Monday, January 31, 2011

31 January, 2011

Follow the Blog on Facebook & Twitter

TODAY'S TOP WEATHER STORIES
On Weather & Climate Through the Eyes of Mark Vogan

***MARK VOGAN'S FEBRUARY OUTLOOK FOR UK AND EUROPE IS OUT, SEE WEATHER TALK BELOW FOR THE DETAILS!

ARE YOU READY?
GREATEST SNOWSTORM OF WINTER TO CRIPPLE HEART OF UNITED STATES
By Mark Vogan


With a huge temperature contrast of super cold air flowing into the Northern Rockies and Plains this morning thanks to a strong Arctic high over Alberta and Saskatchewan and warm, tropical air flowing north from the Gulf of Mexico and merging with a thermal boundary across the central Plains region today, a low is developing over the Southern Rockies and this will cut northeastwards towards the Northeast tomorrow and Wednesday but as it does so, the cold air will push further southwards into Texas as the high over western Canada builds south intensifying the storm system. As the low pressure system winds up, it's wings of capturing both cold to the north and west and warm, moist air to the south spread and grow stronger. The infusion of these conflicting air masses raise the thermal contrast and thus injects fuel into the storm. The storm itself feeds as it ingests greater quantities of cold, warmth and moisture and this creates that stronger storm. The track of the storm means, anywhere that finds themselves northwest of the center, they will see blizzard conditions with winds aligning over them out of the northeast as a deepening Arctic high to the northwest and deepening low pressure system to the southeast means the fight zone rages in between, the atmosphere's way of finding balance!

There is concern that whilst a swath of locally 6-10 inches is possible across the Northern Plains from Rapid City, SD to Minneapolis today and snowshowers through the central and even southern Plains, the "bigtime snows" will set up from east of Denver and focus a band of blizzard-condition snowfall over Chicago and up into Detroit and southern Ontario tomorrow and Wednesday as winds align. As of this time, the city of Chicago appears to be inside the atmospheric fightzone and a blizzard of potentially historic proportion looks highly likely. As much as 15 to 22" is possible in and around Chicago whilst tornadic thunderstorms and flooding rains is likely for the Southern States.

Stay tuned for more, updated information as well as videos coming up shortly.


Forecast: 'Potentially life-threatening' blizzard
Storm seen as worst since '99
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Snow blankets metro roads; up to 6 inches expected
STAR TRIBUNE

Stormy weather in store for Metro Detroit
DETNEWS

Blizzard Warnings stretch 800 miles, from Sheboygan to Oklahoma City

WGN-TV CHICAGO





OTHER NORTH AMERICA COLD WEATHER NEWS

Temperatures dipped overnight and early in to Monday morning prompting the City of Toronto to issue an extreme cold weather alert. The warning was cancelled Monday morning.

Toronto cancels extreme cold weather alert

CTV TORONTO

Cold weather set to linger this week

BILLINGS GAZETTE
 
BRUTAL COLD SETTLING INTO THE WEST
 
Frigid Billings, Montana (Courtesy of Billings Gazette)


 
WHAT A DIFFERNCE IN ALBERTA AND SASKATCHEWAN!


It's been WARM across much of Western Canada last week but would you believe that after experiencing mid-winter temperatures as balmy as 13C or +55F in Calgary last Thursday it's now a stunning 40C (72F) COLDER with a current reading of -27C or -17F. If you think that's amazing, the city actually saw readings back down below -20C as quickly as Sunday from it's warm high's of Thursday. A high of only -17C or +1F is expected today. As for Edmonton to the north, after seeing 9C or 48F last Thursday, it's currently -30C or -22F with surrounding areas registering close to -40C (-40F). Today's high in Edmonton is expected to reach only -19C or -2F and plunge to -32C (-26F) this evening.




The City of Saskatoon in central Saskatchewan also warmed to abnormally high levels on Thursday with a high topping 2C or 36F but by Sunday, the "high" was a stunningly lower -25C or -13F, that's a remarkable drop between highs in only 3 days!. It's currently a cold -35C or -31F with a low likely reading cooler earlier this morning. Today's forecast high is a cold, but much more appropriate -25C or -13F for late January in the heart of the continent where winter's are meant to be cold!.

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS SCOTLAND, UK & EUROPE
By Mark Vogan

The classic La Nina upper-level pattern is continuing to show itself across our part of the world as well as further across the continent with cold air stationed over the mainland but isn't particularly far away from us. In fact whilst Glasgow and Edinburgh remain mild with off and on showers and breezy conditions and temps in the 6-8C range, London is cooler with 4-6C and over the weekend it struggled to get much above freezing.

Today, Paris is barely 1C whilst much of the inland areas of Europe will be at or slightly below freezing and nights not much off the daytime high thanks to clouds, rain and snow. It's a fairly grey, damp and cold picture across much of Europe, colder still as can be expected across European Russia and Scandinavia with highs in the -5 to -10C range and lows perhaps -10 to -15C from Oslo to St Petersburg but close to seasonal averages given it's the heart of winter.

The cold lingers across the southern half of Europe as a low is set to present a region from southern France across to Italy, Greece and Turkey with stormy conditions with low elevation rain, high elevation snow and windy conditions.

Britain remains mild with an active Atlantic dominated pattern. With mild and stormy weather in western Europe, colder for the central, eastern and southern regions, this is very La Nina-like and this setup appears likely to hold for much of thr remainder of the winter!

Gail McGrane presents the BBC Scotland Forecast

Nina Ridge presents the BBC UK Forecast

Susan Powell presents the BBC Europe Forecast

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS AMERICA
From AccuWeather


What Makes A Bad Winter: Snow or Cold?
By Gina Cherundolo, AccuWeather.com Staff Writer

Groundhog Day Blizzard Could Spawn Tornadoes Across the South
By Henry Margusity, Expert Senior Meteorologist


Major Northeast Snow, Ice Storm into Groundhog Day
By Alex Sosnowski, Expert Senior Meteorologist


WEATHER TALK
By Mark Vogan

MY FEBRUARY OUTLOOK
THE REMAINDER OF WINTER APPEARS TO REMAIN MILD AND ATLANTIC DOMINATED OVERALL FOR UK BUT THIS DOESN'T MEAN OFF AND ON COLD AND SNOW CAN'T RETURN TO BRITAIN!
As we enter the final "Meteorological winter" month of February, January ends overall fairly mild after a cold, snowy start to 2011 which followed the record-cold December.

The La Nina pattern is beginning to show itself as we enter winter's end game for Europe as the cold continues to hold over Germany eastwards into the Ukraine and this cold which is of a moderate brand and not extreme will bleed south towards the Mediterannean countries which look likely to see the greatest departures below normal for the final month of winter and even into March. The persistent cold and blasts of snow will linger for areas that have been cold throughout the season and that are typically cold. Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki have seen a brutal November-December period and a return to "typical winter conditions" with near normal temperatures and typical snowfalls returned in January and will likely continue for the remainder of the season.

OFF-ON STYLE SHOTS OF COLD ARE POSSIBLE DURING FEBRUARY FOR UK AND IRELAND

La Nina's tend to bias western continental ridging and dominant Atlantic storm activity from Britain and Ireland into the Low Countries of the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark and into northern France. This appears likely to cold OVERALL during February and thus as expected in my seasonal forecast published back on Oct 31, 2010, winter wouldn't be like last winter as the mid point would see a substantial mild and more seasonable pattern and the brunt and worst of our winter would occur during December. I did state that the mid and later point of winter 2010-11 should see off and on cold and like we did see this during January, we're likely to see more off-on style shots of cold and perhaps snow during February and into March. The cold, even for central and even eastern Europe is less severe than what was seen in November and December but because the typically mild, sunny south of Europe (Italy, Greece etc) don't see particularly cold weather, The cold air IS EXPECTED to reach these areas and will result in the greatest departures from normal for February with perhaps unusual snow and cold to Med coastal resorts.

WHAT'S REACHING TODAY'S BLOGS?

One-Two Punch of Storms to Pack Quite a Wallop
Joe Lundburg, AccuWeather

Groundhog Day Blizzard, Ice Storms and Severe Weather
Henry Margusity, AccuWeather

THE EXTREMES OF THE DAY

TODAY'S US EXTREMES
COURTESY OF ACCUWEATHER

HIGH: 87 degrees at Laredo, TX
LOW: -33 degrees at Chinook, MT

TODAY'S EXTREMES HERE AT MY HOUSE

HIGH: 44 degrees
LOW: 37 degrees

TODAY'S CONDITION'S (LOCALLY)
A generally dull, overcast, showery and breezy day with a west, southwest flow and this ushers in mild Atlantic air. Heavier more persistent rains moved in by this afternoon and will continue tonight.

Thanks for reading.
-Mark

31 January, 2011

Follow the Blog on Facebook & Twitter

TODAY'S TOP WEATHER STORIES
On Weather & Climate Through the Eyes of Mark Vogan

***MARK VOGAN'S FEBRUARY OUTLOOK FOR UK AND EUROPE IS OUT, SEE WEATHER TALK BELOW FOR THE DETAILS!

ARE YOU READY?
GREATEST SNOWSTORM OF WINTER TO CRIPPLE HEART OF UNITED STATES
By Mark Vogan


With a huge temperature contrast of super cold air flowing into the Northern Rockies and Plains this morning thanks to a strong Arctic high over Alberta and Saskatchewan and warm, tropical air flowing north from the Gulf of Mexico and merging with a thermal boundary across the central Plains region today, a low is developing over the Southern Rockies and this will cut northeastwards towards the Northeast tomorrow and Wednesday but as it does so, the cold air will push further southwards into Texas as the high over western Canada builds south intensifying the storm system. As the low pressure system winds up, it's wings of capturing both cold to the north and west and warm, moist air to the south spread and grow stronger. The infusion of these conflicting air masses raise the thermal contrast and thus injects fuel into the storm. The storm itself feeds as it ingests greater quantities of cold, warmth and moisture and this creates that stronger storm. The track of the storm means, anywhere that finds themselves northwest of the center, they will see blizzard conditions with winds aligning over them out of the northeast as a deepening Arctic high to the northwest and deepening low pressure system to the southeast means the fight zone rages in between, the atmosphere's way of finding balance!

There is concern that whilst a swath of locally 6-10 inches is possible across the Northern Plains from Rapid City, SD to Minneapolis today and snowshowers through the central and even southern Plains, the "bigtime snows" will set up from east of Denver and focus a band of blizzard-condition snowfall over Chicago and up into Detroit and southern Ontario tomorrow and Wednesday as winds align. As of this time, the city of Chicago appears to be inside the atmospheric fightzone and a blizzard of potentially historic proportion looks highly likely. As much as 15 to 22" is possible in and around Chicago whilst tornadic thunderstorms and flooding rains is likely for the Southern States.

Stay tuned for more, updated information as well as videos coming up shortly.


Forecast: 'Potentially life-threatening' blizzard
Storm seen as worst since '99
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Snow blankets metro roads; up to 6 inches expected
STAR TRIBUNE

Stormy weather in store for Metro Detroit
DETNEWS

Blizzard Warnings stretch 800 miles, from Sheboygan to Oklahoma City

WGN-TV CHICAGO





OTHER NORTH AMERICA COLD WEATHER NEWS

Temperatures dipped overnight and early in to Monday morning prompting the City of Toronto to issue an extreme cold weather alert. The warning was cancelled Monday morning.

Toronto cancels extreme cold weather alert

CTV TORONTO

Cold weather set to linger this week

BILLINGS GAZETTE
 
BRUTAL COLD SETTLING INTO THE WEST
 
Frigid Billings, Montana (Courtesy of Billings Gazette)


 
WHAT A DIFFERNCE IN ALBERTA AND SASKATCHEWAN!


It's been WARM across much of Western Canada last week but would you believe that after experiencing mid-winter temperatures as balmy as 13C or +55F in Calgary last Thursday it's now a stunning 40C (72F) COLDER with a current reading of -27C or -17F. If you think that's amazing, the city actually saw readings back down below -20C as quickly as Sunday from it's warm high's of Thursday. A high of only -17C or +1F is expected today. As for Edmonton to the north, after seeing 9C or 48F last Thursday, it's currently -30C or -22F with surrounding areas registering close to -40C (-40F). Today's high in Edmonton is expected to reach only -19C or -2F and plunge to -32C (-26F) this evening.




The City of Saskatoon in central Saskatchewan also warmed to abnormally high levels on Thursday with a high topping 2C or 36F but by Sunday, the "high" was a stunningly lower -25C or -13F, that's a remarkable drop between highs in only 3 days!. It's currently a cold -35C or -31F with a low likely reading cooler earlier this morning. Today's forecast high is a cold, but much more appropriate -25C or -13F for late January in the heart of the continent where winter's are meant to be cold!.

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS SCOTLAND, UK & EUROPE
By Mark Vogan

The classic La Nina upper-level pattern is continuing to show itself across our part of the world as well as further across the continent with cold air stationed over the mainland but isn't particularly far away from us. In fact whilst Glasgow and Edinburgh remain mild with off and on showers and breezy conditions and temps in the 6-8C range, London is cooler with 4-6C and over the weekend it struggled to get much above freezing.

Today, Paris is barely 1C whilst much of the inland areas of Europe will be at or slightly below freezing and nights not much off the daytime high thanks to clouds, rain and snow. It's a fairly grey, damp and cold picture across much of Europe, colder still as can be expected across European Russia and Scandinavia with highs in the -5 to -10C range and lows perhaps -10 to -15C from Oslo to St Petersburg but close to seasonal averages given it's the heart of winter.

The cold lingers across the southern half of Europe as a low is set to present a region from southern France across to Italy, Greece and Turkey with stormy conditions with low elevation rain, high elevation snow and windy conditions.

Britain remains mild with an active Atlantic dominated pattern. With mild and stormy weather in western Europe, colder for the central, eastern and southern regions, this is very La Nina-like and this setup appears likely to hold for much of thr remainder of the winter!

Gail McGrane presents the BBC Scotland Forecast

Nina Ridge presents the BBC UK Forecast

Susan Powell presents the BBC Europe Forecast

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS AMERICA
From AccuWeather


What Makes A Bad Winter: Snow or Cold?
By Gina Cherundolo, AccuWeather.com Staff Writer

Groundhog Day Blizzard Could Spawn Tornadoes Across the South
By Henry Margusity, Expert Senior Meteorologist


Major Northeast Snow, Ice Storm into Groundhog Day
By Alex Sosnowski, Expert Senior Meteorologist


WEATHER TALK
By Mark Vogan

MY FEBRUARY OUTLOOK
THE REMAINDER OF WINTER APPEARS TO REMAIN MILD AND ATLANTIC DOMINATED OVERALL FOR UK BUT THIS DOESN'T MEAN OFF AND ON COLD AND SNOW CAN'T RETURN TO BRITAIN!
As we enter the final "Meteorological winter" month of February, January ends overall fairly mild after a cold, snowy start to 2011 which followed the record-cold December.

The La Nina pattern is beginning to show itself as we enter winter's end game for Europe as the cold continues to hold over Germany eastwards into the Ukraine and this cold which is of a moderate brand and not extreme will bleed south towards the Mediterannean countries which look likely to see the greatest departures below normal for the final month of winter and even into March. The persistent cold and blasts of snow will linger for areas that have been cold throughout the season and that are typically cold. Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki have seen a brutal November-December period and a return to "typical winter conditions" with near normal temperatures and typical snowfalls returned in January and will likely continue for the remainder of the season.

OFF-ON STYLE SHOTS OF COLD ARE POSSIBLE DURING FEBRUARY FOR UK AND IRELAND

La Nina's tend to bias western continental ridging and dominant Atlantic storm activity from Britain and Ireland into the Low Countries of the Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark and into northern France. This appears likely to cold OVERALL during February and thus as expected in my seasonal forecast published back on Oct 31, 2010, winter wouldn't be like last winter as the mid point would see a substantial mild and more seasonable pattern and the brunt and worst of our winter would occur during December. I did state that the mid and later point of winter 2010-11 should see off and on cold and like we did see this during January, we're likely to see more off-on style shots of cold and perhaps snow during February and into March. The cold, even for central and even eastern Europe is less severe than what was seen in November and December but because the typically mild, sunny south of Europe (Italy, Greece etc) don't see particularly cold weather, The cold air IS EXPECTED to reach these areas and will result in the greatest departures from normal for February with perhaps unusual snow and cold to Med coastal resorts.

WHAT'S REACHING TODAY'S BLOGS?

One-Two Punch of Storms to Pack Quite a Wallop
Joe Lundburg, AccuWeather

Groundhog Day Blizzard, Ice Storms and Severe Weather
Henry Margusity, AccuWeather

THE EXTREMES OF THE DAY

TODAY'S US EXTREMES
COURTESY OF ACCUWEATHER

HIGH: 87 degrees at Laredo, TX
LOW: -33 degrees at Chinook, MT

TODAY'S EXTREMES HERE AT MY HOUSE

HIGH: 44 degrees
LOW: 37 degrees

TODAY'S CONDITION'S (LOCALLY)
A generally dull, overcast, showery and breezy day with a west, southwest flow and this ushers in mild Atlantic air. Heavier more persistent rains moved in by this afternoon and will continue tonight.

Thanks for reading.
-Mark

Sunday, January 30, 2011

30 January, 2011

Follow the Blog on Facebook & Twitter

TODAY'S TOP WEATHER STORIES
On Weather & Climate Through the Eyes of Mark Vogan

MAJOR SNOWSTORM TAKES AIM AT MIDWEST, THEN RETURN TO BITTER ARCTIC AIR!

SUNRISE OVER LAKE MICHIGAN: Thanks to Maciej Bien for this amazing photo taken in north Lakeview.

Twin Cities Could See Up To 6 Inches Of Snow
WCCO MINNEAPOLIS

Blizzard Watch replaces Winter Storm Watch

WGN-TV CHICAGO

January's recorded only 3 above-freezing days here; fewest in 34 years!
WGN-TV CHICAGO


PRAIRIES WARMTH BECOMES RAPIDLY ERASED!

Cold Takes Bite Out of the Prairies
THE WEATHER NETWORK


Courtesy of The Weather Network

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS EUROPE

BBC Europe Forecast By Peter Gibbs

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS AMERICA
From AccuWeather


Super Bowl Cold To Shock Fan
AccuWeather

Southern Plains Cooldown Sunday, Worst Yet to Come
By Kristina Pydynowski, Senior Meteorologist

WEATHER TALK
By Mark Vogan

It's Been A Tough Winter, Even for The Typically Frigid Midwest!

Here is a video from the Minneapolis Blizzard of December 2010


CHICAGO, ILL RUNNING 1.4 BELOW NORMAL, HAS SEEN ONLY 4 DAYS ABOVE 32, WARMEST NIGHT WAS 26, COLDEST NIGHT -4

MINNEAPOLIS, MINN RUNNING 1.2 BELOW NORMAL, HASN'T SEEN A SINGLE HIGH ABOVE 32, WARMEST NIGHT 23, COLDEST NIGHT -16.

INT. FALLS, MINN RUNNING 3.4 BELOW NORMAL, WARMEST HIGH 24, WARMEST NIGHT 16, COLDEST NIGHT -46 (COLDEST SINCE 1964)

Whilst the Windy City has seen it's least amount of above-freezing days in January, 2011, Minneapolis has endured no day this month above 32 degrees. It did reach 32 during the overnight hours of early Saturday morning but didn't get above!

COLD FEELS WORSE IN MIDWEST, THAN IN ALASKA?

The Midwest has been considered worse for cold in winter than Alaska! How does that work when Alaska gets down to 50 or 60 below every winter whilst the lowest in the Midwest is probably between 35 and 45 below zero? Well, a good part of the time when Alask's deep interior communities register highs sometimes in the 40s below zero and nighttime lows that can drop well below -50, even -60 and every so often -70, like we saw back in February 2006 when Chicken, AK saw two consecutive nights plummet to 72 degrees below zero, there is little if any wind blowing and that is key! In fact, in order to register these kinds of brutal numbers, there needs to be little wind and this coupled with landmass-wide snow and ice coverage, no sunlight to warm daytime air and plenty of clear skies and powerful Arctic high pressure overhead, these kind's of interior temperature can be achieved quiet easily.

As for the Northern Plains and Midwest, this very air mass, also every winter, will be displaced south and down the continent, funnelled by the Rockies in the west and Appalachains in the east and with no large bodies of warm water to take the sting out of the super cold southbound air from northern Canada and Alaska, places such as North Dakota and Minnesota often endure the coldest weather in the lower 48 with multiple days remaining below zero, sometimes in the -10s and in extreme cases like seen in 2004, the -20s, yes for highs! Nighttime lows can dip below -40 and perhaps every 4 or 5 years, in a select few known Midwest cold spots, below -50 degrees.

The coldest night I've ever seen since closely following US weather was a reading of 54 degrees below zero in the tiny community in the Iron Range of NE Minnesota called Embarrass, southeast of International Falls
in January 2005. The first 50 below reading was in 2004 at Fosston, west-central Minnesota and the last sub 50 below reading was actually out East in far northern Maine in Big Black River, next to the New Brunswick, Canada border. The low hit 50 below zero and this actually broke Maine's all-time cold record, the old record was -48 degrees.


WIND is the problem in the Midwest when Arctic high's swing down from the north. Regularly in winter, like we've seen plenty of times this winter, with highs even in the relatively mild 15 to 20-degree range in a large urban area such as Minneapolis or Chicago, winds often blow out of the northwest at between 5 and 15mph, making it feel closer to zero. This winter has seen many daytime highs remain below 10 degrees and even a slight breeze makes the air feel more like 10 to 20 below zero. Even on the nights which dipped below zero, winds have been blowing. Anywhere from a slight breeze to a brisk 10 to 15mph wind creates windchills of 25 to 35 below zero (even in downtown Minneapolis or Chicago) and that feels worse than 35 below zero with no wind! The Midwest is often cold but made much worse because there is almost always a wind blowing and this means often, face coverage is needed and this makes for a long winter here. Across northern North Dakota and Minnesota where daytime highs and lows may be 10 to even 20 degrees colder than down in the southern half of Minnesota and within Minneapolis, wind chills often register 40 to 60 below zero during Arctic outbreaks and there has been no shortage of cold this winter. We just need to look at the amount of days in which days have remained below zero and nights under 20 or even 30 below zero. I would say, that International Falls, Duluth or Hayward, WI likely has a worse winter than perhaps Fairbanks, especially this year when Alaska hasn't been too bad in terms of cold and the cold has been persistent over the Midwest. Also snowstorms will dump more snow than across more typically drier Alaska where moisture is more limited.

Minnesota Snowstorm: The Day After, December 12, 2010

VAGARIES OF THE WEATHER
INDIA & SUB-CONTINENTAL WEATHER
BY RAJESH KAPADIA

W.D. passes away to the East (and weakens).

Sunday (30th. Jan) Precipitation details Gulmarg received 3" of snowfall while Qazigund received 25 mms of snow. Pahalgam and Kokernag had mild snow flakes.


'Due to fresh snowfall and slippery road conditions in Patnitop and Bannihal areas of the highway, the Srinagar-Jammu road has been closed this morning (Sunday),'


Srinagar recorded a low of 1.2c while Gulmarg was the coldest place in the Valley with mercury still settling at -6.3c.


Jammu city recieved 4 mms of rain


Meanwhile, Ladakh region also witnessed some respite from cold with Leh town recording -10c, and Kargil registering -8.8c.


In Delhi, people woke up to a chilly morning with drizzles but a bright sunshine followed in the afternoon.


However, the maximum was 22.4c, a notch below to yesterday''s reading.The city also received 0.5mm of rainfall.


Strong icy wind with sleet lashed higher reaches of H.P., with Kalpa receiving 10 cm of snow. Lahaul and Spiti headquarter Keylong was at -8.9c.


In neighbouring Uttarakhand, the weather was cloudy and cold wind brought down the temperatures. State capital Dehra Dun recorded a low of 7c.


In Pakistan, various parts of Balochistan and Karachi received rain between Friday and Saturday night.In Balochistan, it rained at Quetta, Mastung, Kalat, Khuzdar and other cities.


The rain caused extreme cold weather in some regions.

FOR THE VERY BEST INDIA, SUB-CONTINENT AND GLOBAL WEATHER, PLEASE CHECK OUT OUR PARTNER'S BLOG FOR THE VERY LATEST!

WHAT'S REACHING TODAY'S BLOGS?

First Look at the Groundhog Day Blizzard
Henry Margusity, AccuWeather

THE EXTREMES OF THE DAY

TODAY'S US EXTREMES
COURTESY OF ACCUWEATHER

HIGH: 89 degrees at Laredo, TX
LOW: -17 degrees at Cavalier, ND

TODAY'S UK EXTREMES
COURTESY OF THE MET OFFICE

HIGH: 47 degrees (8.6C) at South Uist (Outer Hebrides)
COLD HIGH: 31 degrees (-0.3C) at Spadeadam (Cumbria)
LOW: 16 degrees (-9C) at Pembrey Sands (Carmarthanshire)
TODAY'S EXTREMES HERE AT MY HOUSE

HIGH: 37 degrees
LOW: 33 degrees

Thanks for reading.
-Mark

30 January, 2011

Follow the Blog on Facebook & Twitter

TODAY'S TOP WEATHER STORIES
On Weather & Climate Through the Eyes of Mark Vogan

MAJOR SNOWSTORM TAKES AIM AT MIDWEST, THEN RETURN TO BITTER ARCTIC AIR!

SUNRISE OVER LAKE MICHIGAN: Thanks to Maciej Bien for this amazing photo taken in north Lakeview.

Twin Cities Could See Up To 6 Inches Of Snow
WCCO MINNEAPOLIS

Blizzard Watch replaces Winter Storm Watch

WGN-TV CHICAGO

January's recorded only 3 above-freezing days here; fewest in 34 years!
WGN-TV CHICAGO


PRAIRIES WARMTH BECOMES RAPIDLY ERASED!

Cold Takes Bite Out of the Prairies
THE WEATHER NETWORK


Courtesy of The Weather Network

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS EUROPE

BBC Europe Forecast By Peter Gibbs

TODAY'S WEATHER ACROSS AMERICA
From AccuWeather


Super Bowl Cold To Shock Fan
AccuWeather

Southern Plains Cooldown Sunday, Worst Yet to Come
By Kristina Pydynowski, Senior Meteorologist

WEATHER TALK
By Mark Vogan

It's Been A Tough Winter, Even for The Typically Frigid Midwest!

Here is a video from the Minneapolis Blizzard of December 2010


CHICAGO, ILL RUNNING 1.4 BELOW NORMAL, HAS SEEN ONLY 4 DAYS ABOVE 32, WARMEST NIGHT WAS 26, COLDEST NIGHT -4

MINNEAPOLIS, MINN RUNNING 1.2 BELOW NORMAL, HASN'T SEEN A SINGLE HIGH ABOVE 32, WARMEST NIGHT 23, COLDEST NIGHT -16.

INT. FALLS, MINN RUNNING 3.4 BELOW NORMAL, WARMEST HIGH 24, WARMEST NIGHT 16, COLDEST NIGHT -46 (COLDEST SINCE 1964)

Whilst the Windy City has seen it's least amount of above-freezing days in January, 2011, Minneapolis has endured no day this month above 32 degrees. It did reach 32 during the overnight hours of early Saturday morning but didn't get above!

COLD FEELS WORSE IN MIDWEST, THAN IN ALASKA?

The Midwest has been considered worse for cold in winter than Alaska! How does that work when Alaska gets down to 50 or 60 below every winter whilst the lowest in the Midwest is probably between 35 and 45 below zero? Well, a good part of the time when Alask's deep interior communities register highs sometimes in the 40s below zero and nighttime lows that can drop well below -50, even -60 and every so often -70, like we saw back in February 2006 when Chicken, AK saw two consecutive nights plummet to 72 degrees below zero, there is little if any wind blowing and that is key! In fact, in order to register these kinds of brutal numbers, there needs to be little wind and this coupled with landmass-wide snow and ice coverage, no sunlight to warm daytime air and plenty of clear skies and powerful Arctic high pressure overhead, these kind's of interior temperature can be achieved quiet easily.

As for the Northern Plains and Midwest, this very air mass, also every winter, will be displaced south and down the continent, funnelled by the Rockies in the west and Appalachains in the east and with no large bodies of warm water to take the sting out of the super cold southbound air from northern Canada and Alaska, places such as North Dakota and Minnesota often endure the coldest weather in the lower 48 with multiple days remaining below zero, sometimes in the -10s and in extreme cases like seen in 2004, the -20s, yes for highs! Nighttime lows can dip below -40 and perhaps every 4 or 5 years, in a select few known Midwest cold spots, below -50 degrees.

The coldest night I've ever seen since closely following US weather was a reading of 54 degrees below zero in the tiny community in the Iron Range of NE Minnesota called Embarrass, southeast of International Falls
in January 2005. The first 50 below reading was in 2004 at Fosston, west-central Minnesota and the last sub 50 below reading was actually out East in far northern Maine in Big Black River, next to the New Brunswick, Canada border. The low hit 50 below zero and this actually broke Maine's all-time cold record, the old record was -48 degrees.


WIND is the problem in the Midwest when Arctic high's swing down from the north. Regularly in winter, like we've seen plenty of times this winter, with highs even in the relatively mild 15 to 20-degree range in a large urban area such as Minneapolis or Chicago, winds often blow out of the northwest at between 5 and 15mph, making it feel closer to zero. This winter has seen many daytime highs remain below 10 degrees and even a slight breeze makes the air feel more like 10 to 20 below zero. Even on the nights which dipped below zero, winds have been blowing. Anywhere from a slight breeze to a brisk 10 to 15mph wind creates windchills of 25 to 35 below zero (even in downtown Minneapolis or Chicago) and that feels worse than 35 below zero with no wind! The Midwest is often cold but made much worse because there is almost always a wind blowing and this means often, face coverage is needed and this makes for a long winter here. Across northern North Dakota and Minnesota where daytime highs and lows may be 10 to even 20 degrees colder than down in the southern half of Minnesota and within Minneapolis, wind chills often register 40 to 60 below zero during Arctic outbreaks and there has been no shortage of cold this winter. We just need to look at the amount of days in which days have remained below zero and nights under 20 or even 30 below zero. I would say, that International Falls, Duluth or Hayward, WI likely has a worse winter than perhaps Fairbanks, especially this year when Alaska hasn't been too bad in terms of cold and the cold has been persistent over the Midwest. Also snowstorms will dump more snow than across more typically drier Alaska where moisture is more limited.

Minnesota Snowstorm: The Day After, December 12, 2010

VAGARIES OF THE WEATHER
INDIA & SUB-CONTINENTAL WEATHER
BY RAJESH KAPADIA

W.D. passes away to the East (and weakens).

Sunday (30th. Jan) Precipitation details Gulmarg received 3" of snowfall while Qazigund received 25 mms of snow. Pahalgam and Kokernag had mild snow flakes.


'Due to fresh snowfall and slippery road conditions in Patnitop and Bannihal areas of the highway, the Srinagar-Jammu road has been closed this morning (Sunday),'


Srinagar recorded a low of 1.2c while Gulmarg was the coldest place in the Valley with mercury still settling at -6.3c.


Jammu city recieved 4 mms of rain


Meanwhile, Ladakh region also witnessed some respite from cold with Leh town recording -10c, and Kargil registering -8.8c.


In Delhi, people woke up to a chilly morning with drizzles but a bright sunshine followed in the afternoon.


However, the maximum was 22.4c, a notch below to yesterday''s reading.The city also received 0.5mm of rainfall.


Strong icy wind with sleet lashed higher reaches of H.P., with Kalpa receiving 10 cm of snow. Lahaul and Spiti headquarter Keylong was at -8.9c.


In neighbouring Uttarakhand, the weather was cloudy and cold wind brought down the temperatures. State capital Dehra Dun recorded a low of 7c.


In Pakistan, various parts of Balochistan and Karachi received rain between Friday and Saturday night.In Balochistan, it rained at Quetta, Mastung, Kalat, Khuzdar and other cities.


The rain caused extreme cold weather in some regions.

FOR THE VERY BEST INDIA, SUB-CONTINENT AND GLOBAL WEATHER, PLEASE CHECK OUT OUR PARTNER'S BLOG FOR THE VERY LATEST!

WHAT'S REACHING TODAY'S BLOGS?

First Look at the Groundhog Day Blizzard
Henry Margusity, AccuWeather

THE EXTREMES OF THE DAY

TODAY'S US EXTREMES
COURTESY OF ACCUWEATHER

HIGH: 89 degrees at Laredo, TX
LOW: -17 degrees at Cavalier, ND

TODAY'S UK EXTREMES
COURTESY OF THE MET OFFICE

HIGH: 47 degrees (8.6C) at South Uist (Outer Hebrides)
COLD HIGH: 31 degrees (-0.3C) at Spadeadam (Cumbria)
LOW: 16 degrees (-9C) at Pembrey Sands (Carmarthanshire)
TODAY'S EXTREMES HERE AT MY HOUSE

HIGH: 37 degrees
LOW: 33 degrees

Thanks for reading.
-Mark

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