So it may or may not snow but we are not sure when, where or how much.
Read this in Paul Douglas blog (local meteorologist celebrity) and though immediately of CF.
"I beseech you Paul, how many inches!" That never gets old, by the way. My favorite meteorology college professor was right. Americans are preoccupied with inches, demanding a level of specificity and precision the science can't provide. So we give a range of inches (if I say 2-4 inches you'll probably remember 4) and a much-borrowed snowfall rating scale: nuisance-plowable-crippling.
People also don't understand what forecasting means. I'm no expert, but my meteorology prof in college taught us that a "50% chance of rain" really means "of all the days we've collected data with conditions that are similar to those expected tomorrow, it rained about half the time."
So this weekend's event seems to be fizzling a bit for central IA? Looks like 2" or less based on the latest NWS graphic.
Also some % forecast is based on area. Like, “There’s a 50% of rain somewhere in a 30 mile radius of your location”
Also some % forecast is based on area. Like, “There’s a 50% of rain somewhere in a 30 mile radius of your location”
Ed's middle name is Earl.....thought I heard Ed Wilson discuss this once... might’ve been on one of the after dark podcasts
Weather gurus: How does this correlate to central Iowa late next week, and early the week of Feb 1? Looks like a BEAST:
This is no doubt one of the most insane model runs I've ever seen from the GFS.
365 inches of snow, 23" of liquid equivalent. Through just Day 10. https://t.co/RZlTQ9zZpH