longshanks
New member
This doesn't look good at all...Accuweather's Ken Clark on the high pressure ridge now strengthening over the West...
Mega Winter Ridge Means Mega Winter Dryness Jan 20, 2011; 1:56 PM ET
The screaming message in the weather pattern through the end of the month is for dry weather the rest of the month in the Southwest and even drier than normal weather in the Great Basin and Northwest. A mega ridge in the eastern Pacific will stand large and strong.
I do not see any threat of rain and snow in the Southwest through next week. The sometime fickle models are in agreement on this. This will mean that January will end up far below normal precipitation wise. Along with the dryness will also come warmer than normal weather that is likely to continue as well.
Even in the Northwest and Great Basin it will be pretty dry the rest of the month. The only real important precipitation will be tomorrow into tomorrow night in the Northwest and tomorrow night into Saturday in the Great Basin and eastern Rockies. After that it looks like most of the time will be free of precipitation. This is not bad news for the Northwest where recent rain and snow melt has caused flooding problems.
and more of the same $hite news from Alex Sosnowski...
A building ridge of high pressure will eventually push Pacific storms so far north that they will miss not only California, but the Northwest U.S. entirely next week and beyond...
Colder air may try to slosh in from the north and east during February, simultaneously with a return of the storms. However, that is 10 to 14 days off.
Has anyone seen The King's Speech with Geoffrey Rush & Colin Firth? I think Firth's character (King George VI) sums up this forecast quite well with his angry but hilarious rant...fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, shit, fuck, fuck, bastard, fuck... I couldn't agree more
Mega Winter Ridge Means Mega Winter Dryness Jan 20, 2011; 1:56 PM ET
The screaming message in the weather pattern through the end of the month is for dry weather the rest of the month in the Southwest and even drier than normal weather in the Great Basin and Northwest. A mega ridge in the eastern Pacific will stand large and strong.
I do not see any threat of rain and snow in the Southwest through next week. The sometime fickle models are in agreement on this. This will mean that January will end up far below normal precipitation wise. Along with the dryness will also come warmer than normal weather that is likely to continue as well.
Even in the Northwest and Great Basin it will be pretty dry the rest of the month. The only real important precipitation will be tomorrow into tomorrow night in the Northwest and tomorrow night into Saturday in the Great Basin and eastern Rockies. After that it looks like most of the time will be free of precipitation. This is not bad news for the Northwest where recent rain and snow melt has caused flooding problems.
and more of the same $hite news from Alex Sosnowski...
A building ridge of high pressure will eventually push Pacific storms so far north that they will miss not only California, but the Northwest U.S. entirely next week and beyond...
Colder air may try to slosh in from the north and east during February, simultaneously with a return of the storms. However, that is 10 to 14 days off.
Has anyone seen The King's Speech with Geoffrey Rush & Colin Firth? I think Firth's character (King George VI) sums up this forecast quite well with his angry but hilarious rant...fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, shit, fuck, fuck, bastard, fuck... I couldn't agree more