn good.

Meanwhile, didn't seem to take much thinking to receive snow out west. It was an incredible season over most areas west of the Continental Divide, particularly in the states of California, Nevada and Utah. The weather pattern, largely powered by another big negative Pacific Decadal Oscillation index was amazingly persistent, supporting both cold weather and storminess throughout the year. The storms were notable for both their frequency and strength and a slow methodical melt off would alleviate what has been a stressed water situation in the Golden State that only seems to get worse over time. Extra water will also provide California some short term and much needed cheap energy since the state depends on hydroelectric generation, but can't claim this in abundance if water isn't flowing . This was very much another winter season that illustrated the underlying power of the PDO in terms of how it can drive a weather pattern. The 2014-2015 snow season, when portions of southern New England were buried in record snowfall while California was hit with a major drought featured much discussion about the role of AGW in contributing to the growing and persistent drought concerns out west. That year featured a record positive PDO and the weather pattern seemed just as persistent as the one featured throughout the 2022-23 season but in reverse with cold weather and snowfall favored over eastern North America. This recent winter, which featured a 5-month cold season aggregated PDO value of -1.29 actually fell short of the prior season's negative number but still stands in stark contrast to the 2014-15 number of +1.77.Got some PDO values from the last 10 seasons below and a link to some additional info on it here.

 

The PDO is not the only game in town and one can go back through history and easily find seasons where the weather pattern is not hogtied to PDO values. The recent winter season also featured a moderate La Nina with colder than average temperatures enveloping large swaths of the equatorial Pacific Ocean. La Nina conditions are correlated to PDO conditions though not perfectly and the combination of the two may have been the right ingredient to produce a weather pattern capable of producing so much snow and relative cold, west of the Continental Divide. Below are some selected snowfall totals for ski resorts in the areas discussed and some others. 


 

Alta wins  the title for most snow, but almost any location in California saw snowfall amounts approaching 200 percent of normal. Across the east, the few stations I selected in that table illustrate how sensitive this snow season was to latitude. Jay Peak recorded essentially a normal snow season while Stowe, Mad River Glen and Sugarbush recorded respectable amounts yet still what is considered below average by the Onthesnow.com standards. This gives me the opportunity to do a quick opine on ski resort snowfall data which is recorded in a highly unscientific manner leading to amounts that are skiflationary compared to reality. There are several ways this is accomplished but the most sure-fire way to achieve a skiflationary snowfall total is to measure in several locations, record the range and then continue to sum the seasonal total using the high end of that range. I've numbed myself into partaking into this absurdity, justifying the practice with the idea that it will actually get us to apples to apples comparisons though it actually doesn't when ski area opts for honest reporting. This past season, if anyone notices or cares, I actually was partaking in this unscientific procedure and recorded a higher total at Mad River Glen than the mountain actually recorded. My total was actually closer to Sugarbush's seasonal amount of 195". It's not especially important to me but I do think mountain ops at MRG missed 10-15 inches in November and then somehow managed to short itself another 10 inches in the March storm by adding 35" to 135" and getting 160" instead of 170".  All good however and I certainly respect the fact that MRG reports ranges as opposed to partaking in skiflation and hopefully this digression helps folks understand how all the numbers, my own summations, Sugarbush's and MRG's could be all so different.

The same weather pattern that resulted in all the snow across California, Nevada and Utah was also responsible for the persistent warmth across the east, especially southeast US. The mild weather may have appeared blunted in northern New England but every month was above average relative to even new, warmed 30-year averages (The 1991-2020 average are materially warmer than 1981-2010 and I'll let the reader speculate as to the reason) and January was the warmest ever recorded across most of New England. Arctic air certainly had a North American presence in every month except January (more on that later), but was either focused on western part of the continent or at higher latitudes in Canada. Populated areas of the northeast saw two big but very short-lived outbreaks of cold, one occurring in the days prior to Christmas while the other slammed the region in early February. Vermont was ground zero for the second and much of the state saw the coldest wind chill temperatures in several years. In the southeast U.S. winter essentially ended after the Christmas outbreak of cold. Atlanta, GA saw temperatures plummet to 9 degrees on Christmas Eve and never saw sub-20 degree readings again and only a handful of mornings were even below freezing. Needless to say, this weather pattern took a tremendous toll on the ski season in the Mid-Atlantic where it was a struggle to keep snow on the ground and terrain open.  

To reiterate, the weather pattern manage to induce above normal temperatures every month of this past cold season though there were variations on this theme. The November warmth was powered by the first 11 days which featured 4 days of 70-degree temperatures across valley locations. Colder air arrived on November 13 and much of the rest of the month featured early season arctic air and several inches of wet snow fell on November 16th. As the month progressed it seemed apparent that the weather would get interesting in December with indications of a large high latitude blocking structure emerging over Greenland powering a big expected drop in the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Some of this indeed happened, but much of the blocking ultimately set up farther west over the Davis Strait early in December and then transitioned to the Arctic regions near the top of the Yukon Territory later in the month. The shift in this blocking set up basically meant that much of the winter weather fireworks which could have occurred along the east coast, happened farther inland or west. This includes Buffalo, NY which saw one massive outbreak of heavy lake effect snow during the cold weather in mid-November and would later see a historic wind-driven lake effect snow storm with the cold outbreak before Christmas. 

Vermont saw a rainy start to its December with much of the cold focused further west. It appeared for a time like the mild weather would persist through the 2nd week of December but the blocking won out and not only did we get a colder week, but got some big snow to go along with it with most of the snow falling on Friday December 16th, setting us up for a proper weekend opening. The storm looked ominous, initially taking aim at the eastern Great Lakes and threatening to track toward the St Lawrence Valley, but the jet stream structure helped ensure that the storm would reform on the eastern seaboard in a much more advantageous position; in fact, it turned out nearly perfect and produced nearly 2 feet of snow, one of the best events of the season for Mad River Glen. Several days of sub-freezing temperatures in the wake of that storm brought some of the best December skiing since 2018. It certainly looked like we could keep it going for the duration of the month as a massive surge of cold weather, the strongest of the season in many parts of the eastern United States, enveloped a broad swatch of the continent on and just before Christmas. The cold wasn't especially severe in a relative sense across northern New England but temperatures remained below freezing through early December 29th and it was then that the weather pattern broke and the New Years holiday came in with some very mild air.

The scouring of the cold in the days after Christmas was dramatic and remarkable considering the geographical scale. By New Years 2023, most of the North American continent was mild relative to climatological averages and there was a glaring absence of arctic air. The weather pattern was making plenty of news but for the wrong reason. Anytime we hear about an "atmospheric river" when describing the storminess across California, it can't be good for winter weather fans in the eastern United States and it certainly wasn't. The support for cold weather in mid-latitude North America collapsed by early January using any number of teleconnection indicators, but the EPO in particular, which is a measure of the strength of the jet stream in the Pacific Ocean proved particularly problematic. Powerful storms, one after the other, unleashed fury on the west coast dumping over 200% of normal rainfall on the Bay Area. A colder version of this weather pattern would reemerge later in the season but the January setup actually featured relative high snow levels in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and I certainly remember one Tahoe based ski area shutting a lift down for flooding with that image going viral on social media.    

 

 

The first 18 days of January was probably the worst period of the season around Mad River Glen. The December snowpack slowly eroded and it was an ugly scene with bare ground very visible over our valley locations. We saw some rain, ice a bit of wet snow here and there and many days with temperatures above the freezing mark though it never did reach 50 degrees. The mild weather, particularly during the overnight hours helped power the month to one of the warmest January's ever recorded but as it turned out, it wasn't the worst January I've ever seen for skiing. As we moved into the middle of the month there were promising signs with neutralizing teleconnection indicators though arctic air remained very bottled up in Siberia where there as news that temperatures were the coldest in 50 some odd years. There was no such cold in Vermont, but the setup for storms was very good and we scored a trifecta on new snowfall over the span of just a week. Steady snow on the January 19th and into the 20th to the tune of over a foot and another 8-14 inches followed late on Sunday January 22nd into Monday the 23rd. The best storm in this period appeared to be lined up for Thursday January 26th and the snow indeed came, but like so many La Nina powered winter weather events, so did the layers of warm air. Following several inches of snow, we saw mixed precipitation and even a brief period of rain right before first chair. The upper mountain survived the onslaught of warmth in one piece, but a lasting memory from that event will be driving across the valley and seeing temperatures start at 26 and then soar to 39 by the time I hit the MRG base. Heard my name mentioned in a less than flattering light (though not too bad) in the lodge that morning but there wasn't too many complaints as the day progressed with that rain changing back to snow and then heavy snow as the Champlain Oragraphic Enhancer came to life and deposited another 10 inches on the mountain. By Friday, January 27th, the skiing and the general mood was terrific and additional snowfall during the weekend and in the early part of the next week certainly didn't hurt. 

 


 

As the snow piled up across northern Vermont late in January the arctic air began to rebuild across Canada and as it turned out, our neighbors to the north saw a much colder month of February than January. Arctic air also plunged into the snow covered areas of the west, but in the best traditions of La Nina, struggled to maintain any grip on the Mid Atlantic and Deep South. Over New England, it was a colder month but it was powered by one massive outbreak of cold weather on February 3rd-4th with temperatures plunging to 20 below or colder and wind chills exceeding -50. Mt Washington made headlines during that arctic invasion by recording the lowest wind chill ever measured by an instrument in the United States. I phrase it this way because assuredly there have been colder wind chills that haven't been recorded by an instrument. Unfortunately, the cold on February 4th retreated into Canada and mild weather consumed interior New England during the middle part of the month. We were fortunate not to receive a heavy rain event but the snow eroded nonetheless leaving much of ski country in need of more natural snow to save the season. 

 



And then suddenly, the tide turned in our favor. Arctic air managed to push southward into interior New England on February 22nd setting up a nice garden variety overrunning event for February 23rd when cold powdery snow fall over the mountains. Snow showers on the last weekend of February turned into an added bonus and the March outlook continued to improve with blocking showing up at high latitudes after a nearly 2 month absence. As it turned out, the weather pattern partially gravitated toward a more "persistence-based" outcome which in this case means that the configuration of temperature anomalies in North America in March bore a close resemblance to what happened in prior months. It did stay colder however and when the storms came, northern Vermont received snow. We started March with a couple of lighter snowfall events but it seemed almost inevitable that all of the weather drama would revolve around the Ides of March or March 13-15 dates like they always seem to. One again,the calendar worked its magic! There were indications of a storm well in advance that included several different advertised model simulated scenarios. The weekend prior to the storm, models shifted much of the action southward with a slow moving and exploding coastal low remaining south of Cape Cod. Higher resolution model data seemed to confirm this trend and there were stunning indications that much of northern Vermont might struggle to receive any snowfall from this storm. It was all part of a plan though, like a Game of Thrones season, but one with a happy ending. The stage was set for a northward shift and gradually one began to happen. All kidding aside however, it was a terrific illustration of why it is important to consider everything when putting together a forecast and many times the best information is the one coming at you with the most consistent output. Southern Vermont did ultimately get the bullseye initially advertised but northern Vermont performed exceptionally well from this bombing storm that indeed consolidated its energy north of Cape Cod. It was the appropriate finale to this multi-week stretch of favorable weather because the storm managed to, in some ways, resemble some of the other storms over the course of this season only this one bombed harder and produced more snow over a longer stretch of time, 35 inches to be exact. Remarkably, and much like many of the other events this winter, temperatures were just cold enough to support a drier snow. Across valley locations the snow was wetter and not as much of it fell. 



The weather pattern remained stormy and certainly capable of producing more events in the last 2 weeks of March and even into early April but the mountains received only mixed results. Early in April there were hints of wintry weather potential both in the first and 2nd week, but this also didn't materialize. By April 9th and 10th, much of the unsettled weather became detached from the jet stream over the Gulf Coast allowing a round of extraordinarily mild weather to impact Vermont in April. By the time the month is over, 2023 version of April is likely to be the warmest, maybe this young century. 

This theme of mild weather and specifically the persistence of it was the most remarkable part of the recent weather season. Every month, even March and December, which had some cold weather advertised, featured temperatures that averaged above the recently warmed 30-year averages across interior New England. In contrast, areas west of the Continental Divide saw persistent cold weather and high snowfall every month. I am certainly not the biggest cheerleader for - PDO winters since they are notorious in their ability to produce multi week stretches of warm and wet weather. It is unusual however for such a pattern to be so persistent, but this particular pairing of what was a moderate La Nina and a very negative PDO seemed to be the magic formula. The mild weather produced a historically awful result for snow-lovers along the I95 corridor from Boston southward. Interestingly however, the weather pattern, though persistent, wasn't amplified enough to obliterate the ski season across northern Vermont; in fact, the weather pattern did have some redeeming qualities for the interior. Given enough cold, the storm track generally cooperated and the mountains got its share. The Mt Mansfield snow stake, which acts as the reserve currency for grading the snow season in northern Vermont, lagged on its snow depth relative to normal for much the season before finally blowing through normal on March 14 and remaining there through the end of the month. It was a satisfying way to finish a season with some ups and downs. 

Meanwhile, conditions in the equatorial Pacific have shifted with the La Nina status now eliminated and temperatures in that portion of the ocean now running just a little bit above average. At the same time, we have yet to see the PDO relax. An emerging El Nino has been the consensus forecast for ENSO in the coming months but these forecasts are not always correct. It would also be conventional wisdom to expect the PDO to relax if an El Nino emerges as advertised, but this too can defy expectations. I am certainly ok with a mild to moderate El Nino, but most imporantly I want the negative PDO to neutralize. Sure, we managed to survive this recent winter in ok shape but mild onslaughts are not good for my mental health in winter.  I continue to see legitimate articles suggesting El Nino conditions will be more prevalent as climate change progresses and though it strikes me as a viable opinion I am yet to be convinced that a warming earth would favor relative warmth in one part of the Pacific Ocean as opposed to another. Unfortunately, we are likely to find out the answer whether we like it or not. 

And that puts a wrap on the 2022-2023 season. We had a decent start, had to endure a few big mid-season body blows before managing to fight our way to a respectable snow season .Cold air was a bit sparse on this side of the continent though we made the most of it, and the most of our 44 N latitude and distance from the snowless coast. Amazingly, next year will mark the 20th season of weather blogging at MRG and we get to celebrate its conclusion with a complete solar eclipse on April 8th. Though I don't have any cloud cover prognostications yet, rest assured that I will make every attempt at providing totally inconclusive and inaccurate predictions way too early. Enjoy the summer everyone !