A guy made an interesting comment on another forum and I thought I’d inquire if any mags have any insight.
We had the strongest inversion I’ve ever witnessed yesterday here in central Oregon. Temps were 0 F at my house sitting at about 3,600 feet above sea level. In a 45 minute window while I ascended to the base at Mt. Bachelor the ambient rose to 30 F at 5,700 ft.
So, amateur weather geek guy attributes that to global warming as he claims that the maritime air socked on to the mountain is warmer than it should be due to El Niño.
I’m not necessarily disagreeing, but I’m curious if anyone knows that the southern oscillation warming actually effects water temps that would generate our typical NNW patterns coming out of the northern Pacific and the Gulf of Alaska?
Do those of you that have lived/observed PacNW weather for a decade or two feel that the storm systems are coming through warmer while the continental polar air will sit underneath it in the valleys and on the plains? It’s an interesting theory and would seem to explain how the models missed the events the last couple of days.
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