*GLOBAL COOLING: The Irregular Seasons of 2018 & 2019
May 15, 2018 16:59:48 GMT
missouriboy likes this
Post by AstroMet on May 15, 2018 16:59:48 GMT
Global Cooling: 2017-2053
'Irregular Seasons Has Begun'
by Theodore White, astromet.sci
Before the next ENSO of 2019-2022 arrives, I will remind some on about my seasonal forecast calling for highly irregular seasons of 2018 and 2019, where I predict that our recent brutal winter 2017-18 in the northern hemisphere would lead to an early spring with summer-like temperatures.
In fact, spring 2018 will be short-lived, leading to an early summer and long fall season of 2018.
The spring of 2018 already has exhibited anomalous weather for some regions of the United States. April 2018 was one of the coldest months of April in the U.S. since conventional weather record-keeping started in 1895.
The historically low spring temperatures created problems for farmers in the northern plains and Midwest as the unseasonably cold soil prevented them from planting crops on time.
Agricultural experts expect that, as in years past, the cold spring temperatures portend a lower yield when farmers harvest in the fall.
Astonishingly, much of the northern plains and Northeast was colder than Anchorage, Alaska in the first half of April 2018.
Now, what many people though would be spring would feature a traditional or classic spring coming out of winter, but spring did come early - however it was colder and wetter than normal.
If anyone is noticing, now there are warmer-than-normal summer-like temperatures evident in early May 2018.
We are going into a period of time in 2018 and 2019 where warmer-than-normal and drier than normal weather will take place with high irregularity of winter, spring, summer and autumn.
At this time, most people will be surprised to know that the next winter will be highly irregular will not arrive under early February 2019, according to my calculations.
We are heading into summer right now in May 2018 as the spring season came early (though it felt cold for many) and summer conditions will be early as well this year.
For instance, summer-like heat has arrived early in southern Middle Tennessee.
Temperatures passed the 90-degree mark in some parts of the region over the weekend, and Monday, May 14, 2018 saw a local record of 92 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
The record-breaking temperature was recorded at the Nashville International Airport at 2:49 p.m.
“It looks like a record might be broken,” Meteorologist John Cohen said Monday morning, referring to the record high for May 14. The previous recorded high for Monday was 91, set in 1944 and 1962.
“We apparently skipped Spring,” the National Weather Service tweeted on Sunday, reporting its forecast for the week.
In February, Nashville made history by setting a new record for its warmest high and the warmest low temperature for the day of Feb. 20.
A high temperature of 80 degrees broke the record of 78 degrees set in 2014, according to National Weather Service in Nashville. The normal high temperature for Feb. 20 is 53 degrees.
AccuWeather reported that Fayetteville, North Carolina, recorded its third-hottest Mother’s Day on record with a high of 96 degrees Sunday.
The temperature of 93 degrees in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, on the same day, tied both the daily record high and the hottest Mother’s Day ever.
But in April, many locations in the southeast, including Middle Tennessee, had experienced below-normal temperatures.
Autumn in the northern hemisphere will be extended with Indian summer-like weather featuring a drier-than-normal and long fall season that will extend deep into January 2019.
This also means that drought conditions will spread in various regions and there is a high threat of wildfires both this year and next as well.
Due to the long warm fall just ahead, I have calculated that next winter will not arrive until February 2019 and will last through March and April 2019, meaning spring 2019 will be very cold and wet because it will be winter during the spring months of next year.
This is what I mean by the 'irregularity of the seasons' in our new climate of global cooling.
The climate of global cooling, which officially began mid-December 2017 will be with us for the next 36 solar years.
With it comes the irregularity of seasons, winter weather storms extended into spring in some regions; while early spring season experiences summer-like dryness in other regions and others see severe storm activity.
This is the weather of global cooling and it has to be understood as being a climate of extreme weather conditions which can exist simultaneously.
A clear marker of all this is how the Sun's reduced magnetic and ultraviolet activity alters the jet streams, wind patterns and ocean currents - resulting in high irregularity of seasons with wild weather.
This is taking place right now - as reports of extreme conditions has three different kinds of weather striking at the same time - severe thunderstorms and tornado risks in the South; wildfire threats in Oklahoma and Southern Plains, and a blizzard through the Upper Plains and Upper Midwest. a
These kinds of extreme weather conditions will become more of the norm rather than the exception in the years and decades to come.
This is the climate of global cooling, as forecasted.
'Irregular Seasons Has Begun'
by Theodore White, astromet.sci
Before the next ENSO of 2019-2022 arrives, I will remind some on about my seasonal forecast calling for highly irregular seasons of 2018 and 2019, where I predict that our recent brutal winter 2017-18 in the northern hemisphere would lead to an early spring with summer-like temperatures.
In fact, spring 2018 will be short-lived, leading to an early summer and long fall season of 2018.
The spring of 2018 already has exhibited anomalous weather for some regions of the United States. April 2018 was one of the coldest months of April in the U.S. since conventional weather record-keeping started in 1895.
The historically low spring temperatures created problems for farmers in the northern plains and Midwest as the unseasonably cold soil prevented them from planting crops on time.
Agricultural experts expect that, as in years past, the cold spring temperatures portend a lower yield when farmers harvest in the fall.
Astonishingly, much of the northern plains and Northeast was colder than Anchorage, Alaska in the first half of April 2018.
Now, what many people though would be spring would feature a traditional or classic spring coming out of winter, but spring did come early - however it was colder and wetter than normal.
If anyone is noticing, now there are warmer-than-normal summer-like temperatures evident in early May 2018.
We are going into a period of time in 2018 and 2019 where warmer-than-normal and drier than normal weather will take place with high irregularity of winter, spring, summer and autumn.
At this time, most people will be surprised to know that the next winter will be highly irregular will not arrive under early February 2019, according to my calculations.
We are heading into summer right now in May 2018 as the spring season came early (though it felt cold for many) and summer conditions will be early as well this year.
For instance, summer-like heat has arrived early in southern Middle Tennessee.
Temperatures passed the 90-degree mark in some parts of the region over the weekend, and Monday, May 14, 2018 saw a local record of 92 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
The record-breaking temperature was recorded at the Nashville International Airport at 2:49 p.m.
“It looks like a record might be broken,” Meteorologist John Cohen said Monday morning, referring to the record high for May 14. The previous recorded high for Monday was 91, set in 1944 and 1962.
“We apparently skipped Spring,” the National Weather Service tweeted on Sunday, reporting its forecast for the week.
In February, Nashville made history by setting a new record for its warmest high and the warmest low temperature for the day of Feb. 20.
A high temperature of 80 degrees broke the record of 78 degrees set in 2014, according to National Weather Service in Nashville. The normal high temperature for Feb. 20 is 53 degrees.
AccuWeather reported that Fayetteville, North Carolina, recorded its third-hottest Mother’s Day on record with a high of 96 degrees Sunday.
The temperature of 93 degrees in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, on the same day, tied both the daily record high and the hottest Mother’s Day ever.
But in April, many locations in the southeast, including Middle Tennessee, had experienced below-normal temperatures.
Autumn in the northern hemisphere will be extended with Indian summer-like weather featuring a drier-than-normal and long fall season that will extend deep into January 2019.
This also means that drought conditions will spread in various regions and there is a high threat of wildfires both this year and next as well.
Due to the long warm fall just ahead, I have calculated that next winter will not arrive until February 2019 and will last through March and April 2019, meaning spring 2019 will be very cold and wet because it will be winter during the spring months of next year.
This is what I mean by the 'irregularity of the seasons' in our new climate of global cooling.
The climate of global cooling, which officially began mid-December 2017 will be with us for the next 36 solar years.
With it comes the irregularity of seasons, winter weather storms extended into spring in some regions; while early spring season experiences summer-like dryness in other regions and others see severe storm activity.
This is the weather of global cooling and it has to be understood as being a climate of extreme weather conditions which can exist simultaneously.
A clear marker of all this is how the Sun's reduced magnetic and ultraviolet activity alters the jet streams, wind patterns and ocean currents - resulting in high irregularity of seasons with wild weather.
This is taking place right now - as reports of extreme conditions has three different kinds of weather striking at the same time - severe thunderstorms and tornado risks in the South; wildfire threats in Oklahoma and Southern Plains, and a blizzard through the Upper Plains and Upper Midwest. a
These kinds of extreme weather conditions will become more of the norm rather than the exception in the years and decades to come.
This is the climate of global cooling, as forecasted.