Unknown 0:00
There was a North bomb in a Pacific and Northern Pacific bomb last week. 27.1 barometric pressure in the North Pacific, it's not a hurricane. Who's ever heard of such a thing? 27.1 parametric pressure these days what's going on in the world with a record high pressure in Manitoba. This within the same within a day or two of this record low pressure, feet of snow are falling in Japan, there's unbelievable stuff going on in the world, there's a ripple effect. Not only that, the temperature rose over 100 degrees in the stratosphere, it's 18 miles up above the surface. This has nothing to do with the surface. There's no connection to the surface temperatures. I don't know how it happens, the satellite imagery picked up an enormous amount of ozone. I don't know if ozone is connected to this at all. But it went over 100 degrees, which is almost certain to weaken the polar vortex and it did weaken the polar vortex and the polar vortex split. Once that happens, the arctic air spill South off so you would think that here in the United States, we're going to get real cold. But no all of a sudden in El Nino weather pattern develops By the way, this is not no Nino year. This is a La Nina year. But El Nino weather pattern develops blocks off the arctic air. All arctic air goes down to Europe. They're getting clobbered Eastern Asia, places like that. They're getting all the polar air. There's questions that this polar vortex might even split into three. And probably within two weeks. Europe, no, it might even be at the end of next week already. There already could be big changes in our weather pattern, these things will finally start to be felt right over here. And that's what we all have to pay attention to those that love active weather winter weather. Don't get worried that we're going to waste another winter not humble enough, like last winter. You know last winter also in the stratosphere, temperatures went way up, not not over 100 degrees, but they were forecasting the polar vortex to weaken after that. How could it not but it never did. The polar vortex remains strong. And if the polar vortex is strong, the arctic air remains locked up. And the winter remains relatively mild. That's what happened last winter. This winter. We are hoping meaning meteorologists and weather buffs and people who love nature and love all this stuff. We are hoping for a real winter this year. We haven't had one yet here in Chicago, Texas has been bombarded in Oklahoma. They here in Chicago, we haven't had it Baltimore hasn't had it. So we're waiting. We're waiting. And the we're about to go through a week of like eerie stillness of just nothingness. And it's almost like I'm hoping it's like the calm before the storm. That's what I'm hoping because big changes. The National Weather Service, by the way, pointed this out, that big changes lie ahead. They did not use those words to be honest with you. They did not use those words. But they did say that the indications are that the weather pattern will become more active and colder towards the end of next week, or they said at least a little bit beyond our current forecast cycle. The current forecast cycle is seven days based upon the things that I read about the polar vortex so I I love to go into fantasy mode. And I love to be optimistic. But optimistic by me means storms. It doesn't mean storms. That's what it means to have a week of quiet weather. We are sad on this podcast. It's sad. It's not a time of happiness. on here we celebrate when there's intense weather that's a time of celebration. I'm not talking about hurricanes or devastating stuff. I'm talking about beautiful blizzards, heat waves, just mind boggling stuff that's going on in Australia right now day after day after day. This is this is the type of stuff where we celebrate. We celebrate that stuff over here.
This transcript was generated by https://otter.ai
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/weather-with-enthusiasm--4911017/support.