Rob Wadsworth
EF5
We had a dying Typhoon 'Melor' just pass thru the central coast of CA last week, and it dropped between 3-6 inches of precip. As a rule, we never get any appreciable precip until/around the 31st of October. I can say that because I've lived in this same location since dirt was new (some 40 years+). The last time we had such conditions was in 1998, so my guess is that it is definetly going to be wetter on the CA coast this year. Whenever we had early rains, it almost always ended up with large amounts of precip occuring. Which is fine; as CA NEEDS the rain this year.
Incidentally, the last time we had a tornado on the West Coast/central CA was in 1998. Am I hoping for a bit of severe weather because El Nino may go to the modeate/strong status? You bet!
I looked at the NOAA projection for this year as supplied from the previous post. Thanks for providing it here - much appreciated!
Edit: I think it raises one particular question in my mind. If El Nino is going to be a major player this year; how will it skew the distribution pattern of severe storms/tornadic activity on the Great Plains this coming Spring? Will we see less of it on the Plains, and more of it twards the E Coast and the South?
Just though I'd ask...
Incidentally, the last time we had a tornado on the West Coast/central CA was in 1998. Am I hoping for a bit of severe weather because El Nino may go to the modeate/strong status? You bet!
I looked at the NOAA projection for this year as supplied from the previous post. Thanks for providing it here - much appreciated!
Edit: I think it raises one particular question in my mind. If El Nino is going to be a major player this year; how will it skew the distribution pattern of severe storms/tornadic activity on the Great Plains this coming Spring? Will we see less of it on the Plains, and more of it twards the E Coast and the South?
Just though I'd ask...
Last edited by a moderator: