Northeast Storm Could Be the Train Wreck/Hurricane Sandy Storm Predictions

As a visionary, I spend most of my time trying to understand and ‘correctly’ interprets my visions. January 10, 2015  my vision was of a terrible storm that destroyed parts of New Jersey just like Hurricane Sandy, the shore points were hit very hard.

Predictions: Sandy Like Disaster

I had an uneasy feeling that from January 24-31, 2015, some type of attack would take place in NJ/NY area but I did not think  out a major winter storm.  Strangely enough I was watching the Storm of the Century last night.

January 25-26, 2015, the Northeast region will be hit by a major storm and the National Weather Service has issued a blizzard watch for most of New Jersey. Of course, the storm could be nothing but this event more aligns with my visions as this time.

HAARP signature from last Friday (January 23) were indication that the Northeast region was being very hard with signature just like in the days of Hurricane Sandy.

Potentially Historic Blizzard Taking Aim on New England (New Jersey and New York)

The densely populated area from New York City to Boston could experience one of its ten biggest snowstorms on record early this week, as a textbook nor’easter takes shape over the next 48 hours. While local details are bound to evolve somewhat as the storm develops, the models are now in strong, consistent agreement on a potentially crippling snowstorm. Blizzard watches were hoisted on Sunday morning from eastern New Jersey to northeast Massachusetts, including the New York, Providence, and Boston metropolitan areas.

Despite the increasing skill of computer forecast models in recent years, this week’s threat emerged remarkably quickly. As recently as Friday, the model consensus was for a weaker storm that would sweep through the region from west to east, then strengthen well offshore. One of the first models to switch gears was the ECMWF, whose operational run issued at 00Z Friday night highlighted the risk of a potential blockbuster storm for the Northeast U.S. By Saturday morning, most other models had quickly joined the bandwagon. “All operational models now have the forecast of a major snowstorm/blizzard,” said NOAA’s Weather Prediction Center on Sunday morning.

The driver for this record-threatening event is a strong upper-level wave now diving across the Midwest. In line with the pattern of several other storms this year, this wave will produce a stripe of snow from northern Indiana and Ohio into Pennsylvania, dropping several inches on the Washington and Philadelphia metro areas by Monday afternoon. On its heels, a powerful branch of the jet stream will continue diving southeastward, intensified by a unusually strong ridge over the western U.S. that produced record highs across Washington, Oregon, and California on Saturday. As it moves off the mid-Atlantic coast, the upper-level energy will consolidate into a powerful upper-level low and generate a rapidly intensifying surface low. Surface pressures may drop by more than 24 millibars in 24 hours, qualifying the storm as a true coastal “bomb”. Sea surface temperatures are well above average off the northeast U.S. coast, which could help fuel the storm’s strengthening. As it reaches peak intensity on Tuesday, the surface low is expected to slow down just southeast of Cape Cod, which would keep the snow machine going at full strength and lash the New England coast with winds gusting to 60 mph or more in places.


Figure 1. Surface winds (knots) projected by the GFS model at 06Z Sunday, January 25, valid at 09Z Tuesday, January 27. As the surface cyclone winds up south of Long Island, winds exceeding 50 knots are projected to batter Cape Cod. For winds in mph, multiply by 1.15. Photo credit: WunderMap.

http://www.haarpstatusnetwork.com/

http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=2902

Blizzard Watch Issued for Shore Area, 10-18 Inches Predicted

https://melbrake.wordpress.com

About melbrake

Mel Brake is an awarding winning Philadelphia based poet/singer/song writer, whose poetry has appeared in several media outlets and journals, including Philadelphia Poets 2007, 2008 and 2009, Mad Poets Review, Fox Chase Review, and The Philadelphia Bulletin. In addition, Long Island Sounds: An Anthology of Poetry, Writing Outside The Lines (WOSTL) Anthology, Word Riot Magazine, The New Verse News, Word Salad Magazine and Poetry Ink 2010 has published his works. Recently, his band, the Mel Brake Family Band performed a benefit concert at Cross Road Café in Delaware County. He is the Founder and Executive Director of MPW, a non-profit organization, focusing on using the arts to reach children in the Tri-state area. In addition, his first chapbook, “Obama Poetry Project” is available at: MelBrakEpress.blogspot.com.
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