OT: Spring Warmth, 3/5-3/12+? Winter 2025-26 - Patterns and Potential Winter Storms

Knight Shift

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May 19, 2011
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Poor Mr G.

He was sniffing like crazy on the telecast tonight but he also craved attention for the Sunday / Monday event.

2nd sniffer I encountered today !

Had DR appointment today and Nurse in training was a massive sniffer. Sort of freaked me out. Lol.

She averaged about a massive sniff every few seconds or so ! Ugh !
Is sniffing worse than honking?
 
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RU848789

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Jul 27, 2001
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Ok, things just got a lot more interesting at 12Z with the GFS and AIGFS both showing a moderate to significant snowstorm for most of the region with 3-6", although only 2-4" N of 78 (the GFS did back off the 8"+ outcome from the past few runs though), but the CMC now shows a 4-7" snowstorm for most (less towards the coast - mixing), and the Euro now shows 1-3" for most (more towards Philly). The Euro-AIFS and UK are both weaker and suppressed to our south.

All this means 5+ days out (some models start the event Monday afternoon and some as late as late Monday night) is that a moderate to significant snowstorm is possible, but it's also a decent chance that this will largely be a miss to our south (or a graze to southern/coastal sections). Would need to see better consensus to have high confidence in snow.

The Thursday afternoon/evening event is almost kaput with only the GFS showing a few inches south of 276/195.
Well, the Monday threat is looking a lot less likely as most models have trended south and weaker. At 0Z last night, only the CMC brought some snow to our area (1-3" on Monday) and as of 6Z this morning, only the Euro-AIFS is bringing some snow (2-3" on Monday) to our area. Still 4 days out, so the threat isn't dead, especially given that the NWS is still kind of bullish on some snow and given what we saw with the blizzard, where 3 days out all but the GFS were showing little to no snow for us, but even if this one somehow becomes a hit, we're still likely only talking about a 2-4/3-6" event, not a major storm.

The threat for tonight is dead, but there is a chance for a little snow on Sunday morning (1" or so) and there is the chance of snow to rain Tuesday night with mostly rain for 95 and the coast, but could be a few inches of snow well inland before mixing/changing to rain. Pretty far out though.

Finally, here's what bac and many of you have been waiting for. If the Euro and some other models are right, spring arrives next Thursday. These are temps for Philly - they're only a little lower for CNJ, although some other models delay the warmth until next weekend, but all of them have it getting into the 70s by then. Numerous times this winter, warmth has been advertised on the models 9-10 days out only to have that warmth muted, but this one looks real.

1772111569882.png

1772111903331.png
 

Knight Shift

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May 19, 2011
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Well, the Monday threat is looking a lot less likely as most models have trended south and weaker. At 0Z last night, only the CMC brought some snow to our area (1-3" on Monday) and as of 6Z this morning, only the Euro-AIFS is bringing some snow (2-3" on Monday) to our area. Still 4 days out, so the threat isn't dead, especially given that the NWS is still kind of bullish on some snow and given what we saw with the blizzard, where 3 days out all but the GFS were showing little to no snow for us, but even if this one somehow becomes a hit, we're still likely only talking about a 2-4/3-6" event, not a major storm.

The threat for tonight is dead, but there is a chance for a little snow on Sunday morning (1" or so) and there is the chance of snow to rain Tuesday night with mostly rain for 95 and the coast, but could be a few inches of snow well inland before mixing/changing to rain. Pretty far out though.

Finally, here's what bac and many of you have been waiting for. If the Euro and some other models are right, spring arrives next Thursday. These are temps for Philly - they're only a little lower for CNJ, although some other models delay the warmth until next weekend, but all of them have it getting into the 70s by then. Numerous times this winter, warmth has been advertised on the models 9-10 days out only to have that warmth muted, but this one looks real.

View attachment 1199662

View attachment 1199668
ric flair GIF
 

RULoyal

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Jul 28, 2001
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Well, the Monday threat is looking a lot less likely as most models have trended south and weaker. At 0Z last night, only the CMC brought some snow to our area (1-3" on Monday) and as of 6Z this morning, only the Euro-AIFS is bringing some snow (2-3" on Monday) to our area. Still 4 days out, so the threat isn't dead, especially given that the NWS is still kind of bullish on some snow and given what we saw with the blizzard, where 3 days out all but the GFS were showing little to no snow for us, but even if this one somehow becomes a hit, we're still likely only talking about a 2-4/3-6" event, not a major storm.

The threat for tonight is dead, but there is a chance for a little snow on Sunday morning (1" or so) and there is the chance of snow to rain Tuesday night with mostly rain for 95 and the coast, but could be a few inches of snow well inland before mixing/changing to rain. Pretty far out though.

Finally, here's what bac and many of you have been waiting for. If the Euro and some other models are right, spring arrives next Thursday. These are temps for Philly - they're only a little lower for CNJ, although some other models delay the warmth until next weekend, but all of them have it getting into the 70s by then. Numerous times this winter, warmth has been advertised on the models 9-10 days out only to have that warmth muted, but this one looks real.

View attachment 1199662

View attachment 1199668

1772113643807.gif
 

bac2therac

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Jul 30, 2001
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Well, the Monday threat is looking a lot less likely as most models have trended south and weaker. At 0Z last night, only the CMC brought some snow to our area (1-3" on Monday) and as of 6Z this morning, only the Euro-AIFS is bringing some snow (2-3" on Monday) to our area. Still 4 days out, so the threat isn't dead, especially given that the NWS is still kind of bullish on some snow and given what we saw with the blizzard, where 3 days out all but the GFS were showing little to no snow for us, but even if this one somehow becomes a hit, we're still likely only talking about a 2-4/3-6" event, not a major storm.

The threat for tonight is dead, but there is a chance for a little snow on Sunday morning (1" or so) and there is the chance of snow to rain Tuesday night with mostly rain for 95 and the coast, but could be a few inches of snow well inland before mixing/changing to rain. Pretty far out though.

Finally, here's what bac and many of you have been waiting for. If the Euro and some other models are right, spring arrives next Thursday. These are temps for Philly - they're only a little lower for CNJ, although some other models delay the warmth until next weekend, but all of them have it getting into the 70s by then. Numerous times this winter, warmth has been advertised on the models 9-10 days out only to have that warmth muted, but this one looks real.

View attachment 1199662

View attachment 1199668
Mother of God!
 
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WhiteBus

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Oct 4, 2011
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Well, the Monday threat is looking a lot less likely as most models have trended south and weaker. At 0Z last night, only the CMC brought some snow to our area (1-3" on Monday) and as of 6Z this morning, only the Euro-AIFS is bringing some snow (2-3" on Monday) to our area. Still 4 days out, so the threat isn't dead, especially given that the NWS is still kind of bullish on some snow and given what we saw with the blizzard, where 3 days out all but the GFS were showing little to no snow for us, but even if this one somehow becomes a hit, we're still likely only talking about a 2-4/3-6" event, not a major storm.

The threat for tonight is dead, but there is a chance for a little snow on Sunday morning (1" or so) and there is the chance of snow to rain Tuesday night with mostly rain for 95 and the coast, but could be a few inches of snow well inland before mixing/changing to rain. Pretty far out though.

Finally, here's what bac and many of you have been waiting for. If the Euro and some other models are right, spring arrives next Thursday. These are temps for Philly - they're only a little lower for CNJ, although some other models delay the warmth until next weekend, but all of them have it getting into the 70s by then. Numerous times this winter, warmth has been advertised on the models 9-10 days out only to have that warmth muted, but this one looks real.

View attachment 1199662

View attachment 1199668
Looks like a good time to shut down this thread!
 

RU848789

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Jul 27, 2001
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I was just getting ready to compliment you on your March warm-up post, then I see this...
Did you want me to lie to make you feel better? C'mon, I even changed the thread title - it's just that it's too hard to predict beyond 2-3 weeks...
 

RUPete90

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Jul 3, 2025
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Did you want me to lie to make you feel better? C'mon, I even changed the thread title - it's just that it's too hard to predict beyond 2-3 weeks...
We're all aware that freak storms can happen then, but it's not the norm. Given the way this winter has panned out, read the room.
 

DJ Spanky

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Jul 25, 2001
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Well, the Monday threat is looking a lot less likely as most models have trended south and weaker. At 0Z last night, only the CMC brought some snow to our area (1-3" on Monday) and as of 6Z this morning, only the Euro-AIFS is bringing some snow (2-3" on Monday) to our area. Still 4 days out, so the threat isn't dead, especially given that the NWS is still kind of bullish on some snow and given what we saw with the blizzard, where 3 days out all but the GFS were showing little to no snow for us, but even if this one somehow becomes a hit, we're still likely only talking about a 2-4/3-6" event, not a major storm.

What's the timing of the storm if it occurs? Is it still likely to swing south of us, and would that area (mid-Atlantic region) get snow or rain?
 

NickRU714

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Aug 18, 2009
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When will this snow melt off fields?

Baseball/Softball starts in a month.
Outdoor practices supposed to start in a couple weeks.
 

RUPete90

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When will this snow melt off fields?

Baseball/Softball starts in a month.
Outdoor practices supposed to start in a couple weeks.
Probably pretty fast if we don't get any significant reinforcements and if that warm-up pans out later next week. Thankfully there was no deep freeze after this event and it doesn't look like there will be any in the near future.
 

RU848789

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Jul 27, 2001
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When will this snow melt off fields?

Baseball/Softball starts in a month.
Outdoor practices supposed to start in a couple weeks.
The snow on the ground should all be gone by about 3/5, IMO - unless we get a significant snowfall early next week, which might push that back a couple of days or it might be gone a day or two earlier if we get significant rainfall next week (could be mostly rain for many on Weds).

I did pretty well predicting that the 1/25 snowpack would last for 3-4 weeks given the forecast cold and the high QPF/high density/low surface area sleetcrete cap slowing melting and ours had just reached 1-2" left on Sunday, 4 weeks later, while there was still 1" in NB through last Friday, 2/20.

And, as I posted elsewhere, the recent snow has a fairly similar frozen QPF (I had 1.9" QPF on 1/25 and guessing 2.0" for this storm with 21" of snow) as 1/25, but should melt much more easily as it's all snow and we're going to have much warmer temps vs. post-1/25, plus the late Feb sun. That's why my guess has been that the snow from this storm would only last about 10-11 days and be gone by late next week (assuming no significant snow or rain) - and if not for the mini cold snap this Sunday through Tues it would melt even faster.
 
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RU848789

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What's the timing of the storm if it occurs? Is it still likely to swing south of us, and would that area (mid-Atlantic region) get snow or rain?
Most models show it going south of us and it being fairly weak. The only model showing significant snow is the Euro-AIFS which puts down 2-5" for most from about 6 am through 4 pm, meaning some of that is likely to melt in the early March indirect sun. A couple of models show a few to several inches of snow for VA/MD/DE during that time, but others show little to no snow (mostly rain or not much precip).
 

RU848789

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Jul 27, 2001
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We're all aware that freak storms can happen then, but it's not the norm. Given the way this winter has panned out, read the room.
I'm not talking about freak storms at all (except maybe April). March is snowier, on average than December, although snow after about 3/20 is much less frequent than snow the first week of March. We had 25-30" of snow for most in March/April 2018, inculding 8-12" on 3/21/18, plus we had about 12" in March 2017 and 10" in March 2019; on the other hand we've had maybe 5-6" of total snow over the last 6 Marches, so who knows. I'm not much interested in reading rooms - my focus is on sharing relevant and hopefully accurate info.
 
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RU848789

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The snow on the ground should all be gone by about 3/5, IMO - unless we get a significant snowfall early next week, which might push that back a couple of days or it might be gone a day or two earlier if we get significant rainfall next week (could be mostly rain for many on Weds).

I did pretty well predicting that the 1/25 snowpack would last for 3-4 weeks given the forecast cold and the high QPF/high density/low surface area sleetcrete cap slowing melting and ours had just reached 1-2" left on Sunday, 4 weeks later, while there was still 1" in NB through last Friday, 2/20.

And, as I posted elsewhere, the recent snow has a fairly similar frozen QPF (I had 1.9" QPF on 1/25 and guessing 2.0" for this storm with 21" of snow) as 1/25, but should melt much more easily as it's all snow and we're going to have much warmer temps vs. post-1/25, plus the late Feb sun. That's why my guess has been that the snow from this storm would only last about 10-11 days and be gone by late next week (assuming no significant snow or rain) - and if not for the mini cold snap this Sunday through Tues it would melt even faster.
With no significant snow on tap anymore, I think my guess of 3/5 for it being all gone will be close, especially if we get some rain; maybe 3/6 or 3/7 if little rain, as we should be in the 60s for the weekend. We still have 6-8" of snow on most of our property, as it's somewhat shady; the sunny properties in town are down to 1-2" in spots and bare ground in others. NB is down to 5" left, officially.
 

RU848789

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While it was one of the coldest and snowiest meteorological winters (Dec/Jan/Feb) in decades in much of the NE US and especially in the Philly-NJ-NYC area, as I'm sure most are aware of, it turns out it was the 2nd warmest winter on record (since 1895-96) in the 48 contiguous US states.

See the first two graphics from the NWS-Philly, detailing the extent of the cold and snow in their major climate locations and as an aside, our 53.5" of snow here in Metuchen was the 3rd most in our 32 years here (behind 95-96 and 2013-14). But the 3rd graphic shows just how much warmer it was than normal across most of the US, especially for the western 2/3 of the nation.

1772429709970.png

1772429725819.png

1772429740877.png
 

WhiteBus

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While it was one of the coldest and snowiest meteorological winters (Dec/Jan/Feb) in decades in much of the NE US and especially in the Philly-NJ-NYC area, as I'm sure most are aware of, it turns out it was the 2nd warmest winter on record (since 1895-96) in the 48 contiguous US states.

See the first two graphics from the NWS-Philly, detailing the extent of the cold and snow in their major climate locations and as an aside, our 53.5" of snow here in Metuchen was the 3rd most in our 32 years here (behind 95-96 and 2013-14). But the 3rd graphic shows just how much warmer it was than normal across most of the US, especially for the western 2/3 of the nation.

View attachment 1204115

View attachment 1204116

ofView attachment 1204117
Nothing historic about snow totals and winter's avg temperature in Philly. But the combination of the January storm and the bitter cold was brutal.
 

RU848789

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Just a heads up on a minor risk of wintry travel tomorrow morning in our area, as <1" of snow and perhaps a glaze of freezing rain are possible from about 5-10 am for the counties in blue under advisories, generally along/NW of 95. I doubt anywhere south of 78 will see much snow at all - the brief risk of freezing rain is the reason for the advisories (as advisories are typically for 2-3+ inches of snow, when it's all/mostly snow).

https://www.weather.gov/phi

1772495914675.png
 

RU848789

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Jul 27, 2001
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Nothing historic about snow totals and winter's avg temperature in Philly. But the combination of the January storm and the bitter cold was brutal.
Depends on one's definition. The winter season severity index shows that Philly's winter was rated "extreme" which means its combination of snow, snow cover and cold placed it in the top 20% of all winters for severity, i.e., it was more severe than 80%+ of winters in Philly's history. I'd say that's historic, but some might think it has to be top 5 or 10 instead of top 30. I don't have the full set of rankings to know exactly where Philly sits (yet - looking for it).

chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/apme/54/8/jamc-d-14-0217.1.pdf

1772497378501.png
 

WhiteBus

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Depends on one's definition. The winter season severity index shows that Philly's winter was rated "extreme" which means its combination of snow, snow cover and cold placed it in the top 20% of all winters for severity, i.e., it was more severe than 80%+ of winters in Philly's history. I'd say that's historic, but some might think it has to be top 5 or 10 instead of top 30. I don't have the full set of rankings to know exactly where Philly sits (yet - looking for it).

chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/apme/54/8/jamc-d-14-0217.1.pdf

View attachment 1204922
You are stretching the meaning of historic. Both of the storms we had this winter are not historic in Philadelphia. Not even close. The total amount of snow isn't historic either. Avg temperature are the lowest in 10 years. Far from historic.
A memorable winter, of course but not historic.
 

RUPete90

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I travel the world. But this is a weather thread so you have to have a base city for discussion. Others talk about where they area living.
I recognize that, but some location outside of Philadelphia may have experienced record snowfall for a given storm or the season. Or maybe not. But you can't debate based on one location. Well, you can if you choose.
 

WhiteBus

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I recognize that, but some location outside of Philadelphia may have experienced record snowfall for a given storm or the season. Or maybe not. But you can't debate based on one location. Well, you can if you choose.
I made it clear I was specifically talking about Philadelphia. I'm not arguing about other locations. You seem to be the guy arguing to include other locations.
 

RUPete90

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I made it clear I was specifically talking about Philadelphia. I'm not arguing about other locations. You seem to be the guy arguing to include other locations.
You're right - I apologize. I re-read the thread. I am more interested in the region beyond Philadelphia, a fine city BTW. Although not necessarily historic, Numbers makes the case for it ranking among one of Philly's crappier winters, so there's that.
 
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WhiteBus

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You're right - I apologize. I re-read the thread. I am more interested in the region beyond Philadelphia, a fine city BTW. Although not necessarily historic, Numbers makes the case for it ranking among one of Philly's crappier winters, so there's that.
Aren't all winters crappy? He is projecting Metuchen on to the entire tri state area.
 

newell138

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Aug 1, 2001
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I propose we just have 1 thread on the board and each time someone has a thought or wants to post something of interest we just change the thread title. This way no one will miss any posts.
 
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