Bomb cyclone is not even a word used by most meterologists. It's just used by people who want to get attention. Just a mere "blizzard" doesn't get the attention that "BOMB CYCLONE!" does.
And I will be driving all night in the hopes of beating the blizzard to south-central Nebraska..... According to my calculations, if I don't make it to Sidney by 10am tomorrow morning I am SCREWED! Funeral stuff on Thursday night and Friday afternoon that I WILL ATTEND (please mother nature????)!!!!
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/weatheralerts/Casper,WY,United-States/we-city?iso=US&el=8xx6fxwudyh4nXIhObkHTA==
It's official
You in Sioux falls??Iv'e never heard of a bomb cyclone until our last storm but number two is suppose to to hit starting tomorrow night. Calling for 15-23 inches of snow with ice falling first here in SE South Dakota. The wind is suppose to blow up to 45 mph.
Good luck. Keep it between the ditches. I don't think we're going to get much here in thayer county. But 50 miles can make a big difference. We've been really warm so it won't stick much unless super heavyAnd I will be driving all night in the hopes of beating the blizzard to south-central Nebraska..... According to my calculations, if I don't make it to Sidney by 10am tomorrow morning I am SCREWED! Funeral stuff on Thursday night and Friday afternoon that I WILL ATTEND (please mother nature????)!!!!
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/weatheralerts/Casper,WY,United-States/we-city?iso=US&el=8xx6fxwudyh4nXIhObkHTA==
Bomb cyclone is not even a word used by most meteorologists. It's just used by people who want to get attention. Just a mere "blizzard" doesn't get the attention that "BOMB CYCLONE!" does.
A bomb cyclone is short word for a bombogensis weather event for an area with rapid low pressure, which the term itself is already a combination of a storm bombing out and a cyclone, and it happens in areas both tropical and non-tropical.
But hey let's take your uneducated word for it. A "blizzard" in April just doesn't get much attention.
Thanks Google. I guess the geniuses that are weather predictors only managed to name a blizzard a BOMB CYCLONE in the last few years. You know, because SCIENCE.
Yankton. After reading the report this morning it looks like they are expecting it to go further North than expected so we may only get a few inches.You in Sioux falls??
OhNOES! BOMB cyclone! Yes, the local news described HEAVY snow in the forecast. How much did they predict? 4 inches.
"Bomb cyclone" is so last month. Need a new term.
This used to be the case. Now when people make fun of scientists, the crowd claps each other on the back while muttering angrily, "Effin' scientists think they know everthang!"Making fun of scientists because you don't understand what is happening will make people laugh at you.
I mean...it is either snowing or it isn't snowing...I get that weathermen make bank and have to justify their salary but really how much more do we need to know other than that it "might snow a lot"
They make weather forecasts. Well, they read what the NWS puts out. Man I miss the days of Mel Mains, Kinney, Bob Geiger. Not sure if they were all "meteorologists" but they knew their weather.Do weathermen make bank?
Don't they? I guess I always heard/thought they did well.Do weathermen make bank?
There was nothing "uneducated" about what I said. In fact, my comments came from a point of education. I knew exactly what a bomb cyclone was, and even if I didn't, I could have looked it up. My point was that most meteorologists do not use the term, and there is a reason for that. In fact, the term was hardly known except among meteorologists and other scientists until last year, when the general media picked up on it with a storm in the northeast and started using it. Bomb cyclones aren't new-they've been around for a long time. The fascination with it among the media is new. There's nothing about the conditions associated with a bomb cyclone that calling it just a mere blizzard doesn't get across. The National Weather Service has no warning for a "bomb cyclone". They have a Blizzard Warning, which is what they've issued. The point is, there is no need to draw attention by screaming "bomb cyclone!" when the same weather terms we've always used work just fine.A bomb cyclone is short word for a bombogensis weather event for an area with rapid low pressure, which the term itself is already a combination of a storm bombing out and a cyclone, and it happens in areas both tropical and non-tropical.
But hey let's take your uneducated word for it. A "blizzard" in April just doesn't get much attention.
“White privileged precipitation”."Bomb cyclone" is so last month. Need a new term.
There was nothing "uneducated" about what I said. In fact, my comments came from a point of education. I knew exactly what a bomb cyclone was, and even if I didn't, I could have looked it up. My point was that most meteorologists do not use the term, and there is a reason for that. In fact, the term was hardly known except among meteorologists and other scientists until last year, when the general media picked up on it with a storm in the northeast and started using it. Bomb cyclones aren't new-they've been around for a long time. The fascination with it among the media is new. There's nothing about the conditions associated with a bomb cyclone that calling it just a mere blizzard doesn't get across. The National Weather Service has no warning for a "bomb cyclone". They have a Blizzard Warning, which is what they've issued. The point is, there is no need to draw attention by screaming "bomb cyclone!" when the same weather terms we've always used work just fine.
For that matter, this storm is actually likely to fall short of the "bomb cyclone" designation of dropping at least 24 millibars of pressure in 24 hours. Yet that hasn't stopped some media from calling it one anyway.
Exactly my point.It’s the need to sensationalize it, like, um, pretty much everything else in society today.
From Oneill west they could get 14-24 inches. But the cutoff line is a ways south. I GI we should only get a 1/4" of ice and maybe 1-2" coupled with 45-60 mph winds.
The forecast by the "experts" was 4 inches 24 hours ago. Now its a foot. Just sayin.