We'll miss you Dave. Can't wait till you are back. 😀
@76.2.7Күн бұрын
Dave will come back am Shure when the high pressure seasons come around am I bet is gone be ugly
@tammyroyce80137 сағат бұрын
That has got to be the most biggest atmospheric river that I have ever seen the one that brought in Yuri and Brody and Grayson that was all small compared to this one so what's it going to bring
@LarryLaird-k9yКүн бұрын
Great job Dave Jones again you explain everything so well 🎉
@PrimitiveIcon3 күн бұрын
like everyone else here, i too appreciate you sharing and explaining meteorological systems, terminology and data sharing sources.. Thank you Dave. yes, take care stay safe and look out for others too. now i have to check out your book.
@Thedesertguy753 күн бұрын
This guy is Mr. Weather!! When those systems don't move it's bad because the rain won't stop! 😮 Happened to us in Houston during hurricane Harvey! That system just stayed in a spot and kept raining until the city was flooded
@Quasar5303 күн бұрын
Okay finally it just stopped raining over 8 inches of rain this is the most I can remember in a three day period in my years here. I’m a bit to the right of the yellow mousse icon on the screen up a bit in Butte County.
@Quasar5303 күн бұрын
Oh I guess I should have waited you mentioned where I live Chico Ca got pummeled.
@Boutthattime20244 күн бұрын
We’re only the Capital city but yea …
@Boutthattime20244 күн бұрын
Us lowlifes in Sacramento will do whatever we can to help San Francisco out… nothing to see here in sac … no no no poor ol SF ! 😂
@carolwright75034 күн бұрын
During the atmospheric River in Calif...can you check out in the future what Tulare Lake could be doing? Once lived in the area and it used to not be there for hundreds of years...for other agriculture places...it got changed and some want it as large as it used to be...released it caused damages so curious.. thank you for at least reading about it..
@larrytaylor6934 күн бұрын
Pineapple exspess is what I'm thinking of
@larrytaylor6934 күн бұрын
Never heard of atmospheric rivers bomb cyclones Rancheros before a few years ago . Maybe because they never happened. At most never heard about them because they were so rare. But now we have hurricanes coming up though the Appalachian mountains all the way to Eastern Kentucky Completely wipping out anything thats remotely close to a river or stream changing the landscape even the path of these water ways never have I heard of a storm rain altering a river let alone a little stream I'm thinking California and along the west coast will have the biggest flooding due to atmospheric rivers this year since the historic one back in the 1800s that put the entire matha Vinyard area under water. Just because the patterns are moving that way last years atmospheric river didn't happen until first part of the year
@RB-jo8od4 күн бұрын
Thank you for the weather report much appreciate
@robertkirby10954 күн бұрын
You are the best!!! Thanks from S. California and may God Bless you brother.
@anthonythomas6834 күн бұрын
I was going to say the same thing he is the best
@LarryLaird-k9y4 күн бұрын
Thank you Dave Jones for your excellent Forcast and I love how you explain all the scientific data 😊😊😊
@ChildPerson4 күн бұрын
Thank you! Happy Thanksgiving
@robynbarricks7624 күн бұрын
Thanks for the info. I learned more about burn scars severity! Have a great Thanksgiving!
@prueblackmore55384 күн бұрын
I came across your page the other day. Really good. I have been obsessed with global weather over the last couple of decades as we approach the end of the 13k year cycle of our star. Well known and understood impacts on climate and weather intensification. The whole climate is following the increasing electrification of our atmosphere and the extremes of temperature, precipitation, seismic activity and particulants from volcanoes around which rain and ice form - is fascinating and slightly terrifying. It is what it is. It’s going to get a lot worse. Thanks for your work
@Thedesertguy754 күн бұрын
50 degrees in Florida is cold!! By far the best weather channel
@Darin9704 күн бұрын
I hope everybody's paying attention to this on the West Coast and not underestimate the storm everybody stay safe God bless you all 🙂🙌😇🙌
@satoshiyamada70414 күн бұрын
This has been happening in the winter for the past three years.
@RickSuchomel-xj3te4 күн бұрын
Excellent job at explaining this I really appreciate your down-to-earth lingo that I can understand. Thanks.
@jackiestar0074 күн бұрын
We got 12 inches so far in upstate NY Catskills western mountains 🧐
@GM-cf6jv5 күн бұрын
Best weather channel I have ever listened to, so educational and sat photos just very cool with models etc. Dave not as pretty as young network weather ladies but a hell of alot more informative 😂 Glad I found channel.
@MarineSwede5 күн бұрын
Love how you explain complicated things in simple terms.
@janetm29695 күн бұрын
Thank you so much fotr extending the forecast to Vancouver Island! ❤
@Jesst77215 күн бұрын
Like you all I am a weather nerd and I am seeking perspective on what I notice, I have never seen so much total cloud water in the atmosphere covering the entirety of the northern hemisphere. Have you?
@StormCenterInc14 күн бұрын
Thanks for this great question! The amount of water vapor (its concentration) depends on the temperature of the atmosphere. This makes water vapor the only greenhouse gas whose concentration increases because the atmosphere is warming, and causes it to warm even more. Increases in atmospheric water vapor also amplify the global water cycle. They contribute to making wet regions wetter and dry regions drier. The more water vapor that air contains, the more energy it holds. This energy fuels intense storms, particularly over land. This results in more extreme weather events. So you are right by noticing...the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere has increased. One more interesting thing: The atmosphere can hold about 4% more water vapor for every one degree Fahrenheit increase in temperature. So as the temperature warms, more moisture can be absorbed by the atmosphere which means when it rains, it can rain more intensely (this goes for snow too). That is why we are seeing more floods around the world. Thanks for watching fellow weather nerd!
@alexandreVERDUN-yz3oe5 күн бұрын
It gonna push all Doomsday fish on shore.
@LarryLaird-k9y5 күн бұрын
Great video Dave Jones you explain everything so well that a layman can understand 😀 👍
@roseappelhoff92825 күн бұрын
StormCenter Com... Thank you for your warnings and thorough updates (I live near Vancouver, Canada) It's presently very mild and not windy at this time; early afternoon.
@TaniaBocciaDamasceno5 күн бұрын
Hi Dave, can you please enable subtitles/CC in Brasilian Portuguese.
@a.randomjack66615 күн бұрын
When he enables subtitles, you will have to use translation to read them in other languages. But yes, it would be very useful 👍
@StormCenterInc15 күн бұрын
@@TaniaBocciaDamasceno Thanks for watching! I am working on that now. It may take a little time but I’ll figure it out. That’s a great suggestion! Thank you for asking.
@StormCenterInc15 күн бұрын
It looks like I need to generate caption file and upload it to the channel. I’ll try it with this video shortly. Please let me know if it works. 😁
@StormCenterInc15 күн бұрын
Okay I uploaded the captions and told KZbin to use Brasilian Portuguese. Can you tell me if it worked? Thank you.
@a.randomjack66615 күн бұрын
@@StormCenterInc1 Auto captions or something. it's just a box to ☑Dave
@GM-cf6jv6 күн бұрын
Great idea from Project 2025 to get rid of the National Weather Service NOT!! We can just ask the religious leaders to tell us what the weather will be.😵💫
@KarenKennedy-lq8nt6 күн бұрын
We need the rain in San Diego!
@a.randomjack66616 күн бұрын
Thank you Dave 👍 Found it "Bombogenesis Origins and Term" Based on the provided search results, bombogenesis, also referred to as a “weather bomb” or “meteorological bomb,” was first observed and described by the Bergen School of Meteorology in the 1940s and 1950s. The term “bomb” was informally used to describe these intense storms because they developed with a great ferocity rarely seen over land. However, the more formal definition and usage of the term “bombogenesis” were introduced by Fred Sanders, a pioneering weather forecaster with MIT, in a 1980 article titled “Synoptic-Dynamic Climatology of the ‘Bomb’” published in the Monthly Weather Review. Sanders and his colleague John Gyakum defined bombogenesis as a rapid intensification of an extratropical cyclone, characterized by a drop in central pressure of at least 24 millibars (0.71 inHg) within 24 hours.
@LarryLaird-k9y6 күн бұрын
Dave Jones you have taught me more about the weather with all your neat satellite and other science based things, thanks for sharing all this information 😀
@vivianh91976 күн бұрын
Wow!! That’s a whole lot of snow!! My granddaughter’s would be singing, Do ya wanna build a snowman. ☃️ Thanks for the weather updates. God bless
@KirkBaumgardner6 күн бұрын
So you could probably in prepping is mainstream now everybody's getting into it man so you could probably take and I know you probably just want to do just weather but I'm telling you man put in a little something else with it maybe even get some sponsors or something I don't know if you can do that like go to companies that will help build the channel end up being a more better and accurate and efficient Weather Channel straight to the point I don't know you can get people who do damage prevention or prepping gear for your house or flood control products or companies that put those products out
@a.randomjack66616 күн бұрын
This is sponsored, (payed for) by the US Gvt. Tax dollars doing good stuff.
@KirkBaumgardner6 күн бұрын
I appreciate what you put on on KZbin you only got like 18,000 followers but keep working on it man I like to share I get in the prep and so you know something prepping will probably help your channel out I know you do just weather but don't tell me as a weatherman you don't want people to prepare according at least to the weather
@kimberlycoolidge52066 күн бұрын
We have a second storm coming behind this storm #2. Where #1 will be pushed south while storm #2 hits the PNW and then #1 will swing back up to the North to us in Washington and Oregon for a second round at a lesser impact but still impact us.... This is called "Fujiwhara" yep! A new term. So we have now these three terms in the PNW: Atmospheric rain, bomb cyclone and now Fujiwhara. Not to mention we have thousands if not hundreds of thousands of people without electricity and trees down everywhere.
@StormCenterInc16 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching and yes I’ll be talking about the Fujiwhara effect in my update today. Indeed lots of power out in PNW and utility crews are on the way!
@MsMelanie1236 күн бұрын
Geoengineered...
@AndressCrimeWatchers7 күн бұрын
Cool and Wetness for Washington, Oregon States and NorCal.
@doyoubelong2Him7 күн бұрын
I sure hope Fema gets a jump on supplies heading there ahead of it so we don't have another North Carolina disaster.
@larryrubin51507 күн бұрын
Images second to none,... .
@larryrubin51507 күн бұрын
That storm needs a name
@LarryLaird-k9y7 күн бұрын
Great Forcast Dave Jones you are the man when it comes to the weather 😊😅😅😅
@mauimixer60407 күн бұрын
Great reporting and definitely not Too long, not when it's this intense with all the possibilities ! Just sent to a friend ban camping in n. Calif, which may be life saving ?! Thanks for such details.
@KarenKennedy-lq8nt7 күн бұрын
Sounds engineered !
@StormCenterInc17 күн бұрын
@@KarenKennedy-lq8nt No, weather systems can not be enhanced or altered at this huge scale. Weather modification research has been tested for decades but only at the cloud level and that was even difficult to prove because you need to have a ‘control’ cloud (meaning one that you do not seed) and a cloud that is exactly the same to be the one that seeding is applied. The problem is that no two clouds are exactly the same. This storm is the result of atmospheric circulation and thermal gradients along with spin in the atmosphere. Unfortunately the right conditions currently exist to make these storms particularly strong.
@inga21377 күн бұрын
Thank you sir
@rca65767 күн бұрын
Well, came here to see what would happen with Vancouver and not a single word so I guess nothing?
@StormCenterInc17 күн бұрын
@@rca6576 Will add more info tomorrow for Vancouver. Thanks for watching.
@rca65767 күн бұрын
@@StormCenterInc1 Many, many thanks!
@inga21377 күн бұрын
Than go somewhere else
@inga21377 күн бұрын
You people have no idea how to say thank you.
@rca65767 күн бұрын
@@inga2137 Ok, thank you for your response.
@a.randomjack66617 күн бұрын
That is impressive!!! Doesn't "Bomb" refers to speed of intensification?
@StormCenterInc17 күн бұрын
It refers to the rate of pressure drop in the center of the storm. If the atmospheric pressure falls 24 millibars in 24 hours, that is the basic criteria for naming a developing cyclone as a 'bomb'. Many meteorologists also call it bomb-o-genesis. We will have two in three days in the Pac NW. Thanks for watching!
@a.randomjack66617 күн бұрын
@@StormCenterInc1 I almost always watch Dave. Subscriber since Jennifer Francis.
@Jesst77217 күн бұрын
My grandmother talks about her memory of the new school building destroyed during the "Big Blow" Columbus Day Storm that hit the Pacific Northwest on October 12, 1962 with a top speed recorded on the Oregon coast at 179 mph (288 km/h) at Cape Blanco on the southern Oregon coast. During the Columbus Day Storm of 1962: The central pressure dropped to 960 millibars, equivalent to a Category 3 hurricane.
@StormCenterInc17 күн бұрын
Wow! That was a doozy storm for sure and is considered the 'benchmark' of cyclones in the Pac NW. So glad she survived to tell her story and thanks so much for watching.
@janetm29697 күн бұрын
Would be nice to see you extend the colours at least, up into the Canadian Pacific coast, so that we can interpret from those.
@StormCenterInc17 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching. I'll extend my coverage into Canada tomorrow.