Just 24hrs after I posted the above there are signs of a possible "game changer", but like most things this year it is not what you would normally expect, so how the models will handle it remains to be seen.
My comment about the mostly dry weather continuing was based on the presence of a persistent blocking high pressure and a complete absence of storm/hurricane activity in the north atlantic. None of this has changed. However, the pacific hurricane season is rather more active, and at present there are 2 tropical storms off the west coast of Mexico - Vicente and Willa. Vicente is forecast to remain a tropical storm and move north west up the coast of Mexico. Willa will soon become a hurricane, and is forecast to become a major hurricane by Monday, before hitting Mexico sometime on Wednesday, when it will weaken as it moves inland. The models are picking this storm up as travelling across Mexico and up the eastern seaboard of America.
At present the waters off the eastern seaboard are unusually warm. What the GFS appears to be doing is strengthening the storm as it moves north over the water, then catching it in the jet stream and depositing it over us, where it takes up residence over Scotland, changing our weather from very dry to wet and windy or stormy.
This is all in the long range part of the model (we are talking about the start of November) so it is difficult to check against other models which don't go so far out, but there are signs at the end of the ECMWF run that it is thinking along the same lines.
Slightly nearer is a small change to the forecast for next weekend, starting the northerly flow on Friday and introducing the possibility of more precipitation as the cold air comes in from the north. This would lead to more widespread wintery showers over the weekend with snow possible over high ground and to lower levels in the north. This is unusual but not unprecedented in late October (it happened in 2008). It won't last long as the milder air moves in after the weekend.
My comment about the mostly dry weather continuing was based on the presence of a persistent blocking high pressure and a complete absence of storm/hurricane activity in the north atlantic. None of this has changed. However, the pacific hurricane season is rather more active, and at present there are 2 tropical storms off the west coast of Mexico - Vicente and Willa. Vicente is forecast to remain a tropical storm and move north west up the coast of Mexico. Willa will soon become a hurricane, and is forecast to become a major hurricane by Monday, before hitting Mexico sometime on Wednesday, when it will weaken as it moves inland. The models are picking this storm up as travelling across Mexico and up the eastern seaboard of America.
At present the waters off the eastern seaboard are unusually warm. What the GFS appears to be doing is strengthening the storm as it moves north over the water, then catching it in the jet stream and depositing it over us, where it takes up residence over Scotland, changing our weather from very dry to wet and windy or stormy.
This is all in the long range part of the model (we are talking about the start of November) so it is difficult to check against other models which don't go so far out, but there are signs at the end of the ECMWF run that it is thinking along the same lines.
Slightly nearer is a small change to the forecast for next weekend, starting the northerly flow on Friday and introducing the possibility of more precipitation as the cold air comes in from the north. This would lead to more widespread wintery showers over the weekend with snow possible over high ground and to lower levels in the north. This is unusual but not unprecedented in late October (it happened in 2008). It won't last long as the milder air moves in after the weekend.
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