Your weekly predictions for my area in Alberta have been perfectly accurate, and you and Matt always say that any predictions beyond a week are not reliable. So, thank you for the very accurate weekly predictions.
Thank you, as always, for these great updates, Eric. We have found your data and wisdom very helpful the last few years in farming decisions. In an upcoming video, could you do a description of what makes a storm a "super cell"? We have been hearing that term quite a bit in Iowa, but I am unclear on what the qualifications are for a storm cell to be classified as a super cell. Thanks again for everything you do!
Great questions! I can send you a couple of lectures I gave in my 100-level course several years ago about supercells. Take a look! ruclips.net/video/jhMfiI41X4o/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/EyVPbjIZOgw/видео.html
I have been in many Thunderstorms and 53 years of living, I have never heard a storm make a roaring sound or a Growl, so to speak, the strangest thing I have ever heard and then came the hail, which was small, but a lot of it and then the rain. I'm in Colorado City, Tx 79512. That was just strange.
No offense to you personally, but the main problem in meteorology is its inherent myopia- in attempting to forecast future events from standard meteorological models, you're reasoning from the specific to the general- this is always a bad bet. For instance, the Jet Stream is a 'lagging indicator', portraying boundary differences without giving full insight into how and/or why they arose. While true that meteorology is a branch of applied thermodynamics, as it has become more precise in its output, it has needed to become even more precise in its observations. Stepping back into meta-scale observation of a more pure physics based idea of climate allows one to 'see' what a daily weather algorithm has forgotten on its way forward. Thank you so much for your work here, you save me hours weekly attempting to predict my own local weather.
MJO = Mumbo Jumb-O Its always in null space, whatever null space means. I get floods in null space, i get droughts in null space. Null space really is a difficult metric to grasp from Missouri anyway
@@Nutrien_AgSolutions It was a piddly thing to be sure, but I couldn't help myself. I got my meteorology degree (UW Mad 81) back in the days of Tom Horn and Reid Bryson. The best (only?) model we had in synoptic lab was the LFM which came over wet fax WW2 surplus machines. You would sit there and twiddle your thumbs while the machine slowly chugged out the lines. It is truly a different world now and I always go to your analysis first because it is the best.
Haven't met any yet so I am not sure. My guess is they don't mind it given their issues with circulation and no need to sweat or regulate internal temperature.
Your weekly predictions for my area in Alberta have been perfectly accurate, and you and Matt always say that any predictions beyond a week are not reliable. So, thank you for the very accurate weekly predictions.
Thank you, as always, for these great updates, Eric. We have found your data and wisdom very helpful the last few years in farming decisions. In an upcoming video, could you do a description of what makes a storm a "super cell"? We have been hearing that term quite a bit in Iowa, but I am unclear on what the qualifications are for a storm cell to be classified as a super cell. Thanks again for everything you do!
Great questions! I can send you a couple of lectures I gave in my 100-level course several years ago about supercells. Take a look! ruclips.net/video/jhMfiI41X4o/видео.html and ruclips.net/video/EyVPbjIZOgw/видео.html
Thanks for this ! I live in New Brunswick Canada. I loved this report . Will subscribe ! ❤
He and his colleagues are the best
thanks for another report, the tornados in Iowa have been devastating for so many people!!!!
.6 rain this morning. First in a month. Thankyou for these daily reports. You are a blessing to all of us!
I have been in many Thunderstorms and 53 years of living, I have never heard a storm make a roaring sound or a Growl, so to speak, the strangest thing I have ever heard and then came the hail, which was small, but a lot of it and then the rain. I'm in Colorado City, Tx 79512. That was just strange.
Thanks for ag focused weather
I just hope the southwest have an active monsoon season 🤞
I am concerned that the SW monsoon could be weak and sporadic
Pretty amazing analysis, I must say.
No offense to you personally, but the main problem in meteorology is its inherent myopia- in attempting to forecast future events from standard meteorological models, you're reasoning from the specific to the general- this is always a bad bet. For instance, the Jet Stream is a 'lagging indicator', portraying boundary differences without giving full insight into how and/or why they arose. While true that meteorology is a branch of applied thermodynamics, as it has become more precise in its output, it has needed to become even more precise in its observations. Stepping back into meta-scale observation of a more pure physics based idea of climate allows one to 'see' what a daily weather algorithm has forgotten on its way forward.
Thank you so much for your work here, you save me hours weekly attempting to predict my own local weather.
MJO = Mumbo Jumb-O
Its always in null space, whatever null space means. I get floods in null space, i get droughts in null space. Null space really is a difficult metric to grasp from Missouri anyway
The orange in south Texas is a heat advisory not wind advisory (also not for "southern Mexico")
you are exactly right. I am color blind and sometimes those colors look too similar. I should have looked closer before I recorded.
@@Nutrien_AgSolutions It was a piddly thing to be sure, but I couldn't help myself. I got my meteorology degree (UW Mad 81) back in the days of Tom Horn and Reid Bryson. The best (only?) model we had in synoptic lab was the LFM which came over wet fax WW2 surplus machines. You would sit there and twiddle your thumbs while the machine slowly chugged out the lines. It is truly a different world now and I always go to your analysis first because it is the best.
Blundered myself, should be Dr. Lyle Horn, not Tom.
Maybe the stronger solar effects the weather and the oceans. What do you think
Who would ever guess the sun is the major influence in our weather and planet in general. ;-)
Happy memorial Day
How monsoon looking for AZ?
sporadic and weak
Do Zombies like Hot, Humid weather??😂
Haven't met any yet so I am not sure. My guess is they don't mind it given their issues with circulation and no need to sweat or regulate internal temperature.