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franktank232

Major freeze showing up on weather model

franktank232
12 years ago

Note: This is over 10 days out. Until the ECMWF (European weather model) shows this, along with other models, don't take any of this too seriously. Just be aware its very possible.

We have had so much warm weather so early, that everything in my yard is near or has bloomed (about 5 weeks behind last year). Parts of N Michigan were near 90F just a few days ago. For the days I'm looking at (April 7th/8th)...the record lows here are in the low teens, so really this isn't even close to record breaking cold, but because of where we are at in flowering/fruit....

The GFS (American weather model) for the last 6 or so model runs has been showing what would be a very nasty freeze for most of us in the midwest/lakes and probably points east. Lets just say it has Milwaukee dropping to 21F (on April 8th) and my area dropping to 22F... Detroit shows 21F also..

Basically right now the GFS shows what would be a disaster for orchards. I doubt there would be any apples out of Minnesota, Wisconsin, most of Michigan...Peaches would be destroyed, cherries, etc...

I'll try to update daily with any major changes.

Here is Detroit...

LINK

Punch in your 4 digit airport code closest to you to find what your area shows (they start with K...KDTX/KLSE/etc).

Comments (65)

  • myk1
    12 years ago

    I don't think 5 is being overly pushy for Japanese plums.
    Now the people I know in MN from brewing forums with Japanese plums, they're pushing it.
    But here in 5 I expect I'll get them more often than not without much input from me (although with plenty of worry because our weather people are good about giving forecasts based on wishful thinking until the 10:00 forecast where they come out and say it's going to freeze to late to do anything about it).

  • ltilton
    12 years ago

    They're more reliable than the cots. I've not tried pluots, but Spring Satin flowers with the plums. I think maybe people got the idea it couldn't be done when the weather was colder here.

  • megamav
    12 years ago

    I studied weather in college for a few semesters before taking up computer science.

    It looks pretty zonal to me until early next week, April 2nd when a shot of "colder" air comes down from Alaska into California. Warm in the east again, possible severe weather in the plains mid week.

    Dont freak out yet, these models are fluid and especially volatile without snow pack this time of year to keep the temps down. Sun angle is getting higher, so the ground will have more say in surface temperature than you'd think.

    I am not a commercial grower, I am just planting these past two years in my yard. I have expectations of fruit, but im hoping this works out for you guys who are growing.

    Here is a link that might be useful: {{gwi:78272}}

  • megamav
    12 years ago

    harvestman:
    Albany area Monday night: Clear with gusty winds. Hard freeze expected. Low 21F. Winds NNW at 20 to 30 mph.

    Sorry to see this, I hope most of your trees havent broken bud. My Jonamac up here is still in silver tip... barely.

  • alan haigh
    12 years ago

    My J. plums are pretty much at full bloom, peach flower buds are at various states from pink to wide open. Redhaven and Madison have plenty of unopened flowers.

    Forecasts vary but it's bound to get at least as cold as 24 tonight (actually tomorrow am) with a hard frost predicted all the way down to NYC.

    I may attempt to protect some of my J. plums with plastic sheeting but I'm not sure what I will do beyond this. A freeze like this hasn't happened for years as J. plums have been consistent for about a decade around here but in the past freeze off was not exactly rare. I guess I was getting spoiled.

    It concerns me that the weather seems to be getting increasingly erratic and I hope we aren't seeing just the beginnings of what's to come in the next couple of decades. At some point erratic weather can drastically affect our overall ability to produce food. In the end the stability of civilization is dependent on food production, of course.

  • mrsg47
    12 years ago

    Only my peaches and nectarines are getting to 'popcorn' stage. All of the other trees are still in tight bud. I will still cover the peaches and nectarines this afternoon. I agree with Harvestman, about the erratic weather. I hope this is a fluke and not a sign of the future. I'm sure this has happened before.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    6z GFS is a lot warmer in the extended. Stills hows some chilly 850mb temps, but would only be 30Fs here... Still something to watch, but hopefully this is a trend. I really don't want to deal with a hard freeze and all the blankets, sheets,etc I'd have to pull out to try to protect my trees.

    I will say that the extended does look more "normal" then it has been, no more record warmth, although the GFS continues to show a quick run up in temps before we fall off...so maybe another 80F reading before the cold arrives.

  • megamav
    12 years ago

    In terms of history, the planet has had its ups and downs with temperature. This isnt global warming, this is wacky weather this year due to a eastward shift in the La Nina effect. La Nina and El Nino are relatively new to researchers, the pattern was picked up not too long ago, but has been going on for a very long time. There are a lot of NATURAL variables that go into the climatology cycle, like volcanic activity, solar cycle, natural CO2 emmissions, even dust!

    Here is a link that might be useful: {{gwi:78273}}

  • glib
    12 years ago

    For what is worth, ice cores of age similar to the last major climate transitions show local rapid (rapid=year to year or decade to decade) weather oscillations before the onset of the new equilibrium. This is consistent with what we see here or in other parts of the temperate world. soon we will not worry about the peaches anymore but we will worry about bigger things.

  • malaec
    12 years ago

    I love Randy's set up. I am going to do just that, and place a Sterno in each tent. We have a case of them left from last party, they are great for reheating food. Hope it works!

  • olympia_gardener
    12 years ago

    I am in Chicago. The low today is 36 but it will be below 32 in couple of days. I have a peach tree just flowered and petals fell. I will try to cover it up somehow to create a mico enviroment to protect it. My pear tree is in full bloom, depends on how long the freezing temp. is. It might survive and fruiting.
    It is crazy. Last year , my daffodils did not bloom till Mother's day. This year, they are already done blooming.

  • myk1
    12 years ago

    I don't think I'd call it increasingly erratic. It has always seemed erratic.
    Although it was in z6PA I recall a few birthdays that were very warm. Here we've had a few early springs. Warm spells in Feb/Mar that have me hoping the trees don't bloom aren't at all rare.
    If we actually back off the heat for the rest of March and April without getting into freezing, to have an actual spring here will be rare but welcomed.

    Since nobody responded to my water mist question on whether they've tried it, water is above 32. Running water on the trees keeps them above 32. If it's cold enough for them to freeze the ice insulates them to keep them at 32.
    A friend unintentionally test this when he fell in a creek at about 10. Granted he has a body producing heat but his ice covered windbreaker kept him pretty warm the rest of the day.

    This would be a lot easier to set up than tents and covers.

    I haven't ever done it in the spring for flowers but I've done it in the fall to get a coating of ice to protect the garden plants.

  • mark_roeder 4B NE Iowa
    12 years ago

    Earlier when I posted, 4/7/12 was to be 52F here, and now 47F. Lowest in our 2-week forecast now is 30F on 4/4/2012. It is looking good for us in upper Midwest, so far. But my peach trees are fully blooming at least 5 weeks early.

    I love peaches.

  • windfall_rob
    12 years ago

    myk1,

    Overhead irrigation is commonly used to reduce/eliminate the effects of spring freeze/frost damage.

    But the ice does not insulate, or at least not in any substantial fashion. The water gives up a certain amount of heat as it cools from say 45 down to 32. But as it freezes a substantial amount of heat (energy) is released as liquid water phase changes to solid ice. After that it is just a bit of additional thermal mass.

    You must keep applying more water which in turn freezes and releases a bit more heat.this continues until temps rise.

    The ice build up that results can be a problem with breakage if the freeze event is especially cold or long.

  • bamboo_rabbit
    12 years ago

    "Since nobody responded to my water mist question on whether they've tried it, water is above 32. Running water on the trees keeps them above 32. If it's cold enough for them to freeze the ice insulates them to keep them at 32.
    A friend unintentionally test this when he fell in a creek at about 10. Granted he has a body producing heat but his ice covered windbreaker kept him pretty warm the rest of the day."

    That is not correct but is a common misconception. Ice will protect the fruit or buds but ONLY if liquid water is continually applied to the ice AND it is calm. If you apply water to coat the fruit or buds in ice then stop the water it offers no protection at all. Try it for yourself.....place a thermometer completely submerged in a glass of water and stick it in your freezer, let it freeze solid and read the temp.

    I am by far no expert but as I understand it it works like this..water coming from the irrigation system coats the buds and as long as you keep supplying water the ice constantly is being melted and reformed. Not talking about all the ice but a microscopic layer is constantly refreshed and as matter changes from one state (liquid) to another state (solid) and back to liquid energy is released in the form of heat and that creates a warmer bubble around the bud. Stop the flow of liquid water though or don't supply enough water and you lose your protection.

    Water applied during wind will cause supercooling causing more damage than if no water was supplied at all.

    Far as your friend...we produce our own heat and the ice would make his jacket windproof so I could see that happening. Sadly our plants don't make their own heat.

  • ltilton
    12 years ago

    I've been determinedly ignoring the longrange forecast of just-below-freezing for early next week. Payoff comes - it's been revised upward to 39.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    The GFS still wants to bring a killing freeze to the whole area, but not until the end of the model run (april 13th)...This is way too far out to worry about.

    Next week looks chilly, but nothing that should be a problem...maybe some areas of Michigan may see frost/freeze.

  • myk1
    12 years ago

    I have tried it myself but for fall freezes. There I have stopped the water flow and gone with an ice coating as at that time the fruit has some thermal mass, we're talking a lot of cold to freeze an apple and a windbreaker can be all they need.

    I did not say you should stop the water. Wind or not if you have running water on the trees it's going to stay around 32. If it's able to drop low enough to do harm with running water your tree was a goner any which way you slice it short of a tent AND a heat source.
    High winds have a way of ruining a lot of plans. They blow the mist away from the trees, lift corners of tents, etc.

    I used to fight mother nature all the time. I found hoop houses (with the ground mass somewhat warmed from the tent) with no heat was good to about 27 with tomatoes. They were worthless if the wind lifted a corner or if the cold stuck around with no sun to warm inside the tent during the day.

  • bamboo_rabbit
    12 years ago

    "Wind or not if you have running water on the trees it's going to stay around 32"

    No, that is not correct.

    Water during a cold windy night will cause evaporative cooling and can cause the plants much more damage than if you had not turned the water on at all. Here is a link that explains what I am saying....it is a very complicated subject with many variables.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Freeze protection.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    GFS shows what would probably be snow next week...

  • myk1
    12 years ago

    It's not so complicated. Your water is coming out of the ground below the frost depth meaning your water is warmer than 32 (usually much warmer than 32).
    It takes a lot of energy to change the temperature of water. Lose a degree to evaporation all you want but you have the tree being bathed in >32 to counteract that. It doesn't sound like the idea of evaporation is taking the "warmth" from the water into consideration or the fact that water in the process of freezing is 32 and it's not until it's frozen that it can drop lower. The plant is kept "warm" to >32. The ice coating is kept at 32 by the coating of water in the process of freezing.

    Notice this from your link, "Overhead irrigation systems designed for freeze protection with diesel, rather than electric, pumps are the most widely used and practical method of reducing blueberry fruit losses to freezes in Florida"
    Notice the pictures of blueberry plants encased in ice.
    And notice the chart which takes wind into consideration to tell you how much water to spray.

    Notice the chart where it says 27. That's the temperature I found that a hoop house with no heat craps out with tomatoes, especially with wind. A hoop house is going to be better than direct covering.

    What I'm amazed your link doesn't mention is the wind blowing the mist away from the plants which leaves the trees exposed to the super cooling or evaporation. That has always been my problem when I've used water. 15mph is plenty of wind to blow the water off it's intended target.

  • mark_roeder 4B NE Iowa
    12 years ago

    On weatherforyou.com our projected low temp now for next two weeks is 36F on 4/5/12. That's better than the 30F that had been our two week forecast low for 4/4/12 just yesterday's forecast. The forecast substantially improved in just 24 hours.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Just looking at models this morning...starting to think this whole major freeze thing may not play out. Everything seems to show a more mild look to it. Still a quick shot of cold moving in early next week that should spread through the lakes/NE... Could still be some frost/freeze for areas of Michigan and points east.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Its back...next week could be ugly... frost, freezes, snow...GFS and Euro both show ugly weather...

    {{gwi:78276}}

  • mark_roeder 4B NE Iowa
    11 years ago

    Two week Low has been moved to April 13 at 33F. Reviewing my 1st post here, the two week low was projected at 27F on 4/7/2012, and that projection is raised to 36F.

    I am starting to think that the two week forecast relies upon the Farmer's Almanac beyond the first week.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    GFS shows a game over... Time to dig out the blankets and frost cloth me thinks...the Euro will be out shortly...see if it concurs.

    More or less the entire Great Lakes gets into the 20Fs ... as the cold air shifts east over Michigan...

  • glib
    11 years ago

    I noticed that, too. This is going to be very bad for fruit growers around here.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Euro seems to be on board...

    Remember...still 7 days out...lots of model runs to come. Hopefully it can back off some on the extent of the cold.

  • glib
    11 years ago

    It has. Now it is showing 31 for Detroit as the minimum over the next week. These long range forecasts are too unnerving, I may delete that bookmark.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    UGLY UGLY UGLY UGLY UGLY... Will there be a fruit crop in Michigan this year? Looks bad over here on day 5/6...

  • dmtaylor
    11 years ago

    Yes... me worry!! All of a sudden, out of the blue, the weather folks in their infinite wisdom are predicting low temperatures of just 17 F tonight!! And just yesterday they were like, nah, it will be around 30 F.

    Here is a link that might be useful: {{gwi:78274}}

  • dmtaylor
    11 years ago

    Actually here's where I got really scared:

    Here is a link that might be useful: {{gwi:78275}}

  • megamav
    11 years ago

    Typical early spring battle of the air masses.

  • Dan.NY
    11 years ago

    Supposed to be 26 for me tonight, 23 tomorrow night. I have not seen my orchard in nearly a month so do not know what if anything is budding. I'll know this weekend. I am guessing Asian pears made it out. Buds were swelled several weeks ago when I saw them then we had the HOT weather..

  • ltilton
    11 years ago

    Accuweather is still saying low of 40 here, despite showing the banner with the official NWS Freeze Watch. I think they can't be believed, although I'd like to.

  • glib
    11 years ago

    We are talking about separate freezes here. Tonight (27 forecast here) is the small one. The big one will be April 12.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    The big dog is next week... Tonite is just a preview

    NWS in Minneapolis:
    "GOOD AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE ECMWF AND GEM HEADING INTO EARLY NEXT
    WEEK AND SUGGEST WE`LL SEE THE COLDEST TEMPERATURES WE`VE SEEN
    SINCE EARLY MARCH. HARD TO IMAGINE A SCENARIO WHERE WE DON`T GET
    WIDESPREAD NEAR FREEZING OF SUB-FREEZING CONDITIONS AT MOST
    LOCATIONS SOMETIME BETWEEN SATURDAY AND WEDNESDAY.
    "

  • dmtaylor
    11 years ago

    You may be right. Perhaps I should be more worried about April 10-ish. It turns out that the local weather forecast low for tonight has changed yet again from 17 F to 30 F. They seem to be saying that locally we are protected from extremes by Lake Michigan (I live one mile away from the big lake). Yay. I hope this comes in handy on April 10 as well.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Well...one more nite of safety, before the bottom falls out. NWS shows us dropping to 28F Tues morning, 29F Weds, 30F Thurs... Going to be very close. I'm only protecting a few trees, strawberries...

    Models did a good job picking up on this from a long ways away.

  • ltilton
    11 years ago

    I'm surprised. Usually, these things change profoundly by the time the predicted date arrives. Here, the forecast has been steady at 32 for a week.

    Just some frost so far this month, and some brown blossoms on a pear tree - the one in first bloom, of course, that I've been waiting on since 2006. Everything else looks like it might have made it. So far.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Tues Min temps...

    Showing 27F here...

    Mon nite/Tues will be an advective freeze...so hard to protect against that (it will be windy). Sheets will just probably fly away...

    If I see a lot of damage, I'll just chop everything back and use it as an excuse to reshape some trees. I may even remove a few peach trees.

  • ltilton
    11 years ago

    Frank - do you have a model for April 19?

  • alan haigh
    11 years ago

    Yesterday morning my thermometer read just under 26. Peaches are at or slightly past full bloom. I still can't detect any browning in J. plum flowers- those that aren't past petal fall. Blossoms still look healthy and buzzing with various pollinators. There is some browning of spur leaves on pears and apples.

    I really don't know what to make of this. Charts say that damage should be pretty much complete on my stone fruit but I don't really see it yet. I'm hopeful that the charts are not accurate because they don't take into account duration of lows.

    The hard freezes we've had only linger at the lows for an hour. On the hardest one 2 weeks ago we bottomed somewhere around 23 and wide open J. plum blossoms were frozen solid but have looked fine since thawing.

    All my fruit may come from the market this year and I've partially accepted that strong possibility but my eyes have not yet corroborated the verdict.

  • Konrad___far_north
    11 years ago

    It's good to have at least 2 thermometer out and take the everage, I know that most of them don't read correctly.

  • denninmi
    11 years ago

    It's too early to tell. Nothing in bloom here has been wiped out by any means. Sweet cherries are closest to being a loss, but frankly, I don't know why I bother since I lose them all to birds anyway. Some black centers to Asian pear, but its a minority of the blossoms.

    Kiwi and possibly mulberries are a total loss for the year. With the kiwi, they're all toast, they were all popping with the warmth big time. Mulberries seem to be a tree by tree basis, some were far enough along to have all of the buds killed, others were barely coming out of dormancy and seem OK still. Time will tell.

  • Randy31513
    11 years ago

    If you can wet down your orchard floor now to help hold heat for the cold weather. Water deep. Depending on how much sun you get before hand you might pick up a degree at your trees and maybe 2. Might be just enough.

  • franktank232
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Dennis-

    I agree with the sweet cherries. I have no idea why I have them in the ground. I have one nice tree in a container that has worked great, but that is because I can move it in and out of the rain if need be...and easily cover it with netting. I guess the same can be said for peaches, since one cold winter and its game over...

    April 19th? Both the GFS and Euro have a pretty good cold shot moving through at that time. GFS shows high 20Fs here, but that is way out there to get specific... Still looks like a good cold shot around that time period.

  • olpea
    11 years ago

    "I'm hopeful that the charts are not accurate because they don't take into account duration of lows."

    Hman,

    The old WSU standard temps (frequently reprinted in bud hardiness tables like the one below) were based on the lowest sustained temperature for 30 minutes in which there was no damage to fruit buds. I don't know how much time was used for the newer 90% and 10% damage tables.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Fruit Bud Hardiness

  • olpea
    11 years ago

    I see I posted the wrong link. Below is the correct one.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Fruit Bud Hardiness

  • ltilton
    11 years ago

    At least the freeze threat for 4/19 seems to have piffled.

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