Jump to content

On This Day In History...Major Weather Events in the PNW or West


snow_wizard

Recommended Posts

1-13-

 

1950

 

This is the day the infamous Friday the 13th blizzard stuck the lowlands of Western WA and NW Oregon.  This is one of the few times large amounts of snow fell across the area with temperatures well below 20 degrees.  Seattle would go on to achieve an impressive 24 hour total of 21.4".  Their high temperature on the following day was a bone chilling 16 degrees which is the lowest max temp on record for Seattle during the 20th century.  This storm was one of the few on record for Seattle to officially meet all of the criteria for a true blizzard.

 

The 500mb map below is a composite of January 13 and 14, 1950.  This is how it's done!

 

Note:  This is also proof positive that we can score big with a Hudson's Bay PV in play.

post-222-0-88005600-1515892367_thumb.gif

  • Like 1

Death To Warm Anomalies!

 

Winter 2023-24 stats

 

Total Snowfall = 1.0"

Day with 1" or more snow depth = 1

Total Hail = 0.0

Total Ice = 0.2

Coldest Low = 13

Lows 32 or below = 45

Highs 32 or below = 3

Lows 20 or below = 3

Highs 40 or below = 9

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This date in 1971 was the final day of a 4-day snow event that dumped about 36" of snow at Silver Falls. This was one of the snowiest winters on record not only at Silver Falls, but also in parts of the Willamette Valley. I am sure others know more about this setup, but I believe it was a very cold onshore flow event similar to February 1990.

 

In the valley it was a very wet snow event, but a very significant snow event. Here are some totals for the valley ending the 14th.

 

 

Eugene   18.1"

Corvallis  15.3"

Silverton   14.0

Salem      11.1"

PDX           6.9"

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Reminder that we have active weather in SoCal

 

NWS_SD

 

That 1963 cold wave was a beast in the SW.

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It can get cold down here. 2007 is another example.

I remember this one. It was a decent cold snap in the PNW, but historic in the SW.

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Looks like there was a major Fraser River blast associated with the major regional snow event of January 1971. 

 

BLI had an 18/13 day on the 12th! Temps Seattle and south were pretty similar to those in W. Oregon though. With lots of wet snow to go around. Here are some Washington snowfall numbers.

 

Aberdeen 9.8"

Sea-Tac   9.1"

BLI          25.1"

Olympia  15.1"

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Looks like there was a major Fraser River blast associated with the major regional snow event of January 1971. 

 

BLI had an 18/13 day on the 12th! Temps Seattle and south were pretty similar to those in W. Oregon though. With lots of wet snow to go around. Here are some Washington snowfall numbers.

 

Aberdeen 9.8"

Sea-Tac   9.1"

BLI          25.1"

Olympia  15.1"

 

We had another similar multi-day event later that winter in late February. Lots of cold onshore flow that winter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mid January 1888 was perhaps the most intense arctic airmass in recorded history in the PNW.

 

After an impressive early month airmass (21/10 at Portland), a front came barreling in on the 13th and the temps grew progressively colder for the next few days before bottoming out on the 15th-16th. 

 

Temp spreads include 23/-3 at Ashland, an incredible 20/1 at Newport on the coast, 13/-5, at Eola, all time records of 9 and -2 in Downtown Portland (with bare ground!) on the 15th, a 16/10 day at Astoria on the 16th, and all time records of 18/-2 at Downtown Olympia.

 

East of the Cascades the airmass was phenomenal, Spokane set all time records on the 15th with a high of -10 and low of -30. Miles City, MT plunged to -65 on the 14th, still a record for that part of the state, and the historic blizzard that hit the plains with this arctic front was the deadliest in American history.

 

The cold wave lasted for several days before a fairly significant overrunning snowstorm moved in on the 16th-17th. The late part of the month featured a pretty impressive blowtorch.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Dome Buster

Looks like there was a major Fraser River blast associated with the major regional snow event of January 1971.

 

BLI had an 18/13 day on the 12th! Temps Seattle and south were pretty similar to those in W. Oregon though. With lots of wet snow to go around. Here are some Washington snowfall numbers.

 

Aberdeen 9.8"

Sea-Tac 9.1"

BLI 25.1"

Olympia 15.1"

Olympic rain shadow must of been in full effect for that episode. Any details of the rest of king and snohomish counties?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Looks like there was a major Fraser River blast associated with the major regional snow event of January 1971.

 

BLI had an 18/13 day on the 12th! Temps Seattle and south were pretty similar to those in W. Oregon though. With lots of wet snow to go around. Here are some Washington snowfall numbers.

 

Aberdeen 9.8"

Sea-Tac 9.1"

BLI 25.1"

Olympia 15.1"

Shawnigan Lake had 39” between the 10th and 14th in 1971.

 

Vancouver (YVR) had 40” in that time frame

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shawnigan Lake had 39” between the 10th and 14th in 1971.

 

Vancouver (YVR) had 40” in that time frame

 

Wow. The 18" at Eugene really stands out to me too...All with 15-20 mph southerly winds. I bet temps up in your area were pretty impressive!

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jan 11. 24/20

Jan 12. 23/20

Jan 13. 24/20

 

The mainland was colder

Jan 11 to 14 at Abbotsford shows

 

14/10

16/10

17/13

17/12

Incredible! Truly a regional event too! I would love to see a similar event one of these winters where EVERYONE scores.

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mid January 1888 was perhaps the most intense arctic airmass in recorded history in the PNW.

 

 

It hit the Rocky Mountains too (the Montana reading was already mentioned), though there weren't many weather stations around then.  The book History of Rich County (Utah) says that Randolph hit -65 on 1/15/1888.   I have always wondered about that reading.   Randolph is one of the coldest places in Utah, but besides that -65 mentioned in the history book (apparently unofficial since I have never seen any other data indicating that it is the state record), the coldest reading in a town in Utah was -50 at Woodruff on 2/6/1899.  I have looked for, but have never found any other information or sources on the -65.   

 

Since Randolph is a very cold spot (one of the coldest in Utah), I have wondered if the -65 could actually be accurate given the severity of the 1/1888 cold snap.   I guess I could see it under ideal conditions during a severe cold snap.

 

Official records in Randolph only date from 1893-1894 and then again (with much missing data) 1997-2017.  In the same general region, Border Wyoming produced a -60 on 2/8/1929 and Maybell produced a -61 on 2/1/1985.    Maybell and Border both have similar climates to Randolph.  It is true that Randolph didn't get as cold as Maybell during the 2/1985 cold snap, but it has with several other cold snaps.  Near the river and under ideal conditions, I guess I can see that the -65 might have some plausibility.   I don't think there's any way to verify or confirm it though.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mid January 1888 was perhaps the most intense arctic airmass in recorded history in the PNW.

 

After an impressive early month airmass (21/10 at Portland), a front came barreling in on the 13th and the temps grew progressively colder for the next few days before bottoming out on the 15th-16th. 

 

Temp spreads include 23/-3 at Ashland, an incredible 20/1 at Newport on the coast, 13/-5, at Eola, all time records of 9 and -2 in Downtown Portland (with bare ground!) on the 15th, a 16/10 day at Astoria on the 16th, and all time records of 18/-2 at Downtown Olympia.

 

East of the Cascades the airmass was phenomenal, Spokane set all time records on the 15th with a high of -10 and low of -30. Miles City, MT plunged to -65 on the 14th, still a record for that part of the state, and the historic blizzard that hit the plains with this arctic front was the deadliest in American history.

 

The cold wave lasted for several days before a fairly significant overrunning snowstorm moved in on the 16th-17th. The late part of the month featured a pretty impressive blowtorch.

 

I'd love to know what the 850s looked like for that one. A high of 9 in Downtown Portland is just staggering.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A few other impressive temperatures and records from 1888 not mentioned yet.

 

California

 

Eureka:  36/20 on 1/14/1888

San Francisco:  39/29 on 1/15/1888

Fresno:  42/20 on 1/14/1888

 

Colorado

 

Denver:  -59 windchill (-83 on the old chart!) on 1/14/1888

 

Idaho

 

Boise:  -10/-28 on 1/16/1888

 

Minnesota

 

Minnesota/St Paul:  -17/-41 on 1/21/1888

Nebraska

 

Lincoln:   High of -16 on 1/14/1888 (on 7/25/1936 Lincoln had a low of 91, but that's another story)

Omaha:   High of -14 on 1/14/1888

 

Texas

 

Fort Elliot:   0/-14 on 1/15/1888

 

Utah

 

Randolph:  -65 reported on 1/15/1888 (see above)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

(on 7/25/1936 Lincoln had a low of 91, but that's another story)

 

There's pictures somewhere from that night. People who HAD homes (great depression, remember that) obviously didn't have AC, cuz it was the 30s. They had to spend that night in tents outside because their homes were so hot. Apparently crime was insane. There's a picture somewhere of the Hoovervilles outside the capitol.

Formerly *ahem*: LNK_Weather, TOL_Weather, FAR_Weather, MSP_Weather, IMoveALot_Weather.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There's a picture somewhere of the Hoovervilles outside the capitol.

It's right here:

 

http://snr.unl.edu/LincolnWeather/LNK1936capitol.jpg

 

It was a hot day:

 

lincoln.JPG

 

It's a little off topic though, so maybe we'll discuss it on another thread.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Minimum temperature of 91*F?

 

S**t, I hope it wasn’t humid.

I'm guessing it was. Generally the hottest days here are accompanied by humidity and a South wind which is equivalent to someone breathing on you in terms of temperature. 95° feels bad enough here, I can't imagine how that 115° felt. Dew points had to be in the 80s during that day.

Formerly *ahem*: LNK_Weather, TOL_Weather, FAR_Weather, MSP_Weather, IMoveALot_Weather.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm guessing it was. Generally the hottest days here are accompanied by humidity and a South wind which is equivalent to someone breathing on you in terms of temperature. 95° feels bad enough here, I can't imagine how that 115° felt. Dew points had to be in the 80s during that day.

Dewpoints in the 80s in Nebraska? I thought the dust bowl summers were defined by that dry, windy heat. How often do dewpoints reach the 80s there now?

 

The DC area’s most famous heatwaves also occurred back in the 1930s, but they weren’t very humid. The heatwaves of the late 1930s and 1940s became very humid, however, with dewpoints twice reaching 88*F during those swampy 1940s summers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dewpoints in the 80s in Nebraska? I thought the dust bowl summers were defined by that dry, windy heat. How often do dewpoints reach the 80s there now?

 

The DC area’s most famous heatwaves also occurred back in the 1930s, but they weren’t very humid. The heatwaves of the late 1930s and 1940s became very humid, however, with dewpoints twice reaching 88*F during those swampy 1940s summers.

Almost never reach the 80s. Highest we normally reach each year are the mid-70s. I think we only hit that once this past Summer.

  • Like 1

Formerly *ahem*: LNK_Weather, TOL_Weather, FAR_Weather, MSP_Weather, IMoveALot_Weather.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Proof that the 4th of July in 1910 was a beautiful day in North Bend. Actually I looked it up and it was 81 degrees here on 7/4/1910. Seems way too warm to be wearing these clothes!   It had been basically summer-like since April 15th in 1910... that was an absolutely gorgeous spring and early summer.   These people had already experienced almost 3 months of summer before this picture was taken.  :)

For those familiar with Mt Si... it sure does look bare. I believe it was logged and then there was a massive fire in the Snoqualmie Valley in 1913. They really mismanaged things back then.

200373464.jpg


And here is a later photo looking south towards Rattlesnake Ridge which is completely mangled. Our house would on the left side of this pic on the side of the ridge. I would say it looks infinitely more scenic today!

200373511.jpg

**REPORTED CONDITIONS AND ANOMALIES ARE NOT MEANT TO IMPLY ANYTHING ON A REGIONAL LEVEL UNLESS SPECIFICALLY STATED**

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mid January 1888 was perhaps the most intense arctic airmass in recorded history in the PNW.

 

After an impressive early month airmass (21/10 at Portland), a front came barreling in on the 13th and the temps grew progressively colder for the next few days before bottoming out on the 15th-16th. 

 

Temp spreads include 23/-3 at Ashland, an incredible 20/1 at Newport on the coast, 13/-5, at Eola, all time records of 9 and -2 in Downtown Portland (with bare ground!) on the 15th, a 16/10 day at Astoria on the 16th, and all time records of 18/-2 at Downtown Olympia.

 

East of the Cascades the airmass was phenomenal, Spokane set all time records on the 15th with a high of -10 and low of -30. Miles City, MT plunged to -65 on the 14th, still a record for that part of the state, and the historic blizzard that hit the plains with this arctic front was the deadliest in American history.

 

The cold wave lasted for several days before a fairly significant overrunning snowstorm moved in on the 16th-17th. The late part of the month featured a pretty impressive blowtorch.

 

Meant to reply a couple days ago. The Missoula numbers were insane in January 1888.

 

12th: 27/-10

13th: -14/-28

14th: -25/-39

15th: -29/-42

16th: -27/-40

17th: -6/-22

18th: 20/5

 

I mean, those are really hard to believe. I want to believe them but I'm thinking something was off. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

For reference, the next coldest reading in the Missoula signal service record (1870-1893) was -36 on 2-3-1883, and that was an absolute minimum. Only 3-daily obs were available in January 1888, implying even colder readings (at least possibly) outside of the 7am observation times. The lowest 7am reading outside of January 1888 was just -34 in January 1875, itself a massive cold wave. Really hard to believe three straight days pushing -40...but I guess it's possible.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At this time in 1862 we were right in the middle of the most intense cold wave of that winter.  This certainly ranks as one of the top 5 cold air masses since 1850.  Below are temperatures from Fort Steilacom and Fort Vancouver.

 

Steilacom:

 

15. 18/3

16. 21/-8

17. 18/-8

18. 21/-7

 

Vancouver:

 

15. 25/5

16. 18/-7

17. 13/-10

18. 16/-3

 

I would love to see people's reaction if we had something like that now!

Death To Warm Anomalies!

 

Winter 2023-24 stats

 

Total Snowfall = 1.0"

Day with 1" or more snow depth = 1

Total Hail = 0.0

Total Ice = 0.2

Coldest Low = 13

Lows 32 or below = 45

Highs 32 or below = 3

Lows 20 or below = 3

Highs 40 or below = 9

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure if I've posted the temperatures from Fort Walla Walla from January 1862 or not.  Here are the temperatures from a 7 day period where they were continuously below zero.  In Walla Walla this is insane!

 

13. -3/-10

14. -4/-5

15. -3/-16

16. -11/-24

17. -15/-24

18. -6/-20

19. -4/-8

Death To Warm Anomalies!

 

Winter 2023-24 stats

 

Total Snowfall = 1.0"

Day with 1" or more snow depth = 1

Total Hail = 0.0

Total Ice = 0.2

Coldest Low = 13

Lows 32 or below = 45

Highs 32 or below = 3

Lows 20 or below = 3

Highs 40 or below = 9

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure if I've posted the temperatures from Fort Walla Walla from January 1862 or not.  Here are the temperatures from a 7 day period where they were continuously below zero.  In Walla Walla this is insane!

 

13. -3/-10

14. -4/-5

15. -3/-16

16. -11/-24

17. -15/-24

18. -6/-20

19. -4/-8

 

Incredible month. 10 different days had 2pm temps below zero in Walla Walla. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread makes me sad. 

 

We just need to get our winters to focus in January again.  I think we will, but when is the question.

Death To Warm Anomalies!

 

Winter 2023-24 stats

 

Total Snowfall = 1.0"

Day with 1" or more snow depth = 1

Total Hail = 0.0

Total Ice = 0.2

Coldest Low = 13

Lows 32 or below = 45

Highs 32 or below = 3

Lows 20 or below = 3

Highs 40 or below = 9

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We just need to get our winters to focus in January again. I think we will, but when is the question.

When this PNA trend reverses.

 

7iycVUl.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Meant to reply a couple days ago. The Missoula numbers were insane in January 1888.

 

12th: 27/-10

13th: -14/-28

14th: -25/-39

15th: -29/-42

16th: -27/-40

17th: -6/-22

18th: 20/5

 

I mean, those are really hard to believe. I want to believe them but I'm thinking something was off. 

 

I don't know, I'd wager that the lows are fairly close to accurate. A high of -29 does seem pretty extreme, although a high of -10 at Spokane would probably support highs around -20 for Missoula. That airmass really was pretty off-the-charts from the looks of it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When this PNA trend reverses.

 

7iycVUl.png

When you and I are 70?

  • Downvote 1

Bend, OR

Elevation: 3550'

 

Snow History:

Nov: 1"

Dec: .5"

Jan: 1.9"

Feb: 12.7"

Mar: 1.0"

Total: 17.1"

 

2016/2017: 70"

2015/2016: 34"

Average: ~25"

 

2017/2018 Winter Temps

Lowest Min: 1F on 2/23

Lowest Max: 23F on 12/24, 2/22

Lows <32: 87

Highs <32: 13

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When you and I are 70?

When the WPAC warm pool/ITCZ starts migrating S/SW again, along with the Hadley Cell.

 

That entire system has been migrating N/NE since at least the early 19th century, probably since ~ 1700.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When the WPAC warm pool/ITCZ starts migrating S/SW again, along with the Hadley Cell.

 

That entire system has been migrating N/NE since at least the early 19th century, probably since ~ 1700.

 

It's pretty obvious there are shorter term cycles within the longer cycle though.

  • Like 1

Death To Warm Anomalies!

 

Winter 2023-24 stats

 

Total Snowfall = 1.0"

Day with 1" or more snow depth = 1

Total Hail = 0.0

Total Ice = 0.2

Coldest Low = 13

Lows 32 or below = 45

Highs 32 or below = 3

Lows 20 or below = 3

Highs 40 or below = 9

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's pretty obvious there are shorter term cycles within the longer cycle though.

Definitely. And these longer term cycles (perhaps the Pacific component of the more well-known Bond cycles) typically complete their neoglacial warming phases within a span of approximately 300yrs +/- 50yrs, which is about how long this one has lasted. So, statistically speaking, it should be ending shortly.

 

I’m just not sure whether the best way to terminate it would be via an amplified ENSO, or a dormant one. I suspect a very active ENSO is utilized by the system when it’s trying to warm to equilibrium, vice-versa for a dormant ENSO, which appears more frequently during cooling periods. But, whether the bond cycles reflect the thermodynamic system’s equilibration, or whether it’s the othe way around, and the thermodynamic system attempts to equilibrate to said bond cycles as if they’re some sort of fluid/inertial resonance, isn’t clear to me.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 years ago on this date I had 5.38” of rain fall, this fell on top of 26” of snow depth which had about 4.5” of snow/water equivalent. The result was massive small stream flooding in the Central Willamette Valley. 4.02” of rain fell at Corvallis. The communities of Turner, parts of South Salem, and Albany experiences the worst flooding. In Albany two people drown when their car was swept away in a grocery store parking lot when a small stream over flowed its banks. There was not widespread mainstem river flooding, but the Willamette did crest above flood stage at Salem and Albany.

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...

  • Popular Contributors

  • Activity Stream

    1. 372

      March 2024 Observations and Discussion

    2. 5703

      March 2024 Weather in the PNW

    3. 5703

      March 2024 Weather in the PNW

    4. 638

      Middle East Conflict of 2023

    5. 638

      Middle East Conflict of 2023

×
×
  • Create New...