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2585
July 2024 In The Pacific Northwest
The July heatwave in the PNW has unfortunately taken some lives in Oregon. None reported in Washington yet. Source -
2585
July 2024 In The Pacific Northwest
I found this article interesting and maybe some of you will too. If anything it could be something to talk about. I want to see who is most accurate by the end of summer. Anyway's Seattle's fastest fall from grace news channel, KING 5 asked their meteorologists to predict how many 90 degree days Seattle would have this summer. Article Source Here is what each meteorologist said and their reasoning. I don't recognize any of these names anymore... Adam Claibon: 5 days My reasoning behind only five days is that we are coming out of an El Nino winter. The last time that happened (2018/2019), our following summer (2019) only had two days in the 90s. The summer after that (2020) only had four days in the 90s - more of a neutral year. And the majority of those that hit the 90s were in July or earlier. Mike Everett: 10 days I'm going to go big and say 10. I hope I'm wrong and that the actual number is significantly less. The good news is that we have wrapped up El Niño - the ENSO cycle that soaked the Southwest and kept the PNW warmer and drier than normal while limiting our snowpack. We are about to enter a "neutral" phase before returning to La Niña conditions later this year. This "neutral" phase should theoretically keep us from getting too hot this summer. Continued El Niño conditions would have been brutal. But! A lot of the historical data we pull from is becoming increasingly unreliable as weather patterns are changing faster than we can keep up with them. Stronger and more frequent visits from atmospheric river events are a prime example. Leah Pezzetti: 6 days This is an interesting question. Here's my thought process: the chances of hitting 90 degrees at SEA multiple times are definitely high. We look a lot at historical data when we have conversations like this. In the last 20 years, we've dodged that threshold just two times, so the chance of hitting 90 or warmer zero times feels low. But we also still have the summer of 2022 fresh on our minds, when we broke the record for the most times we'd ever recorded 90 or warmer (we hit it 13 times). I think we still have the sticker shock of that top of mind. But that was smack in the middle of back-to-back El Niño years, so the record heat makes sense given the big-picture conditions. We're expected to transition to a La Niña pattern by the fall, so the heat should back off compared to the last few summers. That being said, our conditions have been trending warmer and drier overall, so that makes me keep my guess on the relatively higher side. Ashley Ruiz: 7 or 8 days I'm thinking closer to seven or eight times, only because we've already hit 90 four times. I hope I'm wrong. El Niño is over and we're currently in a neutral phase, heading for La Niña. The PNW won't feel the effects of La Niña until the winter. Climatologically, a neutral phase would keep us from getting too hot. If we had back-to-back El Niño winters or if we were still in El Niño, I would go even higher. The summer outlook still calls for above-normal temperatures and below-normal rainfall, but this does not mean relentless heat and bone-dry conditions for three months straight. -
10472
Polite Politics
God whitmer would be such a better choice than Harris. Michigan would be in the bag. Harris brings what? California? -
2585
July 2024 In The Pacific Northwest
00Z ECMWF shows 3 days below 80 at SEA... that is new. EPS shows every day at 80+ but just barely and looks decently pleasant overall.- 1
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2585
July 2024 In The Pacific Northwest
The chance of a Nino has been zero for a long time. Although Phil said yesterday he sees a possible path for warm neutral now. A strong Nina also seems like its off the table. Neutral is best for blocking anyways.
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