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Weather Journal: Imperfect scales for rating weather events and basketball teams

Weather Journal: Imperfect scales for rating weather events and basketball teams

Many basketball fans have been caught up in power rankings and now NCAA Tournament seedings, scratching their heads at how their favorite team can be rated so low.

I’m similarly perplexed at how this winter ranks so low on an intensity scale that I created.

It all underscores the inherent imperfections and inevitable subjectiveness of multifactor scales, be it for weather or sports or something else entirely.

Back in November, I rated the first 21 winters of the 21st century to date in the Roanoke area according to a formula I developed to assess each season’s severity based on several factors.

A sleigh ride down memory lane, with a new index to rank the 21 Roanoke-area winters of the 21st century.

Those factors included total snowfall in inches, the number of days of measurable snowfall, the lowest temperature of the season subtracted from the freezing mark of 32, and the number of days with highs 60 or above subtracted from the days with lows at or below 20, all based on Roanoke official weather statistics.

Using that scale, which I didn’t publicly name but have toyed with calling RAWSI (Roanoke Area Winter Severity Index), the constantly cold and deeply snowy 2009-10 winter rates as the most severe winter of the 21st century to date with 84 points, quite unsurprisingly, while the very mild 2011-12 winter and minimal-snow 2019-20 winter are tied for last place with two points.

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Based on this formula, the 2021-22 winter ranks 15th most severe of the now 22 winters in the century to date with a score of 26. It rates seven points behind its predecessor in 2020-21.

That strikes me as odd, even illogical. There is no way I would consider last winter to be more severe than this one.

Last winter had lots of borderline wintry precipitation events but nothing really lasting or all that impactful, at least in the immediate Roanoke area. This winter, by contrast, had a thick icy snowpack that lasted two to three weeks for many, 11 straight days officially, Roanoke’s longest lasting snowpack in seven years.

I heard from people who were stuck in their homes for several days by the unrelenting, difficult-to-remove icy snow cover on their driveways and rural roads, resulting from an 8-inch Jan. 16 storm that included about 2 inches of sleet, followed by days of only partial melting and hard re-freezes.

I left the region for an entire week and returned to find the snow cover on my yard looking basically the same as when I left.

The 2021-22 winter edged 2020-21 for more total snow by a 12-10 margin, rounded to the nearest inch, and had a colder lowest temperature of the season, 10 degrees compared to 15.

This winter’s rating took a hit, however, in having 29 days with highs reaching 60 or more, tied for third most on record going back to 1912, compared to only 15 days with a low 20 or below. While the middle part in January was quite wintry, the bookends in December and the latter half of February were mild. The result in my formula is that it lost 14 points for having that many more 60s highs than sub-20 lows.

Also, last winter had 13 days of measurable snow, though most of those had very minor amounts, compared to only six such days this winter.

In basketball terms, you can think of this winter as having had more bad losses, mild days, than it did quality wins, cold and snowy days. (Your personal perception may be the opposite, that mild days are wins and cold and snow are losses, but that’s not the point of the rating scale.)

How more high-profile and important scales for rating weather events fall short in various ways engenders much discussion in weather social media circles, and the arguments can rage as hotly and last far longer than do those for how various teams are seeded in a basketball bracket.

The Enhanced Fujita Scale used for tornadoes is often criticized because it is based solely on damage markers, which means the happenstance of what a tornado hits can be more important than the strength of its winds.

A tornado with 200 mph winds that only flips a portable outhouse and hits nothing else is an EF-0, when it could be an EF-5 if it swept the foundation clean on just one well-constructed home. There is no radar or instrument observation that can raise a tornado rating if there is no observed tornado damage to support that rating.

The Saffir-Simpson Scale for hurricanes is considered lacking by some because it doesn’t include storm surge as a factor.

The inherent problem is that coastal geography plays a major role in storm surges, so hurricanes of similar size and strength could cause widely varying storm surge levels on different coastlines. But there is no doubt about the important role storm surge plays in damage and death toll with landfalling hurricanes, and the scale does seem to be missing something overlooking storm surge.

Three factors I didn’t include in my RAWSI were days of snow cover, the size of the season’s largest snowstorm, and anything related to freezing rain.

Adding just the total days of snow cover, 13 compared to eight a year ago, plus the size of the season’s largest snowfall, 8 inches compared to 5 a year ago, would have been just enough to move this winter ahead of the last one by one point.

I didn’t include days of snow cover for the simple reason that I have hopes of extending this rating system eventually to the entire period of record going back to 1912, and there is a point several decades back where this data becomes spotty or unavailable.

I didn’t include the size of the largest snow mainly because two of the four factors already emphasize snowfall and having more than half of the scale based only on snow statistics seemed a bit much.

Overlooking ice storms in a local winter rating scale is similar to overlooking storm surge in a hurricane scale, but I could find no consistently recorded, readily available data point related to freezing rain to add to this formula.

And, frankly, for what I was trying to accomplish with the article in November, I didn’t want the trouble of tracking down and adding together six or seven factors.

So the 2021-22 winter will have to live with its 15th seed, which would put it in a first-round bracket pairing with the second-seeded 2013-14 winter, that winter’s fans fuming that having the biggest snowstorm of the young century should somehow be weighted more and get it seeded first ahead of the New England-style winter we had in 2009-10.

Weather Journal appears on Wednesdays.

Contact Kevin Myatt at kevin.myatt@roanoke.com. Follow him on Twitter @kevinmyattwx.

 

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Huge amount of snow poses unique challenge for snowcross event organizers

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Races taking place at Timmins snowdump on Spruce Street South this Saturday and Sunday

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Can there actually be too much snow for a snowcross racing event?

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Apparently so.

Ken Avann, president of the Canadian Snowcross Racing Association which is organizing the two days of racing in Timmins this weekend, said they had to cancel the kids’ events with the mini-snowmobiles because of the limited area of space for racers due to the amount of snow.

“The fact that we have so much is great, because we can proceed with the event,” said Avann. “The fact that we have as much as we do have – which is way more than we need – it does create some challenges for sure.

“For example, our footprint that we have inside the snowdump here is so small, we don’t have enough room to get all the racers in here.”

Typically, CSRA races include novelty events for children, some as young as four.

“There’s just not enough space for them,” said Avann. “So the kids, which represents about 60 racers, we’ve asked to stay home this weekend and we’re going to let them race at another event being held at one of the ski resorts at the end of the season to make up for it.

“We have to bring in about 60 to 70 teams. They’ll fill up all the space that’s here, in the three lots.”

On Wednesday and Thursday, crews began moving snow and starting the work to create a half-mile long track, with jumps at various points.

“We’re going to have a great track. Everything is going to be elevated on top this year. So in that sense, we’re going to have a great show for the crowd.”

Avann said they’re expecting racers from all over Ontario and parts of Quebec.

“They’re going for a national points championship. We run a nine-race series and these guys get points every time they race for a championship at the end of the season. We also did a Triple Crown with our northern events – Sault Ste. Marie, Sudbury and Timmins. So this is the final of that Triple Crown challenge and there will be a big award presented to the pro open racer who wins that Triple Crown championship.”

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Avann said the racers’ group of 60 to 70 teams will account for about 700 people, which includes mechanics and family members.

“Then we’re expecting over a thousand people per day for spectators. So, we’re looking at over the weekend probably close to 3,000 people here, so it’s significant.

“Some people are here now already,” he said on Wednesday. “They’re riding the trail systems and staying at the hotels and they’re spending their money.”

Avann said the economic spinoffs to host communities tends to range between $700,000 to $1.3 million.

“That’s what the economic impact studies have shown and that’s based on hotel rooms, overnight stays, the food and beverages that are sold, the hardware stores, gas, all that kind of stuff.

“So it’s a great boost for the city.”

With no on-site parking available, Avann said spectators are going to be encouraged to take advantage of shuttle services that are going to be available this Saturday and Sunday.

“Once you get the racers in here, the lots are going to be full and the ends will be fenced so there will only be walk-in traffic.”

The Triple Crown Pro Snowcross event put on by the CSRA is being held at the Timmins snowdump on Spruce Street South this Saturday and Sunday. Tickets are available each race day at the front admission gates.

Visit snowcross.com/timmins for more details about admission fees and scheduled races.

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City of Regina bracing for another major snow event

City of Regina bracing for another major snow event


The City of Regina has 50 pieces of snow clearing equipment prepared to roll out during a storm expected at the end of this week.


Tyler Bien, the manager of roadways seasonal operations for the city, said crews will first focus on keeping major roads drivable by applying ice control and removing snow.


“That cycle continues throughout the storm throughout its completion. Once the storm is complete, we will enter into a systematic plow if we receive more than five centimetres of snow,” Bien said. “That’s when we systematically plow the city streets, categories one to four, until completion.”


CTV Meteorologist Bradlyn Oakes said 10-20 centimetres of snow could move into the city between Thursday and Friday.


“If we get to that top end, we could see more than our average amount of March snowfall just in this one system. Typically in March we see 18.8 centimetres of snow,” Oakes said.


So far this winter, Bien said crews have had to deal with more snow than average. He said in a normal year the city receives about 60 centimetres of snow. This year there’s been about 70 centimetres so far.


“We’ve experienced more wind events also,” he said. “So not only accumulations, but the snow blowing into the city on the perimeters or around any open areas.”


This means the city has paid more for clearing efforts. Bien said so far this winter, the city has spent $8.1 million.


“[In] previous years we haven’t spent as much, granted we have received double or triple the amount of snow than we have in the last couple of years,” Bien said.


Although it might be a headache for some people shovelling, members of the agriculture industry are welcoming the added precipitation.


The Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan (APAS) said farmers are “cautiously optimistic” about what the next few months might look like.


“The snow accumulation we have this winter, particularly in the east side of the province, is lending a lot of optimism in the farming industry that going into spring seeding we’ll have adequate moisture,” Bill Prybylski, the vice president of APAS, said.


Prybylski said conditions have been abnormally dry over the last few springs due to lack of winter precipitation. He said subsoil moisture has been dwindling as a result.


While snow is a good start, he said rainfall will be crucial throughout the warmer months.


“It’s going to depend what happens between now and seeding time,” he said. “We’re going to need some good, timely rains throughout the summer to continue that growth.”

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What Fargo roads get plowed first during snow events?

What Fargo roads get plowed first during snow events?

FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) -Fargo Public Works officials say plow drivers normally work in two shifts to help cover the changing weather conditions during like Monday’s storm.

Some roads get more priority over others and it may take even longer for your neighborhood to get cleared.

City plow drivers typically start with main roads that tend to have the most traffic and are used by emergency services.

The smaller streets that connect to neighborhoods come second.

Public Works officials say their goal is always to get the job done.

”This is an extended storm with lots of wind, so the plan can always change, but we do want to get into neighborhoods to get them cleared up,” said Paul Fiechtner, the public works service manager for the City of Fargo.

Fiechtner says if the snow picks back up or the winds get stronger, which is supposed to happen overnight into Tuesday, plows will have to move out of the neighborhoods and return to the primary roads.

Copyright 2022 KVLY. All rights reserved.

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Snow events to begin in Cambridge, Kitchener and Waterloo Thursday night

Snow events to begin in Cambridge, Kitchener and Waterloo Thursday night

Ahead of Thursday’s expected snowfall, the cities of Kitchener, Cambridge and Waterloo, Ont., have all declared snow events that prohibit parking on city streets.

The snow events in Kitchener and Waterloo come into effect at 9 p.m. while Cambridge’s will start at midnight.

Read more:

Snowfall warning issued for Guelph, Waterloo Region ahead of long weekend

The times mark deadlines for cars to be off the streets or potentially face the consequences, which could include a fine or being towed if snowplows are unable to effectively clear a road.

The cities declare snow events in the event major storms are in the forecast but Waterloo notes that they typically end quickly. In the case of the major storm which hit the area in January, they were extended by an extra day.

Environment Canada has issued a snowfall warning that covers most of southern Ontario including the Waterloo Region.

Read more:

Grand River Conservation Authority issues flood watch for watershed

The agency said snowstorms are expected to arrive Thursday afternoon with the potential for up to 20 centimetres of accumulation by Friday morning.

— with files from Global News’ Matt Carty


© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Beijing Winter Olympics live updates: Kaillie Humphries leads monobob; snow postpones slopestyle qualifying

Beijing Winter Olympics live updates: Kaillie Humphries leads monobob; snow postpones slopestyle qualifying

YANQING, China — Elana Meyers Taylor’s vision of the Beijing Olympics and the Olympics that are playing out have only a distant relationship to each other. She was sliding Saturday morning, driving her bobsled at harrowing speeds down a track here. That part fits. Little else does.

“I had this whole intention of coming here and doing this with my family,” Meyers Taylor said after her final training run at Yanqing Sliding Center. “I’ve done everything with my family. Every race, everything, it’s all been a family affair.

“And so now to have that shock of all of a sudden being at the Olympics and not being able to spend time with them, that’s something I didn’t plan for. We planned for all kinds of worst-case scenarios at the Games, but this was something that I didn’t see coming.”

The coronavirus may be abating in most parts of the world, but these are still, undeniably, the second straight Covid Olympics. Anyone in China with any affiliation with the Games realizes this. The bubble is real, and the bubble can be suffocating. Life is this: hotel, throat swab, bus, venue, bus, hotel. The Olympics as a cultural exchange is a notion from yesteryear and the future. Maybe someday. Not now.

Meyers Taylor is Team USA’s reminder of all that. These are her fourth Olympics, and she is seeking her fourth medal — her first gold. But on Jan. 29, two days after arriving in China, she tested positive for the coronavirus. So did her husband, Nic Taylor, an alternate on the American men’s bobsled team. So did her son Nico, nearly 2. So did her father, Eddie Meyers, who was permitted to make the trip to help with Nico.

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Events delayed as heavy snow hits Yanqing and Zhangjiakou

Volunteers clear the course as the start of the women's slopestyle qualification has been delayed due to weather on February 13.
A worker spraying disinfectant at the Secret Garden Genting Grand, at the Beijing Olympics.
A worker spraying disinfectant at the Secret Garden Genting Grand, at the Beijing Olympics. (Dan Hodge/CNN)

The corridors of the Secret Garden Genting Grand in Zhangjiakui seem like any other hotel in a ski resort — but of course, the resort hosting the Beijing 2022 mountain sports is not just any other hotel.

Being within the “closed loop” that separates Olympic athletes and participants from the Chinese public means there are a few quirks to contend with. 

You’re joined in the corridors by dozens of hazmat-suited staff, one of whom is spraying a “disinfectant solution” that smells a lot like bleach from a hose attached to his Ghostbuster-style backpack. They pass through with their sprays at least three times a day, covering mainly the carpet in their mist.  

Relentless disinfectant seems to be a theme across the Games, with white spray marks adorning everything from the airport information booths on arrival, the PVC screen separating us from our closed loop drivers, to stains on black shoes from a freshly sprayed carpet. 

iFLYTEK Jarvisen, an AI smart translator developed in China used by staff and restaurant servers at the Beijing Olympics.
iFLYTEK Jarvisen, an AI smart translator developed in China used by staff and restaurant servers at the Beijing Olympics. (Dan Hodge/CNN)

Breaking the language barrier for lunch: In the mountain resort of Zhangjiakou, the hotels have restaurants ranging from Chinese food and Western-style diners to chain brands like KFC and Pizza Hut.

But one thing they all have in common is the language barrier between the primarily English-speaking clientele and our Mandarin-speaking hosts. In an (almost) Google-less China, there might be an app for that, but some of these restaurants are opting to use other hardware.

The tech that at first glance resembles a cellphone from the early 2000s is in fact the iFLYTEK Jarvisen – an AI smart translator developed in China. Our experience with the tech has been a pleasant one, certainly making mealtimes less stressful. 

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Snow finally falls on Beijing Winter Olympics — and that’s a problem for snow events

Snow finally falls on Beijing Winter Olympics — and that's a problem for snow events
Workers prepare the course as snow falls ahead of the first run of the men's giant slalom during the 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the Yanqing National Alpine Ski Centre in Yanqing on February 13, 2022. (JEFF PACHOUD/AFP via Getty Images)

Workers prepare the course as snow falls ahead of the first run of the men’s giant slalom during the 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the Yanqing National Alpine Ski Centre in Yanqing on February 13, 2022. (JEFF PACHOUD/AFP via Getty Images)

YANQING, China — Natural snow finally fell on the National Alpine Ski Center here on the 11th day of Olympic activity — and became a problem for snow sports that have grown accustomed to operating on artificial surfaces.

Organizers canceled the second day of women’s downhill training “due to the snowfall.”

Up in Zhangjiakou, at the Genting Snow Park, women’s slopestyle skiing qualifiers were initially delayed, then postponed to a later date “due to current adverse weather conditions.”

Precipitation began late Saturday night and into Sunday morning. A few inches of snow had coated roads and racecourses in Yanqing by the time Sunday’s competitions neared. Organizers decided a little before 8 a.m. to call off downhill training.

The men’s giant slalom competition will go ahead as planned, with first runs beginning at 10:15 a.m. local time, but with decreased intervals between start times from one racer to the next — 1 minute, 45 seconds instead of 2 minutes.

for outdoor events, in part because Yanqing — a district on the outskirts of Beijing — and Zhangjiakou — a resort town in a neighboring province — receive very little natural snowfall. Yanqing received none last year, and only one small storm earlier this season. Both sit on the outskirts of the Gobi Desert.

The reliance on man-made snow attracted attention and . But it’s actually quite typical — and even preferred by some skiers and snowboarders.

“Every course needs artificial snow in these days,” Bernhard Russi, the designer of the Beijing Olympic Alpine courses, said in 2017. “There is not a lot of snowfall which, it sounds a little bit ridiculous, but it’s good. If you have a lot of snowfall you are always in trouble [clearing it].”

In both Yanqing and Zhangjiakou, workers shoveled and blew snow off courses and surrounding areas. In Zhangjiakou, visibility and wind were also potential issues.

Snow was still falling steadily in both areas as of 10:15 a.m. local time, and could continue throughout the day in Yanqing. At least 2 inches have already fallen, with up to four more inches anticipated over the next 24 hours, according to forecasts.

Temperatures are hovering in the low teens in Yanqing, and had dropped to 5 degrees Fahrenheit in Zhangjiakou.

This story will be updated.

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Snow finally falls on Beijing Winter Olympics — and that’s a problem for snow events

Snow finally falls on Beijing Winter Olympics — and that's a problem for snow events

YANQING, China — Natural snow finally fell on the National Alpine Ski Center here on the 11th day of Olympic activity — and became a problem for snow sports that have grown accustomed to operating on artificial surfaces.

Organizers canceled the second day of women’s downhill training “due to the snowfall.”

Up in Zhangjiakou, at the Genting Snow Park, women’s slopestyle skiing qualifiers were initially delayed, then postponed to a later date “due to current adverse weather conditions.”

Precipitation began late Saturday night and into Sunday morning. A few inches of snow had coated roads and racecourses in Yanqing by the time Sunday’s competitions neared. Organizers decided a little before 8 a.m. to call off downhill training.

The men’s giant slalom competition began as planned at 10:15 a.m. local time, but with decreased intervals between start times from one racer to the next — 1 minute, 45 seconds instead of 2 minutes.

These Olympics have relied entirely on artificial snow for outdoor events, in part because Yanqing — a district on the outskirts of Beijing — and Zhangjiakou — a mountainous town in a neighboring province — receive very little natural snowfall. Yanqing received none last year, and only one small storm earlier this season. Both sit on the outskirts of the Gobi Desert.

The reliance on man-made snow attracted attention and concern from environmental groups. In reality, though, it has become the norm for international ski and snowboard competitions. Some Winter Olympics actually prefer it.

“We have been riding on a lot of artificial snow halfpipes for so long now, we’ve gotten used to it,” U.S. snowboarder Maddie Mastro said in October.

“The majority of tracks that we ski on are artificially made,” U.S. Alpine skier Ryan Cochran-Siegle said. “And they also do a lot of watering, or injecting with water, to make it more of an icy surface.”

The softer, fluffier natural snow falls on top of that icy surface, and can become a problem.

“Every course needs artificial snow in these days,” Bernhard Russi, the designer of the Beijing Olympic Alpine courses, said in 2017. “There is not a lot of snowfall which, it sounds a little bit ridiculous, but it’s good. If you have a lot of snowfall you are always in trouble [clearing it].”

In both Yanqing and Zhangjiakou, workers shoveled and blew snow off courses and surrounding areas. In Zhangjiakou, visibility and wind were also potential issues.

Snow was still falling steadily in both areas as of 10:15 a.m. local time, and could continue throughout the day in Yanqing. At least 2 inches have already fallen, with up to four more inches anticipated over the next 24 hours, according to forecasts.

Temperatures are hovering in the low teens in Yanqing, and had dropped to 5 degrees Fahrenheit in Zhangjiakou.

This story will be updated.

A worker clears snow off the women's downhill course as women's downhill training has been canceled due to snowfall during the 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the Yanqing National Alpine Skiing Centre in Yanqing on February 13, 2022. (DIMITAR DILKOFF/AFP via Getty Images)

A worker clears snow off the women’s downhill course as women’s downhill training has been canceled due to snowfall during the 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the Yanqing National Alpine Skiing Centre in Yanqing on February 13, 2022. (DIMITAR DILKOFF/AFP via Getty Images)