Saturday, December 15, 2007

Weatherman Notebook - The Wedge

As an on-air meteorologist, I get a budget of roughly 2 minutes to give you a forecast in the morning with 20 to 30 seconds going to my 7-day forecast. Unfortunately, that leaves me little to no time to get deep into an evolving weather pattern for us with significant swings in the weather.

Coming off an incredible week of record highs including setting a new all-time record high at 80 degrees, today (Dec. 15th) as been nothing short of amazing with the difference in weather as we have 'wedged' in. You'll often hear meteorologists talk about a wedge, cool to cold damp air trapped against the eastern slopes of the big North Carolina mountains in a sharp v-shaped wedge appearance. Here's an example, this picture shows the wedge shape and notice the coldest temperatures or shades of light blue to blue hug the eastern sides of the mountains in the foothills to western piedmont. This is the heart of any wedge or cold air damming event.
You'll notice in the map, we're definitely chilly to cold on this Saturday. Colors in the yellow or orange range are 60s and even 70s. This map shows most of our region in a temperature range of 34 - 47. These are the weather scenarios that can raise eyebrows for a forecaster as a cold wedge about 8 to 12 degrees colder can bring wicked ice or sleet storms. Boy, how we just love those!!
This next map will show the source for a good classic wedge event, the massive high over New England.


Note the letter 'H' over New York with a pressure of 1037mb. That's a strong area of high pressure with a good supply of cold air over eastern Canada to tap into and drain it down the eastern side of the Appalachian mountains. You can get a sense of this happening by looking at the u-shape nature of the lines across the Carolinas (isobars). While this is happening, a large winter storm is moving up the Mississippi River Valley dragging good moisture into our area and yes, a potential soaking rain - hoooray! Rain into a cold wedge of air acts to cool the temperatures even more. This becomes an issue when the dew point temperature (how moist or dry the air is) is down into the 20s. We're very fortunate though to escape any risk of significant ice as the high over northern New England is not sliding over New York to New Jersey and anchoring in. It's moving steadily east. Because of this, we'll avoid a continuously strengthening high pressure bringing colder and colder temperatures into our area. Sort of a, brief shot of chilly air then gone. This was a close one for our area as the ingedients almost came together for a stronger wedge and possible bout of winter weather.

Incidentally, in this example chart, the pink shaded areas with blue, green... that's computer estimation of liquid in a rain guage over a 6 hour period. That light pink over us indicates really light rain or drizzle through 1pm Saturday. Brighter pinks and blues come in late in the day, or, soaking rain for us:)

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Rockin' around the Christmas Tree at the Christmas party hop..

Okay, so there was no Christmas tree...or a hop, but the annual Morning Show Christmas Party was a big hit.

We had such a great time on Saturday getting together and celebrating with friends and loved ones.

This is my third year at the party, and it seems to get bigger every year. It was so big this year, that we had to move the party to outside of someone's house!

This year the party was at the PF Chang's at Phillips Place. It was a lot of fun.

Great food, good friends and of course, the cut-throat Chinese gift exchange.

That's the one where everyone draws a number, and you pick gifts in that order. You can either pick a new gift, or steal one that has already been opened.

Of course with our group, anything with coffee or cocoa was a HUGE hit - we are a MORNING group after all!

I took some pictures at the party with my phone, so they aren't the best quality, but here they are...hope you enjoy.

Lots of other people were taking pics as well, so maybe we can get more on later!

Merry Christmas y'all!




Lenise and Alexis

The Faris Family