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Post by Babu on Nov 6, 2017 7:07:29 GMT -5
Winter diurnals aren't higher up here. They are nonexistent. It's just temperatures fluctuate rather quickly independetly from the time of day. It might be -4'C during the day and then 5'C the next morning.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 6, 2017 7:15:47 GMT -5
Winter diurnals aren't higher up here. They are nonexistent. It's just temperatures fluctuate rather quickly independetly from the time of day. It might be -4'C during the day and then 5'C the next morning. Oh really? Sounds bonkers if it is that way considering January has a -3/-10 span
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Post by Babu on Nov 6, 2017 10:33:52 GMT -5
Winter diurnals aren't higher up here. They are nonexistent. It's just temperatures fluctuate rather quickly independetly from the time of day. It might be -4'C during the day and then 5'C the next morning. Oh really? Sounds bonkers if it is that way considering January has a -3/-10 span The day isn't warmer on average than the night, but there's a 20'C difference between the 90 percentile intervals at any given time.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 6, 2017 10:56:30 GMT -5
this is the swedish winter forecast hiromant spoke about. In Scandinavia, the period December-February appears to be a little colder than usual in the south, while northern Scandinavia is getting a little milder weather as a whole. One has to remember that this is relative. Climatologically, northern Scandinavia is colder than the south. "A little milder" in the north means that mild air attacks from the west can be more than usual, while these get a little less in the south and the cold from the east gets easier to reach with eastern winds. This weather situation often occurs when high pressure reaches from the east, which is the weather pattern I think will dominate Scandinavia this winter.www.svt.se/vader/amne/sasongsprognos-vinter-2017-18
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 6, 2017 12:11:46 GMT -5
Ah so
Dec 1/-5 Jan -2/-8 Feb -1/-7
If this is true then. I assume they're still using 61-90 normals so...
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Post by grega94 on Nov 6, 2017 12:16:47 GMT -5
I voted for well below average for the Seattle area. It snowed this past weakened, the earliest in like 30 years or something, and the snow actually sticked to the ground too! This will definitely be a cold and snowy La Nina for Seattle this winter.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 6, 2017 12:17:31 GMT -5
I voted for well below average for the Seattle area. It snowed this past weakened, the earliest in like 30 years or something, and the snow actually sticked to the ground too! This will defiantly be a cold and snowy La Nina for Seattle this winter. Do you live in an area well-representative of the Wiki weather station? Knowing about all those microclimates et cetera
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Post by grega94 on Nov 6, 2017 12:24:09 GMT -5
I voted for well below average for the Seattle area. It snowed this past weakened, the earliest in like 30 years or something, and the snow actually sticked to the ground too! This will defiantly be a cold and snowy La Nina for Seattle this winter. Do you live in an area well-representative of the Wiki weather station? Knowing about all those microclimates et cetera I live like 20 minute away from the airport in Federal Way, and work on the East side on the border of Bellevue and Redmond, and then visited relatives on Camano Island and in all locations it snowed. though in Federal Way it didn't stick, but inland areas and northern suburbs did. here is a weather.com article weather.com/storms/winter/news/2017-11-06-northwest-harsh-winter-ahead-outlook
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