wetcoast91 wrote: ↑Sun Dec 13, 2020 4:02 pm
931mb.
Not very familiar with the Bering sea rule, but (assuming it verifies) wouldn't that correlate to a deep trough across the east sometime in the first few weeks of Jan?
Typeing3 wrote: ↑Sun Dec 13, 2020 4:08 pm
Not very familiar with the Bering sea rule, but (assuming it verifies) wouldn't that correlate to a deep trough across the east sometime in the first few weeks of Jan?
Would prop up a massive ridge over the west towards late month and a deep eastern trough. This would be an ideal progression of winter in the west...as undercutting could lead to retrogression in a typical La Nina setup. Waiting for models to converge on this to see the reaction of the AW forums.
I think many here know winter will be backloaded. Mid Jan, Feb and March seem like prime months if it materializes.
Drove to Whistler today. Not much snow falling there but there was a nice cell parked over the area between Alice Lake and Garibaldi. Also Squamish itself had some accumulating snow away from the water.
tyweather wrote: ↑Sun Dec 13, 2020 5:08 pm
Apparently it was a going show on the Cypress Bowl road with vehicles all over and off the road. Even those with proper tires were being turned away
yikes. Glad I didn't even try. Between the insanely slow drivers and the ones who go too fast, it's just not a good time.
I might be tempted to check out Seymour tomorrow after work though.
Typeing3 wrote: ↑Sun Dec 13, 2020 4:08 pm
Not very familiar with the Bering sea rule, but (assuming it verifies) wouldn't that correlate to a deep trough across the east sometime in the first few weeks of Jan?
If it bombs far enough west it can build the ridge into Alaska. I’m thinking that happened in November a few years back. Typhoon nuri? Perhaps I’d have to think on it.
North end of Shawnigan Lake. Southern Vancouver island. 500ft