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PNW January 2022, Contact Info for Phil


The Blob

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What's scary is we are due for a torchy February, even February 2017 was pretty decent. Really good  up here, the pattern late in the month delivered a lot of cold onshore flow. 

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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.

 

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10 minutes ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

What's scary is we are due for a torchy February, even February 2017 was pretty decent. Really good  up here, the pattern late in the month delivered a lot of cold onshore flow. 

Next winter.

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At KSEA the February and March imprint is made known on the recent upgrade to 1991-2020 normals. While all other months raised by at least 0.3°F (most over 0.5°F), Feb and Mar only went up by 0.1°F. May July and Dec all rose by a full 1°F 😬

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Weather stats for MBY

Snowfall:

-Total snowfall since joining: 50.25"

-2018-19: 21"

-2019-20: 2.5"

-2020-21: 13"

-2021-22: 8.75"

-2022-23: 5.75"

-2023-24*: 0.25"

-Most recent snowfall: 0.25”; January 17th, 2024

-Largest snowfall (single storm): 8.5"; February 12-13, 2021

-Largest snow depth: 14"; 1:30am February 12th, 2019

Temperatures:

-Warmest: 109F; June 28th, 2021

-Coldest: 13F; December 27th, 2021

-Phreeze Count 2023-24: 31

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Shifting the 30yr running mean ahead by a year (1992-2021), and we see that August and January warmed by an additional 0.2°F. This is despite both months being colder than their 2020 predecessors. This makes sense since both months have been notorious for excessive torching over the last 10-15 years, this last year being no exception (as it stands 2022 is following the Jan transcript too, unfortunately.) Unsurprisingly, 2021 dropped Dec by 0.2°F.  2021 was 0.9°F cooler overall than 2020, yet still 0.5°F above the 30 year mean.

The statistical oddities start showing up however during that magical, offputtingly excellent second month of the year. February, given the mid month cold snap and -2.7°F departure, actually cooled the running mean by an additional 0.2°F.

This means that as it currently stands, the newest February 30 year running average is cooler than the one 31 years ago by 0.1°F. Amazingly, given the current -ENSO and improving guidance for an impending cooler than average February, this anomaly could drop further.

To add to this insanity, if March ends up cooler than usual (likely given -ENSO), March could drop its 30 year running average down to the 1981-2010 mean or even colder. For the record, while the running average for March didn't budge, Mar 2021 was 0.8°F cooler than normal, so this is just an artifact of rounding.

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Weather stats for MBY

Snowfall:

-Total snowfall since joining: 50.25"

-2018-19: 21"

-2019-20: 2.5"

-2020-21: 13"

-2021-22: 8.75"

-2022-23: 5.75"

-2023-24*: 0.25"

-Most recent snowfall: 0.25”; January 17th, 2024

-Largest snowfall (single storm): 8.5"; February 12-13, 2021

-Largest snow depth: 14"; 1:30am February 12th, 2019

Temperatures:

-Warmest: 109F; June 28th, 2021

-Coldest: 13F; December 27th, 2021

-Phreeze Count 2023-24: 31

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It's over.

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Springfield, Oregon regular season 2023-24 Stats:

  • Coldest high: 25F (Jan 14, 2024)
  • Coldest low: 20F (Jan 14, 2024)
  • Days with below freezing temps: 24 (Most recent: Mar 8, 2024)
  • Days with sub-40F highs: 4 (Most recent: Jan 16, 2024)
  • Total snowfall: 0.0"
  • Total ice: 2.25”
  • Last accumulating snowfall on roads: Dec 27, 2021 (1.9")
  • Last sub-freezing high: Jan 15, 2024 (27F)
  • Last White Christmas: 1990
  • Significant wind events (gusts 45+): 0

Personal Stats:

  • Last accumulating snowfall on roads: Dec 27, 2021
  • Last sub-freezing high: Jan 16, 2024 (32F)
  • Last White Christmas: 2008
  • Total snowfall since joining TheWeatherForums: 42.0"
  • Sub-freezing highs since joining TheWeatherForums: 4

 

Venmo

GoFundMe "College Basketball vs Epilepsy": gf.me/u/zk3pj2

My Twitter @CBBjerseys4hope

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Winter.png

Spring.png

Summer.png

Fall.png

Made some charts to visualize annual change in running mean over the last half century or so.

Some takeaways:

-December averages rose until the 1961-90 running mean, then hit a brick wall. Decembers of 1990, 1998, 2008, 2009, and 2021 doing their part.

-BIG YIKES for January! 😬🔥😵 It's just straight up lost the plot at this point. Warmer than February by a significant margin. On its way to catch up to December! It doesn't help that the first 40 inputs are boosted by the January-happy late 40s through 60s, but still, January has been outright abysmal since the 70s, with few exceptions.

-February has just stalled since, well, ever... at least at SeaTac. I could try this with the DT Federal building and see how cold it is before 1945. But at least in terms of SeaTac's history with February, it's been perplexingly stable. Arguably indistinguishable from POR's with the 1950s in them. If you showed this month to someone out of context, they wouldn't even know AGW existed.

-Normal and expected AGW-forced warming expressed in rolling averages over the Spring, growing more pronounced as the season goes on. March does hit a similar brick wall around 1961-90 like December, though the upwards movement is still more pronounced. April almost succumbs to that wall, but it's showing signs of warming in recent years. May is upwards, full stop.

-It's getting warming in the Summer. Who'da thunk! Very stable warming too. June took some time to get going, but it's gotten its act together since the beginning of the 2010s. July and August traded places for warmest month in the 1961-90 package and it's been that way ever since. Huh... 1961-90... that POR keeps coming up. Interesting.

-Slow and steady warming in the Fall. Nothing notable, except for how drastic the changing seasons are around here. Man that is a huge spread.

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Weather stats for MBY

Snowfall:

-Total snowfall since joining: 50.25"

-2018-19: 21"

-2019-20: 2.5"

-2020-21: 13"

-2021-22: 8.75"

-2022-23: 5.75"

-2023-24*: 0.25"

-Most recent snowfall: 0.25”; January 17th, 2024

-Largest snowfall (single storm): 8.5"; February 12-13, 2021

-Largest snow depth: 14"; 1:30am February 12th, 2019

Temperatures:

-Warmest: 109F; June 28th, 2021

-Coldest: 13F; December 27th, 2021

-Phreeze Count 2023-24: 31

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3 hours ago, Meatyorologist said:

Shifting the 30yr running mean ahead by a year (1992-2021), and we see that August and January warmed by an additional 0.2°F. This is despite both months being colder than their 2020 predecessors. This makes sense since both months have been notorious for excessive torching over the last 10-15 years, this last year being no exception (as it stands 2022 is following the Jan transcript too, unfortunately.) Unsurprisingly, 2021 dropped Dec by 0.2°F.  2021 was 0.9°F cooler overall than 2020, yet still 0.5°F above the 30 year mean.

The statistical oddities start showing up however during that magical, offputtingly excellent second month of the year. February, given the mid month cold snap and -2.7°F departure, actually cooled the running mean by an additional 0.2°F.

This means that as it currently stands, the newest February 30 year running average is cooler than the one 31 years ago by 0.1°F. Amazingly, given the current -ENSO and improving guidance for an impending cooler than average February, this anomaly could drop further.

To add to this insanity, if March ends up cooler than usual (likely given -ENSO), March could drop its 30 year running average down to the 1981-2010 mean or even colder. For the record, while the running average for March didn't budge, Mar 2021 was 0.8°F cooler than normal, so this is just an artifact of rounding.

1991 was also a massive blowtorch February (payback for December) as was 1992. So a cold February this year would make for a pretty sexy 1993-2022 mean with those dropped off. 

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8 hours ago, Joshua Lake Oswego said:

Ok, I have gone long enough without complaining about the lack of rainfall. I have been biting my tongue. I can not carry on. I must complain now with this sh*t. Come on now. January is the new August?

 

image.thumb.png.77e75a75912ca71de7cdf4a51de48af3.png

Trolling?  😀

It's hard to imagine a scenario that does not include a drier period for a couple weeks at this point.   Might be the wettest October 1st - January 15th period in history for some places in WA and BC.    Even Portland is at 200% of normal for January so far.

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

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Just now, TT-SEA said:

Trolling?  😀

It's hard to imagine a scenario that does not include a drier period for a couple weeks at this point.   Might be the wettest October 1st - January 15th period in history for some places in WA and BC.    Even Portland is at 200% of normal for January so far.

Definitely not trolling. 200% of normal so far, but will likely end up below average for the month still. By the end of the month, we will probably only be about 10% above average for the water year that started 10/1. I wouldn't call that ''wet''.

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20 minutes ago, Joshua Lake Oswego said:

Definitely not trolling. 200% of normal so far, but will likely end up below average for the month still. By the end of the month, we will probably only be about 10% above average for the water year that started 10/1. I wouldn't call that ''wet''.

It does not get any wetter in western WA than it has been for the last 90 days.    This is the absolute gold standard for rain lovers.   And its definitely not sustainable per climo... so the pattern inevitably has to turn drier.   This should not be a surprise.    Seattle does not average 200 inches of rain per year.

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

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17 minutes ago, TT-SEA said:

It does not get any wetter in western WA than it has been for the last 90 days.    This is the absolute gold standard for rain lovers.   And its definitely not sustainable per climo... so the pattern inevitably has to turn drier.   This should not be a surprise.    Seattle does not average 200 inches of rain per year.

I don't live in western Washington though.

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Just now, Joshua Lake Oswego said:

I don't live in western Washington though.

But close.   Its hard to get a pattern that is extremely wet at PDX and dry for western WA.   And by February we can start getting large percentages of the monthly average with just a couple storms.   

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

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6 minutes ago, TT-SEA said:

But close.   Its hard to get a pattern that is extremely wet at PDX and dry for western WA.   And by February we can start getting large percentages of the monthly average with just a couple storms.   

I know that we're looking pretty good so far with rainfall and that we can add to our totals quickly this time of year. I still don't like that we will possibly end up going 23 days in January with <1/3'' of rain. That's gross.

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14 hours ago, snow drift said:

December 1982 was snowier than average. Both 1986-87 and 1987-1988 held snowcover from December through January. December 2015 was snowier than average. February to March 2019 was colder and snowier than average. Enso is a bit overrated in my humble opinion.

Two out of the 3 winter months had its best in a Nino during my time in K-Falls unless you count November and March as part of the meteorological season, then 3 out of those 5 had good ones usually out of a Nina. 

The best of each I had in recent times.

Nov 2010
Dec 2015
Jan 2017
Feb 2019
Mar 2012

I was also affected by the trend of late winters, first half hasn't had significant snowfall in several years down there.
Nov 2019 totaled 6.5" (only 50% over average) yet was the best one since 2010. November easily can go broke, I've seen a handful with close to no measurable snow. I guess one thing La Nina is actually good at doing is front loading a winter, not many other patterns do that well.

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Ashland, KY Weather

'23-'24 Winter

Snowfall - 5.50"
First freeze: 11/1 (32)
Minimum: 2 on 1/17

Measurable snows: 4
Max 1 day snow: 3" (1/19)

Thunders: 11
1/27, 1/28, 2/10, 2/22, 2/27, 2/28, 3/5, 3/6, 3/14, 3/15
3/26, 

-------------------------------------------------------
[Klamath Falls, OR 2010 to 2021]
https://imgur.com/SuGTijl

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9 minutes ago, Joshua Lake Oswego said:

I know that we're looking pretty good so far with rainfall and that we can add to our totals quickly this time of year. I still don't like that we will possibly end up going 23 days in January with <1/3'' of rain. That's gross.

Probably sounds really nice to most people up here.    SEA is at 300% of normal for the month with 17 days left to go.   And +8.23 inches for the water year.    OLM is a foot of rain above normal for the water year already.    And HQM is +14 inches for the water year.   Pretty ridiculous.    A rain lovers dream.   👍

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

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8 hours ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

Not much to say at this point. We can't really complain to much, at worst this winter at least had a decent regional event... Maybe we end up like 2013-14, lots of boredom, but a couple great events. That's probably our ceiling at this point, a February 2019 is not happening. 

For down here this will either be a 2012-2013 repeat (big Dec with nothing after) or a 2010-2011 repeat if it gets active again Mid Feb onward. Seems like every year now we have to deal with a 30-60 day dry period in the heart of winter and every ridge is now record breaking in size and strength. Crazy. 

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6 minutes ago, AlTahoe said:

For down here this will either be a 2012-2013 repeat (big Dec with nothing after) or a 2010-2011 repeat if it gets active again Mid Feb onward. Seems like every year now we have to deal with a 30-60 day dry period in the heart of winter and every ridge is now record breaking in size and strength. Crazy. 

I am not sure what to expect from February this year.    If we had not had the arctic blast all the lowland snow... then I would assume February and March were a lock for cold and snow.    So this either becomes a well-rounded winter with cold and snow again in February... or the best events of winter are behind us.     I am not sure if it matters... but 2011 stayed in a Nina state and the following winter was also a Nina.     This year we are already finishing up our second consecutive Nina winter and will probably be transitioning to a Nino.  

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

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8 hours ago, Geos said:

We need a little break from the AR's. I'm sure things will liven up in no time. 

I remember when AR's would soak the heck out of NorCal and SoOR. Very few of those these days.

Ashland, KY Weather

'23-'24 Winter

Snowfall - 5.50"
First freeze: 11/1 (32)
Minimum: 2 on 1/17

Measurable snows: 4
Max 1 day snow: 3" (1/19)

Thunders: 11
1/27, 1/28, 2/10, 2/22, 2/27, 2/28, 3/5, 3/6, 3/14, 3/15
3/26, 

-------------------------------------------------------
[Klamath Falls, OR 2010 to 2021]
https://imgur.com/SuGTijl

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Just now, TT-SEA said:

I am not sure what to expect from February this year.    If we had not had the arctic blast all the lowland snow... then I would assume February and March were a lock for cold and snow.    So this either becomes a well-rounded winter with cold and snow again in February... or the best events of winter are behind us.     I am not sure if it matters... but 2011 stayed in a Nina state and the following winter was also a Nina.     This year we are already finishing up our second consecutive Nina year and will probably be transitioning to a Nino.  

Yeah I can't get any feel for the upcoming months either. Historically years where we have had a wet Oct and Dec tend to stay wet. But we already had a 50+ day dry streak from Mid Oct through Nov, and now we are looking at another 50+ day dry streak if the models hold. Never had that happen before. 

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8 minutes ago, AlTahoe said:

For down here this will either be a 2012-2013 repeat (big Dec with nothing after) or a 2010-2011 repeat if it gets active again Mid Feb onward. Seems like every year now we have to deal with a 30-60 day dry period in the heart of winter and every ridge is now record breaking in size and strength. Crazy. 

Dec 2012 was good in Klamath, I totaled 18" in that. January was statistically cold but dry. And yeah early 2013 was all dry. But more than solid convective season followed.

Ashland, KY Weather

'23-'24 Winter

Snowfall - 5.50"
First freeze: 11/1 (32)
Minimum: 2 on 1/17

Measurable snows: 4
Max 1 day snow: 3" (1/19)

Thunders: 11
1/27, 1/28, 2/10, 2/22, 2/27, 2/28, 3/5, 3/6, 3/14, 3/15
3/26, 

-------------------------------------------------------
[Klamath Falls, OR 2010 to 2021]
https://imgur.com/SuGTijl

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13 minutes ago, Timmy_Supercell said:

Dec 2012 was good in Klamath, I totaled 18" in that. January was statistically cold but dry. And yeah early 2013 was all dry. But more than solid convective season followed.

We had an amazing thunderstorm pattern that summer. Actually Summers 2013-2016 we all amazing here for thunderstorms. 

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6 hours ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

What's scary is we are due for a torchy February, even February 2017 was pretty decent. Really good  up here, the pattern late in the month delivered a lot of cold onshore flow. 

We are way overdue for a freezer blast in November! 

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Elevation 580’ Location a few miles east of I-5 on the Snohomish Co side of the Snohomish/Skagit border. I love snow/cold AND sun/warmth! 

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Interesting colorful displays of nature this past week.  Last night as I shut off the lights and got into bed i saw the blue moon reflections all over the yard….enough so I got back out of bed to go out in it.   This morning greeted with pink fog  and orange clouds.  
Here’s a couple time lapse from two different cams on the roof …oops…posted the moon setting as well.   Will leave it

39*
https://video.nest.com/clip/6ae7872bc936497db3baa47827f08593.mp4

https://video.nest.com/clip/4b985419c25d4c0f80a084be81e7ea4f.mp4


https://video.nest.com/clip/9ddbf75a21eb418a911928727f1bfd6c.mp4

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4 hours ago, Meatyorologist said:

Winter.png

Spring.png

Summer.png

Fall.png

Made some charts to visualize annual change in running mean over the last half century or so.

Some takeaways:

-December averages rose until the 1961-90 running mean, then hit a brick wall. Decembers of 1990, 1998, 2008, 2009, and 2021 doing their part.

-BIG YIKES for January! 😬🔥😵 It's just straight up lost the plot at this point. Warmer than February by a significant margin. On its way to catch up to December! It doesn't help that the first 40 inputs are boosted by the January-happy late 40s through 60s, but still, January has been outright abysmal since the 70s, with few exceptions.

-February has just stalled since, well, ever... at least at SeaTac. I could try this with the DT Federal building and see how cold it is before 1945. But at least in terms of SeaTac's history with February, it's been perplexingly stable. Arguably indistinguishable from POR's with the 1950s in them. If you showed this month to someone out of context, they wouldn't even know AGW existed.

-Normal and expected AGW-forced warming expressed in rolling averages over the Spring, growing more pronounced as the season goes on. March does hit a similar brick wall around 1961-90 like December, though the upwards movement is still more pronounced. April almost succumbs to that wall, but it's showing signs of warming in recent years. May is upwards, full stop.

-It's getting warming in the Summer. Who'da thunk! Very stable warming too. June took some time to get going, but it's gotten its act together since the beginning of the 2010s. July and August traded places for warmest month in the 1961-90 package and it's been that way ever since. Huh... 1961-90... that POR keeps coming up. Interesting.

-Slow and steady warming in the Fall. Nothing notable, except for how drastic the changing seasons are around here. Man that is a huge spread.

That climb in January average temperatures is astounding. I just don't see why January would warm so much while February (and December to a lesser extent) stay cool. If anything, due to the maritime climate, sun angles, and a touch of seasonal lag, January should stay our coldest month of the year. And even if La Niña's tend to have the flip switched later in the winter there's no reason we should be experiencing more of them in a warming climate.

I wonder if it's truly down to luck or if there's something else at play that has become dominant for our Januaries. 

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Home Wx Station Stats (Since January 2008):

Max Temp: 96.3F (2009)   Min Temp: 2.0F (2008)   Max Wind Gust: 45 mph (2018, 2021)   Wettest Day: 2.34 (11/4/22)   Avg Yearly Precip: 37"   10yr Avg Snow: 8.0"

Snowfall Totals

'08-09: 30" | '09-10: 0.5" | '10-11: 21" | '11-12: 9.5" | '12-13: 0.2" | '13-14: 6.2" | '14-15: 0.0" | '15-16: 0.25"| '16-17: 8.0" | '17-18: 0.9"| '18-19: 11.5" | '19-20: 11" | '20-21: 10.5" | '21-22: 21.75" | '22-23: 10.0" 

2023-24: 7.0" (1/17: 3", 1/18: 1.5", 2/26: 0.5", 3/4: 2.0", Flakes: 1/11, 1/16)

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12 minutes ago, Skagit Weather said:

That climb in January average temperatures is astounding. I just don't see why January would warm so much while February (and December to a lesser extent) stay cool. If anything, due to the maritime climate, sun angles, and a touch of seasonal lag, January should stay our coldest month of the year. And even if La Niña's tend to have the flip switched later in the winter there's no reason we should be experiencing more of them in a warming climate.

I wonder if it's truly down to luck or if there's something else at play that has become dominant for our Januaries. 

I often wonder about the same thing. It almost seems like something else is at work. A colder than average January has been very difficult to achieve over the last 15 years or so.

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41 minutes ago, bainbridgekid said:

Sunrise was awesome this morning but what I woke up to two years ago today was better:

82594765_10220965448943135_214756430748581888_n.thumb.jpg.eb015c834f50ebafceb6b89b7148e06d.jpg

Fun day two years ago! 
And the PNA is attempting a drop again at the very end. 

13D82E7A-BD9A-49D5-AE40-2E2EFA7F24D1.jpeg

7CB5A2D6-90B1-44E5-821A-516F57A358D2.jpeg

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Elevation 580’ Location a few miles east of I-5 on the Snohomish Co side of the Snohomish/Skagit border. I love snow/cold AND sun/warmth! 

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1 hour ago, AlTahoe said:

We had an amazing thunderstorm pattern that summer. Actually Summers 2013-2016 we all amazing here for thunderstorms. 

That rare stretch in May 2013 where I had 5 t'storm days in a row is hard to come by. A similar one happened in July 2015 and those were rather wetting storms. Seems most of the dry types happen in June for some odd reason, then they get heavy in nature by mid summer.

Ashland, KY Weather

'23-'24 Winter

Snowfall - 5.50"
First freeze: 11/1 (32)
Minimum: 2 on 1/17

Measurable snows: 4
Max 1 day snow: 3" (1/19)

Thunders: 11
1/27, 1/28, 2/10, 2/22, 2/27, 2/28, 3/5, 3/6, 3/14, 3/15
3/26, 

-------------------------------------------------------
[Klamath Falls, OR 2010 to 2021]
https://imgur.com/SuGTijl

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The January 2020 event was actually pretty decent down here, I dumped on it way more than I should have. Probably due to the fact we were just coming off of February 2019, also the models backed off so much, there was no sticking snow below 1000', etc... But it was still probably our 3rd best snow event in January in 11 years. We had about 10", that January overall was pretty putrid. 

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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.

 

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Seems like there will be a pattern change towards the end of the month, I don't think at least the initial pattern change will all to earth shattering, but my guess is things start trending cooler and wetter to close out the month. 

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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.

 

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