Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Valentine's Day Potential East Coast Snowstorm

I'm monitoring the potential for a Valentine's Day snowstorm.


Medium range model guidance is supporting the formation of deep negative height anomalies in the Gulf of Alaska, in stark contrast to the typical high pressure anomalies in that area that have given us the anomalously cold winter this year. The negative height anomalies will be helped out by strong positive height anomalies in the western Bering Sea and into the northwest Pacific. As a result of this highly meridional (wavy) pattern in the Pacific, it looks like we'll be seeing suppressed high pressure form in the Southwest US, which will lead us into a northwest flow set-up. The probability of this is enhanced by the negative height anomalies dropping down from Canada into the Northern US, indicative of colder weather in the areas north of the jet stream. The areas affected would include the Great Lakes, Midwest, Plains, Northeast and Mid-Atlantic, to name a few areas.

With this northwest flow would come increased chances for snowstorms for the Northeast, and it looks like we could see one of those storms around the Valentine's Day time period.

The long range GFS model shows heavy snowfall hitting the Northeast in response to a storm system moving away from the coast. The snowfall would likely be maximized along coastal regions, including Massachusetts, New Jersey, and the coastal portion of New York. The northwest flow pattern is clearly defined here, not only by the presence of a coastal storm, but also with the southeast-moving 1000-500mb thickness contours, where blues show colder weather and reds indicate warmer weather. The stray clipper system in Minnesota also alludes to the presence of that northwest flow.

While the GFS is obviously in its inaccurate long range forecast at this point, and there is every chance that this storm may not end up happening, I'm thinking the East Coast will see a shot at snowfall in the mid February time period. Whether it be an amplified clipper system that hits the coast and gives big snows to the Northeast, or a storm system crawling north from the Southeast, I'm liking the East Coast for the snowier opportunities come mid-February. The prevailing northwest flow, which model guidance is in good agreement on, would not support a Midwest, Plains or Ohio Valley major snow event. Alberta Clipper systems would be more likely.

Andrew

5 comments:

Unknown said...

Thanks for listening to my comment!
By the way could we be looking at a possible ice storm down here in southern va? The temps. will be cold enough for a good period of icing.

Anonymous said...

Northwest flow eh?sounds like we had better batten down the hatches in NW Colorado, since a NW flow almost always means some extremely heavy snows in my knack of the woods, like that event in early January that dropped about 4 feet of snow in 5 days, recently the NW flow has been making itself known, with about 1.5 feet that fell in the last few days, now a monster moving in that threatens to dump about 1 to 2 feet with higher amounts possible on west facing slopes, if this NW flow sets up around V-day like your models were indicating, then we are definitely in for another round of nearly historic snows out here...213 inches have fallen so far this year, and it usually doesn't stop snowing here until around late April to mid May. What do you think of that craziness Andrew

Frank-o said...

The High in the gulf is the nail in the coffin for us here in North Carolina. No way anything is getting South when we have a blocking H in the gulf.

Anonymous said...

I just want to know when Spring is coming to the Plains!!
bree

Anonymous said...

Illinois Here: Leave us alone, go away, pick on another state.