#BOTS! A very odd snow system today.

This is hard to believe but there's rain and thunderstorms in northern Indiana. There's rain and clouds in central Indiana and there is heavy snow in southern Indiana. 




Here is what the National Weather Service is saying:


Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Indianapolis IN 822 AM EST Thu Dec 28 2023 .Key Messages... - Fog this morning in places, mainly north and east portions of the CWA - Chances for rain and snow through Friday - A coating of snow is possible, mainly western parts of the CWA - Seasonable temperatures persist through the week into the weekend && .Mesoscale Update... Issued at 822 AM EST Thu Dec 28 2023 A band of snow across far southwest portions of central Indiana has resulted in around an inch of snowfall accumulation in a few spots, mainly on grassy surfaces. Additional minor snowfall accumulation on grassy surfaces is possible as the band is nearly stationary. Latest radar observations show the band has weakened slightly in intensity over the past hour. Look for this trend to continue as the deformation zone associated with this band of snow dissipates. Marginal road temperatures near or just above freezing have limited impacts across this area, but a few slick spots and reduced visibilities will be possible over the next few hours. && .Short Term...(Today and tonight) Issued at 301 AM EST Thu Dec 28 2023 SYNOPTIC OVERVIEW AND EXPECTED SYSTEM EVOLUTION Surface and upper-air analysis show a mid to upper-level low over Missouri and southern Illinois. Another wave/vort max is taking shape over Michigan and southern Ontario. These two features are expected to interact while inducing surface cyclogenesis over Indiana this afternoon and evening. No notable trends in guidance since midday yesterday. Models now seem in good agreement regarding the evolution of the upcoming system. Current analysis shows a band of precipitation intensifying as it enters our southwestern counties. Surface observations place the air mass ahead of this band in the upper 30s to low 40s. In the band itself, temperatures have dropped into the mid to low 30s with some reports of snow coming in. Behind the band, temperatures remain in the 30s. The contrast in temperatures and wind shift suggest that frontogenetical forcing is the primary driver of this band. Hi-res guidance slowly brings this feature northward into our CWA, slowing it down and allowing it to pivot in place for a time while weakening. Will introduce snow/rain mix in locations under band going forward. This afternoon, model soundings show moisture increasing through the column. Clouds heights lower to under 1000 feet for most locations, with some fog possible at times this morning. By 20z, hi-res guidance allows precipitation to break out across our northern and western counties as low pressure begins forming just to our north. As the low wraps up and slowly drifts southward around the primary mid/upper level system, precipitation should spread southward as well. PRECIPITATION TYPE AND AMOUNTS The biggest challenge of the short term is precipitation type. Snow is favored where precipitation intensity is greatest, at least initially. Model soundings show a very marginal profile most of the day today, with temperatures in the mid to upper 30s across the region. Even if snow mixes in, or fully changes over within heavier bands...snow ratios will be quite low and accumulations will be difficult to achieve. By sunset, model soundings indicate further cooling of column which greatly increases snow chances. Still, almost every member of guidance retains above-freezing surface temperatures through tonight. Will introduce snow to the forecast for most locations after 00z, and keep it rain/snow mix through the period. The best chance of going all-snow will be near the Illinois state line and westward. In turn, these places also have the best chance of seeing snowfall accumulations. In terms of amounts, current expectation for total liquid equivalent QPF ranges from a couple hundredths of an inch to a few tenths (some ambitious model runs show around a half of an inch or slightly greater across our northwest). Ensemble means show the lowest values across our eastern counties and the highest in our west and northwestern counties. Regarding snowfall...given the very marginal surface environment, warm ground, and overall light precip amounts...am thinking the most likely scenario for any given point is no accumulation to a coating. If any mesoscale banding occurs, then a coating to an inch or two is not out of the question. The location of any such banding is quite variable within guidance. && .Long Term...(Friday through Wednesday) Issued at 301 AM EST Thu Dec 28 2023 Today`s system continues into the long range, with a few lingering showers / snow showers possible. Model soundings point towards low clouds and dreary conditions persisting well into the weekend. Upper-level flow is modeled to become a bit more progressive and quasi-zonal. Guidance continues to hint at a weak cold front passing through late this weekend, with minor precip chances (less than 20 percent). Overall, the long range looks quiet with few, if any, opportunities for significant precipitation and near-average temperatures. Beyond day 7, some hints in ensemble guidance of a trend towards a more active pattern. While not a strong signal, a period of cooler than average temperatures are possible as well. NAEFS experimental 8 to 14 day probabilities point in this direction while the ECMWF mean is less aggressive.


What the hell happened to winter? (2023-24 Update!)

Keep in mind that winter officially starts on December 21. But yes, we have not seen any snow and the first day of snow usually averages out to be around December 15. That won't happen this year. Unfortunately the rest of December looks warmer than average. The average for this time of year should be a high of 41 and a low of 26. As you can see, we are slightly above average. The computer models keep hinting that the polar vortex will visit us and then the models push the date back by a week. In late November the models said the cold air would arrive by December 12-15. And then December 18-20. Now they say December 27-29. Will it get pushed back again? It's possible. 

Here's what's going on. The cold air is bottled up and stuck over Siberia.(Green circle = Siberia; Red arrow = Indiana)



This makes sense if you have been following the changes in the earth's magnetic pole shift.



Until it makes a move, we are stuck with above average temperatures and a lot of cold rain. The first week of January 2024 looks promising but then the temperatures warm up again.



So, the good news is that winter is not over. Heck, it hasn't even started yet! The bad news is that temperatures are trending warmer than normal. I think it's safe to say that we will not have a White Christmas this year. Nonetheless #BOTS!



The CFS computer is not reliable but...

It does a good job picking up on pattern changes and trends. It's hinting at a polar vortex visit during the last week of December. It also shows an ice storm of the century for Louisiana and the deep south for December 30, 2023.





Keep a close watch on the weather for Sunday 12/10/23

All options are on the table. That means rain, storms, ice and snow. Here is what the National Weather Service is saying:

.Long Term...(Wednesday through Monday)
Issued at 316 AM EST Tue Dec 5 2023

Wednesday through Friday...

Dry conditions will oversee a moderating pattern through the
remainder of the workweek.  Surface high pressure crossing the
central CONUS Wednesday...will be followed by a broad upper-level
ridge crossing the US over Thursday-Friday while a strengthening
surface gradient is focused into central Indiana between the slowing
surface high to our southeast and deepening low pressure along the
Canadian border.

Lingering subsidence cloudiness Wednesday will hold seasonable chill
over the region, before solid warm-advective winds and ample sun
Thursday boost readings into the low to mid-50s for the first time
in a week.  Above normal marks will continue into Friday amid
increasing clouds ahead of the next system/front taking shape across
the central US.  High confidence in precipitation-free conditions
over all of the region through these three days with no forcing
aloft, generally dry mid-levels, and adequate low level moisture not
expected to return until the Friday night timeframe.

Saturday through Monday...

Latest guidance are continuing to show an early winter storm
advancing in a northeasterly direction from the Middle Mississippi
Valley to the Great Lakes this weekend. While disagreement still
lies between different models as well as ensemble members, latest
trends do show better model agreement...and with perhaps a farther
north surface low track through the Midwest due to slightly faster
secondary upper level energy that would serve to negatively tilt the
H500 trough farther upstream/to our west.

For central Indiana this would translate to a deeper presence in the
system`s warm sector late this week into the weekend, with
increasing coverage of rain showers amid advection of greater deep
moisture.  At least a 6-hour period of steadier/heavier rain (with
embedded thunder likely for at least portions of the region) would
pair with precipitable water peaking around 1.1-1.3 inches ahead of
the system`s cold frontal passage.  A second part of the system that
would involve a changeover to snow flurries and perhaps light
accumulating snow under a few snow showers would be dependent on how
fast cold enough air could arrive in the lower levels before the
secondary forcing advanced past the region and into the southeastern
Great Lakes.

Confidence is increasing in an ultimately strong to perhaps intense
winter storm...yet there is much lower certainty that this system
will come together fast enough and far enough southwest to bring
much-needed heavier precipitation...and/or measurable snow.  An
updated glance at ensemble mean rain/snow probabilities for best 24-
hour periods now indicate a 60-80% likelihood in a 24-hr period of
0.50+ inches of precipitation and a 20-40% likelihood of 1.00+
inches...with both of these POPs timed through the middle of the
weekend. Snowfall probabilities denote a 20-30% chance of 1.0"
snowfall in far northern portions of the CWA...and despite minuscule
likelihoods of 3.0"+, the axis for this greatest potential would
likely run in a SSW-NNE band through central portions of the state.
Greatest snowfall chances are during the late weekend.

Best confidence will perhaps be in breezy to gusty conditions
through the entire weekend and into early next week, from first
southerly, and then westerly directions...with gusts as high as 20-
35 mph across all of the region.  Rather mild temperatures Saturday
should trend to a return to seasonably cool readings through early
next week.