Northern Garrett cam still down, once again using the Rt 40 Elementary cam

Aug 15.                       min.       max.      avg

Bitt 2nw valley        56.0        74.7       65.3

Garrett College        62.3        77.2       69.7

Can-Heights             58.5        73.5       66.0

CRN-Canaan            58.6        73.8       66.2

Cabin Mt                  57.2        71.8      64.5

Cabin Mt north       57.9       74.5      66.2

Spruce Knob           56.3        71.2      63.7

Snowshoe                57.9        70.0      63.9

Can-Valley Floor    49.3        75.7      62.5

7Springs                 61.9         73.8      67.9

More clouds than sun to start, then a mix of clouds and sun throughout the day

Temp profile this afternoon2018-08-16-07-34-52

24 hour precip (9pm-9pm) this was the remaining showers last night as the rain ended shortly after dark in these areas. Not going to include radar loop since today was void of precip.Screenshot_20180815-210758

Satellite this afternoon

Flow

Surface features and 500mb height anomalies and flow

Western Smoke and African Dust

If you view the Goes-16 Satellite Loop above the smoke/haze look in the cloud free areas is visible, below shows those areas…

Screenshot_20180815-201613

African Dust making the long loop

nasa_dust_atlantic_8

18z 3km Nam

2m Temperatures

2m Dew Points

10m Winds

Cloud Cover Percentage

Simulated Radar

Based off the formula for this model. If conditions are clear, calm, minimal clouds, subtract 4-8° off modeled dewpoint for mins in the coldest valleys. Which potentially would put out temps 40-45(monitor Canaan Valley Frost Pocket, no sensor on The Glades presently)

Further out, strong hints of a 3-4 day fall-like stretch late next week/weekend. If that materializes, it should be a good time to monitor those frost pocket sites for 30s. Will not be surprised to see model mins trend cooler. Again, frost pockets will not show up on the main model grid.

12z ECMWF meteogramK2G4_2018081512_dx_240

18z GFS meteogramK2G4_2018081518_tx_240

Month to date

Temps, no surprise. A wet month. Typically plenty of cloud cover. Holds max temps down, holds mins up with the blanket of clouds and moist air.

Precip Observed and departure from the average.

Year to date

Temps, running very close to the averages overall. Max temps under, mins up and coincides nicely with a wet year to date,  with those graphics a short scroll down.

Precip, yearly obs from Jan 1, with departures from average.

Sea Surface Temperature drop, Sea Surface Temperature anomalies and potential winter implications.

Pictured above- SST(Sea Surface Temperature) anomalies last year vs this year. Last year on the left, this year on the right. The amount of cooling in the oceans has been fairly significant.

One interesting aspect, Joe Bastardi at weatherbell brought this up and I highly recommend checking that out. That aspect is the cooling in the Indian Ocean, the warmth developing in the tropical Pacific around 120W and forecast to build in to what could be a weak to moderate modoki Nino.

The significance in this, would be the effect on the MJO(Madden Julian Oscillation) during the winter months. The warmth in the tropical Pacific would tend to favor best areas of convection in the favorable phases (8,1,2,3) varies month to month, for eastern U.S cold. That’s one reason why Modiki Ninos can have an effect. Its not the sole reason, it depends on what is going on around it as well. Say the Indian Ocean was very warm, it can hamper that effect for us winter lovers.

Another key, I’v pointed out before. East of the Dateline at 30 N. Those waters cooler vs normal and the Northeast Pacific warmer than normal enhances the pumping of the western ridge, eastern trough. 2 favorable outlooks at the early stages.

A cooler vs normal Gulf of Mexico. A much colder look to the Atlantic overall, with warmth from mid Atlantic to Northeast. That may enhance Nor’Easter type storms with coastal rains, inland snows. The cooling of the North Atlantic looks ideal to set up some blocking highs with a -NAO. Again, far off, and how these features adjust will be key. The significant cooling of the oceans over the past year, and locations of warmth vs cool will be key. Stay tuned as these aspects, plus others will be fun to watch going into fall.

Wildfire Info Links

If interested in statistics, facts on wildfire data, satellite info, smoke views, drought vs wet areas, highly recommend these few links. Helps decipher media hype vs reality

https://www.nifc.gov

https://fsapps.nwcg.gov/afm/imagery.php?op=fire&passID=408474

 

Today pics

 

 

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