winter storm for midwest and the great lakes on american thanksgiving

Posted By: tornadoes2  Posted On: Nov 10th, 2012  Filed Under: Weather

theres huge storm coming keep eye on the weather middle next week storm coming from east asia and whats its doing is that it will bring -nao on the eve of thanksgiving first we will have another warm front coming next weekend and then after that it will bring reinforcement cold arctic air from the north southern branch will be very devestated to gives gulf moisture to help the storm to intensify next weend will be very different it will bring warm and very dry and windswept storm and after we will have a major snow storm this one is not good but for december there will very changeable forecast its going to be extreame variable teleconnections things are looking very ugly stay safe everyone keep eyes, ears open because its going to be really system lurking stay safe everyone.

  1. sapporo1 says:

    hooray for you guys, too bad there’s no chance we will see any of that in my area, we will be dry and windy for weeks at a time again, following a storm that was good for the mountains, and even for the Denver metro area, but didn’t even produce a decent snow shower in my area, what a rip off.
    Sadly, that was our last chance to see any more storms for a long time, so you guys in the east enjoy all your ridiculously above normal precip, because some of us aren’t faring so well, but I do feel for those poor souls who lost their homes and their entire livelihoods, that is always sad to hear about, trust me, I know some people who lost their homes to the Waldo Canyon Fire, it’s a devastating thing to have everything you know taken away from you, the up side for you on the east coast though, is at least you guys wont have to worry about a dwindling water supply when you have another weather disaster. 
    Our water supply is getting so low, that they will be imposing water restrictions starting next summer, and if we have another disaster like the Waldo Canyon Fire, we may not be able to access enough water to fight it efficiently this time, if this drought continues to intensify the way it has been. 

  2. Grandin says:

    ill be back in northwest indiana in 7 days and im ready for a good winter storm! thanks for the update torandoes2..
     
    Dan

  3. spellbound says:

    What areas would be in the line of fire IF this storm verifies ??? 

  4. winterwarrior says:

    Hey there tornadoes2, I hope what you are saying verifies. We could use a nice good blast of wintery weather. I’m in Southern Ont and my 2 week forecast calls for clear and calm conditions for that period of time. We just had a very mild weekend (15-17 C) so I’m ready for some cold and snow.
    Cheers. 

  5. vegomatic says:

    Down here in Arkansas I never know where we are in the great scheme of things.  Some say midwest, others say south…..   Looking at the projected forecast for next week shows a chance of storms on Tuesday-Wednesday, but a high of 71.  Guess we are not in the snow line…. 

  6. tarheelsrule44 says:

    I’m staying on the coast of Maine this winter and I just noticed in our 2 week out look there is quite a bit of winter weather.
    About a week before thanksgiving their calling for rain/snow/ice mix for a good 3 days straight but then, on Thanksgiving, they’re calling for 4 straight days of snow.  Not snow showers or flurries, but snow!  It got me excited and I wondered if any of the guys on here would be talking about it. 
    I look forward to seeing the development of this storm!

  7. tornadoes2 says:

    i hopefully there is snow coming doesn’t look like it so far maybe it will be warm storms who knows.

  8. sapporo1 says:

    Southwest, Southern Plains, Southwest, Southern Plains, damnit, will this dome of high pressure ever go away, this is even worse than 2010-2011 for us, at least we had some precipitation in November then.
    You easterners enjoy your constant troughs of low pressure, but keep one thing in mind while you are, the more  cold and stormy weather you see there, the deeper we go into serious drought and water shortage.
    Also consider this fact, even when the east is under a ridge of high pressure, you guys are still wet, here in the west, it takes a very strong trough of low pressure just to get any moisture at all, and that’s only if the storm track is favorable, once that trough is gone, any and all precipitation becomes blocked, leaving us very dry and windy.
    Also, why is it that a trough lasts for weeks in the PNW, and in the Midwest, East coast, but when it’s over the Southwest, it is lucky to last a day or two, leaving barely even a full day’s chance that any moisture will hit us, but when a ridge develops, it is allowed to
     send warm, dry weather for weeks at a time, what has been causing such an unbalanced phenomenon to occur these last few years.

  9. Ohio 5-O says:

    I hate to bust anyone’s bubble but our local weather forecasters haven’t mentioned anything about a storm thanksgiving week. They’re sayin 40s & 50s that week

  10. stuffradio says:

    sappro1, I don’t want troughs to last for weeks in the PNW. I wish it would last for a couple days, then break away into sunshine. Good thing I run in the rain, otherwise I’d be inside over 280 days a year.

  11. snowlover says:

    Sapporo1 no one on here can control what weather we get.  I wish it could be done.  I’d have it cold and snowy for 90% of winter.  However we all can pray for your area to receive more precipatation.  Most Easterners get excited for whatever snow we can get (particulary the mid atlantic and the south) because we don’t see that much snow anymore.  Winter is not even here yet.   

  12. KatD-Mo. says:

    from the “midwest” here.  nothing is on our “radar”.   I personally doubt we’ll get anything.  the pattern has been set.  its the same one from this summer, warm and dry. 
    just call me bummed, again. 

  13. sapporo1 says:

    Kat, there is alot of speculation about a storm system affecting the plains region and midwest, however, Andrew from the weather centre has yet to respond to me regarding the confidence in just where an area of low pressure may develop, I guess that the probability of a storm happening on Thanksgiving is not more than s 50-50 shot, otherwise it would start showing up in the forecasts, also, that Nor’easter that is expected to form around Thanksgiving will likely be deflected out to sea because of a positive NAO, however, the NAO will be turning negative after that storm leaves and will allow colder temps to drop southward.
    Only wish I knew of there being any good news for us in the southwest and central, southern plains. 

  14. tornadoes2 says:

    noaa should of kept the el nino watch not cancelling it things will change in a hurry in windsor ontario its been getting warm lately everytime fall, winter comes around.

  15. tornadoes2 says:

    there’s a rumors that we might get a storm near end of the month or early december some kind of winter storm we could get ice and snow storm the system will travel from the pacific to the northern tier states we should monitor this bc this could be in all out winter storm.

  16. tornadoes2 says:

    Thursday, November 15, 2012


    Active Period Setting Up For Plains, Midwest Soon

    By Andrew at 4:43 PM

    I am predicting the setting-up of an active weather period for the Plains, Midwest and Great Lakes by the end of the month and into the winter months.

    I have made this discovery by finding the general weather pattern prevalent in the fall months, extrapolating it by about 50-52 days (a full cycle of the LRC this winter), and ending up with my result.  Here is the break-down.

    •Active periods will be listed below. The Plains, Midwest and Great Lakes are affected.
       — November 21 – December 14
       — January 11 – February 2
       —March 4 – March 27


    I expect several disturbances to drop down from Canada and move north from the Plains to hit the region under the dark blue shade in the chart above. If my forecast verifies, this could very well mean several winter storms. I would anticipate the heaviest snowfall to hit the Upper Midwest, as well as a few big shots of snow around the Lower Great Lakes.

    Andrew
     

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  17. adogg30 says:

    I just watch my seven day forcast and it said dry and in the 50′s wtih possibility for a few rain showers for thanxgivingit did not anything about snow and i live right by the lake .

  18. tornadoes2 says:

    between 28 of november and first week of december is where we see huge snow storms midwest to the great lakes afte the active storm we will get southern track before christmas maybe spring forecast will come in december 14 it could warm up that time it looks interesting weather to come take one day at time.

  19. KatD-Mo. says:

    Missouri is no longer a part of the midwest.  60′s forcasted for us!

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