With more than a foot of April snow potentially piling up by Friday, winter-weary Minnesotans could be forgiven for hoping reality will fall short of the predictions. Not likely.
If there's a crystal lining in the endless of barrage of snow clouds that have dumped their frozen vapor on the Twin Cities this year, it just might be the almost unerring accuracy of local meteorologists during the winter of 2013-14.
So when the National Weather Service says the storm expected to get underway Thursday night and build through the Friday morning commute could top the record of 13.6 inches set in 1983, people take notice.
"We have a chef from Los Angeles so the weather gets discussed quite regularly around here," said Jane Oyen, the owner of C. McGee's Deli in the North Loop, said Wednesday. "We've all been noticing how they've done a lot better this year, they just have. If they say we're going to have a blizzard, we generally do."
Exactly, say forecasters at the National Weather Service in Chanhassen. And they can prove it.
They keep a statistic called the Probability of Detection and that county-by-county analysis shows their winter storm warnings have been on target 92 percent of the time since November.
Experts say the enhanced accuracy comes from a man-and-machine combination of factors: Wily, longtime forecasters with well-honed "pattern recognition" skills pass down their expertise to younger meteorologists, who just happen to also have faster and higher-resolution computer models to exploit.
"It's both the computer models and the forecasters themselves," said Tony Zaleski, one of the meteorologists in Chanhassen. "We've got a forecaster who came up from South Carolina and he wasn't in the actual groove for the winter weather that we get up here the last two years, but he's improved."