Message-ID: <3654963.1075840569322.JavaMail.evans@thyme> Date: Wed, 9 Jan 2002 06:17:47 -0800 (PST) From: andy@apbenergy.com To: newweather@apbenergy.com, weathernews@apbenergy.com Subject: WEDNESDAY WEATHER HEADLINES Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-From: Andy Weingarten @ENRON X-To: 'Weather Archive' , 'Weather News Distribution' X-cc: X-bcc: X-Folder: \ExMerge - Griffith, John\Deleted Items X-Origin: GRIFFITH-J X-FileName: john griffith 6-25-02.PST Weather Headlines Wednesday January 9, 2002 Bismarck, North Dakota was warmer yesterday than Miami, Florida! Overall weather pattern still finds bitter cold arctic air lurking... in the NW territories. Bismarck was 38 degrees above normal yesterday at 63 while Miami was about 12 degrees below normal at 61. Its all a product of the jet stream pattern which has taken modified Canadian air deep into the South while allowing a downslope wind off the Rockies to really warm up the Plains. This warm air is heading East and will attack the Ohio Valley and East Coast snow cover with a vengeance the next couple of days. I do see a reversal of temperatures gradually occurring in the South the rest of the week as the deep trough weakens. The current quiet pattern will become a little more active in the storm department later in the week. There is a benign looking system on the West Coast today which may redevelop over the Lower Mississippi Valley this weekend. While I would not give this a "major storm" designation, it could provide the East some snow late in the period. In addition, another moderate cold front in the Northern branch will end the unseasonable warmth in the Plains this weekend, but I would hardly call it cold. The five day numbers will still grade out well above normal. The stagnant pattern in the West looks to continue as high pressure remains anchored over the Great Basin. Storms coming in off the Pacific have a small punch as they hit the coast, but rapidly weaken once inland. Overall, temperatures there look to remain a bit above normal. My mid range forecast continues to disagree with many who are calling for much colder air to invade the Northern U.S. The NWS 6-10 and 8-14 day products seem to be leading this charge with strong probabilities of below normal temperatures over much of the country especially in the 8-14 day time frame. I think a mistake is being made in equating a large area of below normal probabilities with very cold air. Keep in mind that in a probability forecast one degree below normal grades out the same as 30 degrees below normal. There are two distinct branches of the jet stream right now, but clearly the Pacific branch is more dominant in the U.S. than the arctic branch. Repeated efforts at reversing that have not yet materialized and I won't forecast that occurrence without more evidence. I am not arguing against cooler than current weather or even the return to below normal temperatures in the North next week. I just don't see the whole motherlode of arctic air coming down. This outlook will bust big time if I am wrong though if one looks at the extreme cold being predicted on the end panels (days 14-16) of the MRF in NW Canada. Those readings are as cold as anything I have ever seen. But, they are at the end of the long range and in NW Canada. I think it has been proven several times already this winter it is very premature to bring that air down though if you hammer at it often enough it may eventually happen. For the period Wednesday January 9 through Sunday January 13, expect the following temperature trends: Average 1 to 3-degrees below normal: Southeast? Average 1 to 3-above normal: Gulf Coast, Mid-Atlantic... Average 1 to 3-degrees above normal: Northeast, Ohio Valley... Average 4 to 9-degrees above normal: Northeast, Great Lakes, Ohio and Mississippi Valleys, Southern Plains and Rockies, California, Intermountain West, Desert SW, Pacific NW? Average 10 to locally 20-degrees above normal: Central and Northern Rockies, Central and Northern Plains... Andy Weingarten, Meteorologist APB Energy / True Quote