steve_in_il
Member
John,
First and foremost, thank you for all the effort that goes into your seasonal forecast! I always look forward to it and greatly respect your forecasting abilities. If my question goes beyond the rules, feel free to ignore the post and smack me upside the head if we run into each other on Friday night in Milwaukee.
Last year, a couple of other weather forecast sources that I follow (WeatherBELL and Terry Swails) placed a ton of emphasis on the (relatively) warm pool of water in the Gulf of Alaska as a major driver for the pattern that gave the Midwest a Winter for the ages. This year, they both recognize the El Nino as being probable, as you do. However, both sources are continuing to hang their hat on this Winter's forecast with the assumption that the same pool of warm water (which has not changed much) will again be the main driver in a cooler than normal Winter for the Midwest, East and Southeast. I'm just wondering if you gave that criteria much emphasis as you prepared your forecast? If you get overly technical, I'll never understand.
Thanks!
On a side note, but more importantly, CONGRATULATIONS to you and Nora on your recent anniversary! May you share many, many more years together!
Steve
First and foremost, thank you for all the effort that goes into your seasonal forecast! I always look forward to it and greatly respect your forecasting abilities. If my question goes beyond the rules, feel free to ignore the post and smack me upside the head if we run into each other on Friday night in Milwaukee.
Last year, a couple of other weather forecast sources that I follow (WeatherBELL and Terry Swails) placed a ton of emphasis on the (relatively) warm pool of water in the Gulf of Alaska as a major driver for the pattern that gave the Midwest a Winter for the ages. This year, they both recognize the El Nino as being probable, as you do. However, both sources are continuing to hang their hat on this Winter's forecast with the assumption that the same pool of warm water (which has not changed much) will again be the main driver in a cooler than normal Winter for the Midwest, East and Southeast. I'm just wondering if you gave that criteria much emphasis as you prepared your forecast? If you get overly technical, I'll never understand.
On a side note, but more importantly, CONGRATULATIONS to you and Nora on your recent anniversary! May you share many, many more years together!
Steve