There seems to be plenty out there to suggest a rather dry winter.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/people/wwang/cfs_fcst/images3/glbz700Mon.gif
CFS is suggesting a very impressive November, with strong blocking to our NW, followed by a rapid decline to high pressure dominant to our SW by December. It looks like last winter but shifted forward a bit so that the seriously cold weather (relative to averages) gets underway possibly as early as mid to late October (which looks as impressive as November relative to the time of year).
http://iri.columbia.edu/climate/ENSO/currentinfo/SST_table.html
CFS is predicting a stronger La Nina than ALL other models. It will likely have to back down, which will probably influence the predicted pressure anomalies later in the winter.
FWIW many times this year I've seen the predicted location of high pressure shifted north by a thousand miles or so once we reach the month in question; such a thing changed what looked like a passable summer setup for many of us into a dire one for much of the UK during June and July.
ECM is predicting a weak La Nina but still has high pressure strongly influencing us throughout the winter and rarely from a good position to deliver significant cold. My interpretation of this is that there is something else having a major influence on what the models think will happen this winter, the state of this 'something' being more or less agreed upon between CFS and ECM.
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser