Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Quick Vermont Arctic Blast Tuesday Evening Update

Finally some clear skies today gives us a decent visible
satellite view of Lake Champlain, dark blue color
indicating is is mostly ice free. Will be interesting to 
see how much of it ices over in next few days. 
You can also see New Hampshire's Lake Winnipesaukee
and Maine's Sebago Lake also mostly ice-free
 Forecasts haven't changed too much for the expected blast of Arctic air later this week. 

This will only be a quick update, with more details coming tomorrow morning. 

The National Weather Service office in South Burlington, to nobody's surprise,  has issued a wind chill watch for late Thursday night through Saturday. Wind chills are still expected to go to between 30 and 45 below zero Friday and Saturday. 

This will almost definitely get upgraded to a wind chill warning as we get closer to the event. 

Before we get there, you'll need to really bundle up tonight and early tomorrow. We've got some cold air, that, in any other winter, would be totally routine. But in many places around Vermont, this will be the coldest night of the year so far. 

Not only is the air chilly today, it is dry. Which explains the brilliant, beautiful sunshine we've seen this afternoon after a full month or more of mostly gloomy, foggy overcast.  Enjoy it. This is the first day this year that the sun sets at 5 p.m. With the clear skies, it will be lighter out there later than you're used to. You should see some twilight when we get close to 6 p.m. 

With clear skies, and light winds, the expected low temperature tonight in Burlington is 3 above zero. Until now, the coldest night this winter was 8 above. Away from Lake Champlain, many areas will be a few degrees below zero overnight. 

I've never seen this much of Lake Champlain ice-free this late into the season. Even parts of St. Albans Bay has no ice on it, which is bizarre, really, for January 31. It will be interesting to see how much of the lake will freeze over between now and Sunday. I know it won't completely freeze over, but the ice will certainly cover more territory within a few days. 

There's lots of weird nuances to bring up regarding this odd, brief Arctic outbreak. Details coming tomorrow morning! 

New York City, Other Northeastern Cities Set Weird Warm Winter Records

I'm pretty much joking, but if New England winters keep
getting warmer like the first half of this one did, will
we see scenes like this by Groundhog Day?
As the Northeast, including Vermont, braces for likely the sharpest, deepest cold snap in a few years, let's take a look at how weirdly warm it has been lately outside of Vermont, as well.  

Let's start with Central Park, New York City. They haven't had any measurable snow so far this winter. They've broken the record for the deepest into winter they've gotten without so much as 0.1 inches of snow. The old record was January 28, 1973.  

The Big Apple is also close to  also close to reaching the most consecutive days without measurable snow.   

 The previous record was 332 days, ending on December 15, 2020. The last time the New York had measurable snow was on March 9, 2022, when the city had a whopping 0.4 inches of snow. 

New York came close to having some snow last Wednesday at the onset of the most recent storm to affect the Northeast. Some flakes made it all the way down to Central Park, but melted as they landed. But snow did accumulate at higher elevations, as you'd expect. This being New York, the higher elevations were the tops of the taller skyscrapers, where a slushy dusting did accumulate.

If you didn't think the lack of snow was a measure of a weirdly warm winter in New York, check out this statistic:

Monday was the 34rd consecutive day in the city that was warmer than average. That breaks the old record for consecutive balmy days, which ended on January 9, 2017.

With a brief, but intense Arctic outbreak set to hit the Northeast on Friday and Saturday, New York City might hit a weird statistic. It could get down to 0 there during the looming cold snap, which is an increasingly rare event there. 

But they have a shot of reaching 0 without having had any snow this winter. 

Upstate in Albany, they're also breaking records for winter warmth. Or at least coming close to records.

As of Monday, Albany was on their 35th consecutive day of warmer than normal temperatures. Based on data that calculates normal from the average temperatures there since 1951, this is the third most consecutive days of above normal. Only two days in January failed to rise above freezing in Albany. 

The longest stretch of warmer than normal temperatures was 40 degrees, set between February 14 and March 25, 2010.

Up here in Vermont, we're not having such an extended streak, at least based on records from Burlington.

It certainly has been warmer than average since late December, but not every single day was toastier than average.  Two days - January 15 and 16, were every so slightly cooler than average.

As Boston's WBZ Chief Meteorologist Eric Fisher points out, Boston, Providence and Hartford will have gotten through the entire month of January with every day getting above freezing. That is the first time on record that has happened for all three cities.  (Despite the deep chill in northern New England/Vermont on Tuesday, it was above freezing in southern New England).

The average low temperature in Boston was above freezing in January. 

Along with the warmth has come some pretty extreme wetness, at least in eastern New England. Parts of Cape Cod have had nearly ten inches of rain this month. Portland, Maine has had nearly eight inches of rain or melted snow. (mostly rain, since it's been so warm).

The warm weather in New England and New York might have a few damaging consequences. Fruit and ornamental trees as far north as  Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and the New York City metro area are showing signs of budding and growth. 

The cold snap Friday and Saturday could end up damaging them. In a normal winter, these plants wouldn't be budding, and would survive a spell of Arctic cold just fine. With early buds appearing, I'm not so sure. 

In recent years, there have been problems with daffodil shoots coming up during these mild winters. When that happens and it gets cold again, these shoots just die back and try again in March when they should give it a go. 

But the winter has been so warm that there's actually buds for daffodil flowers. Those will probably die and not bloom ii the spring. 

Up here in Vermont, despite widespread daffodil shoots appearing during the first half of the month, I don't think the warmth this month will cause any real gardening or crop problems. 


 

As We Brace For Arctic Blast Console Yourself With Fact Its Even Worse Elsewhere (Arguably)

A windchill forecast map from the National Weather Service
office in South Burlington has "real feel" temperatures 
in the minus 40s for most of us in Vermont this weekend.
We're just getting a foretaste today of the Arctic blast we've been talking about for days now.

That's the one that will put actual temperatures to around 20 below across most of Vermont Friday night and early Saturday, and drop our wind chills into the minus 40s Friday and Saturday. 

I haven't seen much change in that prediction, so we're just have to brace ourselves. 

When the Arctic blast is here, the coldest place in the Northern Hemisphere, relative to average, will be basically here - northern New England and much of the southeastern corner of Canada

Before I go on here, I really need to make a public service announcement, and I'll do it again as we head toward this weather episode. Every time this happens, some moron or morons decide they're going to hike up Mount Washington or some other dangerous New England place in 100 below wind chills, to, I don't know, prove they're superior to nature?

They end up dying, and putting at risk the lives of rescuers trying to find them. Don't be the moron. 

Anyway. 

There's two ways to look on the bright side with this situation. The best one is the cold wave still looks like it will be mercifully brief. By late Sunday afternoon temperatures will be well into the 20s to around 30 above zero. 

And then, possibly well into mid-February, we'll be back to the regularly scheduled warmer than normal winter we've been having.

Another way to feel better about the impending Arctic attack is simple schadenfreude, which is taking comfort or joy in the misfortune of others. 

If you want to do that, there's plenty of people we can look at. A huge area from Texas to Tennessee is experiencing an ice storm. An ice storm, by the way, that is definitely not headed in our direction. 

Just a thin skim of ice, mostly on overpasses, created havoc and plenty of crashes in the Dallas-Fort Worth area Monday and Monday. That will continue as the ice is expected to continue across much of Texas today and tomorrow. Including in the Dallas metro area.

The storm forced the cancelation of 1,000 or so flights on Monday, most of them around Texas.

The ice in Arkansas and western Tennessee is expected to become thick enough to bring down trees and power lines, in addition to making roads virtually impassable. 


Monday, January 30, 2023

Epic, Wild New Zealand Flood Kills At Least 4

 Floods happen around the world all the time, but some of them just make you stop and go "Wow!"

Inside of a Auckland, New Zealand
supermarket during the recent 
extreme floods there. 
One of those "Wow" floods just hit Auckland, New Zealand, dumping nearly as much rain that falls in a typical summer in just 15 hours.

 It was easily the wettest day in the city's history. In some areas, up to six inches of rain blasted down in  just three hours. 

The floods on Friday went so far as to invade the Auckland Airport, shutting it down, canceling all domestic and international flights and causing massive damage. International flights resumed Saturday, though cancelations and delays were expected to continue for several more days.

Hundreds of people had to spend Friday night at the airport, as there was no way in or out. 

This little announcement from the Auckland Airport surely did not warm the hearts of many travelers: "Unfortunately, due to earlier flooding in the baggage hall, we are currently unable to return checked luggage to you....Your airline will make arrangements for its return at a later time." 

Scheduled Elton John concerts in Auckland Friday and Saturday were canceled. 

The torrents flooded hundreds of homes, blocked most major highways in and around Auckland and prompted at least 2,000 emergency calls, the Associated Press reported, 

Though  heavy rain had ended in Auckland Saturday, more waves of heavy rain were forecast to continue at least into Tuesday. 

Auckland, on New Zealand's North Island, is the nation's largest city, with a population of more than 1.6 million,

It's tough to quickly and easily assign a particular weather extreme like these New Zealand floods to climate change. However, it does fit in with a trend with more and more extreme precipitation events and floods created by that climate change. 

VIDEOS:

Views of the Auckland Airport. I caught a glimpse of a "Caution, Wet Floor" warning sign in this video, which was a nice touch: 


News clip of the New Zealand floods:



The First Truly Hard Core Winter Week Of The Season In Vermont Is Here

Just one of many forecast maps that show the Polar Vortex
right near us in southern Quebec at the end of the week.
This will create a brief, but intense Arctic blast in Vermont 
If you have been waiting for a true Vermont winter, this will be your week. 

Colder weather started last night. It will stay cold,  then colder, then ridiculous as the week wears on. By the time Friday and Saturday come along wind chills will be solidly in the 30s and 40s below. Temperatures might or might not get above zero Friday and Saturday afternoons. 

Friday night and Saturday morning, it will be in the teens below in the "banana belt" towns right near Lake Champlain and in some far southern Vermont towns. For pretty much everybody else, it will be in the 20s below. Actual temperature, not wind chill.

It might seem late to dig out your winter gear, but now's the time to do it.

Before we get there, the first half of week won't be too bad, at least not by Vermont standards. But the warm weather is gone. Though this will be the longest period we've had below freezing all winter. It dipped below 32 degrees last evening and will stay there for awhile. 

Wind chills this morning, actually are in the single numbers, so kind of cold. Roads might be icy in spots this morning, especially north, where a little wet snow fell, then froze yesterday. Up here in St. Albans, we collected 1.4 inches of slush, which then turned mainly to an icy snow cover once temperatures dropped.

More little disturbances in the atmosphere should touch off more light snow today and tonight. Most places will only see an inch or so of new snow, but the ski areas of northern Vermont are probably in for a good three or four inches. 

Today's little packet of snow will reinforce the gathering cold, so it will only make it into the upper teens for highs on Tuesday. That will make it the chilliest day since December 24 in Vermont. 

We'll get a false sense of security on Wednesday and Thursday as temperatures actually moderate to normal for this time of year - which means 20s for highs. Really not bad! 

Then the hammer hits.

ARCTIC BLAST

The polar vortex, that whirl of intensely cold Arctic air that pretty much always spins somewhere in the high latitudes in the winter, has spent pretty much this entire winter a safe distance from us here in Vermont. It's been way, way north and pretty compact, so that opened the door for mild Pacific air to make cross country trips to New England. 

Now, the polar vortex is stretched, and about to take a quick plunge, ending up way south, into southeastern Quebec by Friday. 

That is more than close enough to give us a taste of true Arctic  air. 

A cold front will blast through Thursday night with some good snow showers, and temperatures will take the plunge.

It will be a horrible Friday with actual temperatures holding in the low single numbers or even falling. Strong north winds will blast in, leading to those intense wind chills. 

Though the wind will relax somewhat Friday night, the temperatures will plunge to the minus 20s, as mentioned. 

 A cold snap of this intensity is also in one respect worse than other, similar ones we've had in the past. During most winters, we've usually gotten used to a few subzero mornings, so 20 below wouldn't seem like that much of a stretch. 

This year, it IS a stretch. The National Weather Service in South Burlington is already sounding the alarm about the fact that this will come as a shock, and we might be unprepared. In their forecast discussion this morning, the NWS wrote, "Extra caution will likely be needed to combat complacency built up through what has been an abnormally warm winter thus far."

One thing to worry about is cars and trucks haven't been put through the wringer yet this winter with intensely cold air. They break down easily in subzero temperatures. 

I expect to see a lot of cars disabled on the roads Friday through Saturday morning. Since tow truck operators might be busy, it could take awhile to get rescued if your car dies. 

This is a great time to stock your vehicle with extra blankets, clothes, high energy snacks and such. 

Also, make sure your gas tank is filled right before the cold hits. 

Check your home fuel supply now and get ahold of your dealer today if it's getting low. They'll have a lot of emergency calls during the cold snap, and might not get to you very fast if you run out. 

A frigid house with frozen water pipes is a terrible place to be. 

While you're at it, check on your elderly neighbors especially to see if they're stocked up and ready for this.  It probably isn't a bad idea to hit the grocery store between now and Thursday afternoon to stock up on supplies. Maybe stuff to make a hearty stew to have during the cold snap.

SHORT LIVED

In an earlier post, I mentioned this winter could be like 2007. That one started warm, then turned frigid for March and April. At this point, though, this winter is looking more like 2016.  It was a warm winter throughout, except for one, big Arctic blast in mid-February.

The Arctic cold that's coming Friday and Saturday is not going to stick around. The polar vortex will get swept east and north, kind of fall apart a bit, and start to reorganize well to the north again. 

By Sunday afternoon, we'll pop back up in the balmy 25-30 degree territory as it looks now. Long range forecasts call for normal or even above normal temperatures starting Sunday and going into mid-February. 


 

Sunday, January 29, 2023

Exxon Did A GREAT Job Of Predicting Climate Change In 1977. But Of Course Favored Profit

 I was struck by recent reporting from the journal Science that showed scientists at the oil giant Exxon had a great handle on the future of climate change as far back as the 1970s.  

As the Associated Press reported: 

"The study in the journal Science.... looked at research that Exxon funded that didn't just confirm what climate scientists were saying, but used more than a dozen different computer models that forecast the coming warming with precision equal to or better than government and academic scientists." 

It has been known for awhile now that Exxon was aware of climate change decades ago, but publicly casted doubt about it. The Associated Press again: 

"What the new study does is detail how accurate Exxon funded research was. From 63 percent to 83 percent of those projections fit strict standards for accuracy and generally predicted correctly that the globe would warm about 0.36 degrees (0.2 Celsius) a decade."

The Exxon-funded science was 'actually astonishing; in its precision and accuracy, said study co-author Naomi Orestes, a Harvard science history professor. But she added so was the 'hypocrisy because so much of the Exxon Mobil disinformation for so many years...was the claim that climate models weren't reliable. "

This was during the same time that the oil giant publicly doubted that warming was real and dismissed climate models' accuracy.  

The Exxon studies in this piece were done in the late 1970s and early 1980s.  Though scientists at the time already had an idea that fossil fuel emissions would raise global temperatures, there was a lot of what turned out to be false media narratives of a coming ice age. 

Fossil fuel research into climate change was really quite extensive in the second half of the 20th century, even as their spokespeople were telling us climate change was at best uncertain and at worst a hoax. 

Public statements from Exxon since the 1980s cast climate science as uncertain and unreliable. The company's public position was clearly to dismiss or diminish the evidence that human caused climate change was about to occur, or occurring. 

The journal Science published the review of Exxon scientists' accurate climate change studies published decades ago. 

As the journal Science notes:

"In 2015, investigative journalists discovered internal company memos indicating that Exxon oil company has known since the late 1970s that its fossil fuel products could lead to global warming with 'dramatic environmental effects before the year 2050.' Additional documents then emerged showing that the US oil and gas industry's largest trad association had likewise known since at least the 1950s, as had the coal industry since at least the 1960s, and electric utilities."

The Exxon document said the effects of climate change would become detectable by around the year 2000, give or take five years.

Science continues:

".....Exxon's internal documents, as well as peer-reviewed studies published by Exxon and ExxonMobil Corp scientists, overwhelmingly acknowledged that climate change is real and human-caused. By contrast, a majority of Mobil and ExxonMobil Corp's public communications promoted doubt on the matter."

As you can imagine, these revelations will probably become fodder for lawsuits, both current and existing. Numerous complicated, slow moving lawsuits against Exxon and other oil giants are slowly making their way through the legal system. 

For their part, Exxon says its understand of climate change developed along side that of the scientific community. They also said that critics are focusing on the company's internal policy debates and recasting them as a disinformation campaign, as NPR reports.  

It's been known for years that Exxon accurately knew about climate change and its effects, but the latest revelations just add more fuel to the fire, so to speak. 

In October, 2019, for instance, during House hearings, New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez showed graphs from 1982 Exxon research that predicted with remarkable accuracy the rate of carbon dioxide increases in the atmosphere and the corresponding warming it would cause. 

Exxon remains an insanely profitable company on its sales of fossil fuels. Exxon made an estimated $15.4 billion in the fourth quarter of 2022 and took in roughly $58 billion in all of 2022, its most profitable year on record. 

North To South Weirdness In Vermont Today, Arctic Blast End Of Week Looking Worse

Steam rises from Lake Champlain on a bitterly cold
winter morning several years ago. Similar scenes
seem likely Friday and Saturday as a brief but
intense Arctic blast is set to engulf us 
 If you're in far northern Vermont today, you have a fairly wintery day ahead of you. If you're in southern Vermont, it's springtime!  

The dichotomy might make for a bit of hazardous travel in parts of the state later today and this evening. 

Even though all this is happening this afternoon and evening, we still stand a chance of a big forecast bust later on. 

Part of the culprit with today's action is a fairly weak and fast moving storm that will zip through northern New York and Vermont later on today. Normally, this doesn't make for much of a forecast challenge. If it's warm, you get some showers. Cold, a period of snow. No biggie.

The trouble is a huge temperature contrast and the question of where that contrast will be centered and when. 

It's pretty mild in Vermont this morning. Most places were in the 20s to near 30 at 8 a.m. Go into Quebec, and it's much, much colder. Montreal was at 16 degrees at 8 a.m and Quebec City was at just 5 above. A little north of Montreal, it was below zero.

Where the boundary sets up, and moves is still a bit of a question.  Right now, it looks like most of us in Vermont will stay warm through the day.  A little light snow this morning will change to a little light rain south and central. 

The further south you go, the less of any kind of precipitation you get, as those areas are furthest from that little storm zipping along the Canadian border. Plus, it'll get up into the 35-42 degree range south

The stuff coming out of the sky north of Route 2 will be a bit heavier.  Snow will probably at least mix with rain all the way to the Canadian border - at least briefly - this afternoon. 

Then the little storm's cold front comes through and pulls down that cold Quebec air. It's looking like wet roads in the Champlain Valley this afternoon will turn icy as rain or a mix changes to snow and temperatures plunge. 

One forecast I saw had Burlington's temperature falling steeply from around 36 degrees at 4 p.m. to 23 degrees at 7 p.m. Snow will be falling, at least lightly at this time, so you can see how the road conditions will get ---- not great.

This is NOT a big storm.  There could be up to 2 to 4 inches way north, but just a trace to one inch central and nothing south of Route 4. 

The front will tend to slow down and get drier as it moves south, these falling temperatures will come later and the fall won't be as steep. And it will be drier further south. Road issues shouldn't be as big a problem.

ARCTIC BLAST

This whole situation will leave us with bitter Arctic air not far to our north in Quebec and milder air to the south during the first half of the week. So, Vermont will be in sort of a no man's land of average temperatures for this time of year and a few snow showers. 

Friday and Saturday look awful. The cold wave coming our way looks absolutely brutal. Current forecasts have highs in the single numbers Friday and Saturday and lows Saturday in the morning in the teens and 20s below zero. That's actual temperatures. Wind chills could be in the minus 40s. 

Given current indications, this Arctic blast could end up being even more severe than what I'm outlining here. 

Mercifully, the intense cold looks like it will be brief - lasting just two days - before it starts to warm up noticeably by next Sunday, 

Saturday, January 28, 2023

Warm-ish Storm Will Give Vermont Another Small Messy Mix, Then Winter Finally Arrives

Quick bursts of snow this morning dusted my truck in
St. Albans, Vermont. An unsettled weekend will
yield to what will become the first 
real cold wave of the winter later in the week. 
Our warm Vermont winter has one slap to give us before giving way to much more traditional frigid weather. 

 A small storm heading toward us Sunday will move further north than originally expected. It''ll be battling some cold air trying to bleed in from the north. But since its track will be further north than expected, we lose out what had been a forecast for a nice, manageable Sunday snowfall of two to four inches. 

Instead, it looks like we're in for a rain/snow mix, a mini-thaw, and some plain rain. Far northern areas might eek out all snow, but that's iffy. 

Things are iffy because the computer models aren't really handling how much warm air floods in from the south versus cold air drifting in from the north. The forecast for tomorrow definitely has a high bust potential. We could be surprised either way. 

By the way, we've had brief bursts of snow, mostly north of Route 2, Accumulations are less than an inch most places, but the far northern Green Mountains, say Jay Peak, might be getting an unexpected couple or few inches this morning.

Today will be warm again for January, though, with  highs in Vermont valleys should get well into the 30s.  We could see some more snow showers in the mountains, though. It won't amount to much.

 On the bright side, even after this warm-ish weekend, we should still have plenty of snow on the ground. The minor thaw this afternoon, and the sloppy warmth of Sunday should be brief.  The quality of the snow might degrade a little, but we'll still have plenty of it to play in. 

Many areas of the Green Mountain State have a respectable foot of snow on the ground. The snow cover near the top of Mount Mansfield has gone from a paltry 13 inches on January 8 to 40 inches by Friday. 

That's still about seven inches below normal for the date, but at least it's no longer at near record low levels up there near the summit. 

THE UPCOMING COLD SNAP

It'll be a gradual fall into the cold. It'll keep stepping down gradually behind a series of cold fronts. 

We'll make it into the 20s during the day Monday, and closer to just 20 on Tuesday. Nights will cool off to the single numbers either side of zero by Wednesday morning .

The cold will keep deepening late week, and by Friday and the weekend. If current forecasts hold,  we'll be lucky to get to 10 degrees during the afternoon and near 10 below at night, give or take. 

That's not yet cast in stone, though.  There's various thoughts on just how cold it will get. Some models bring us way, way below zero. I'm talking 20s to near 30 below in the colder hollows and well into the teens below in much of Vermont. 

Other models give us just a glancing blow, and it will only turn kind of cold. 

As mentioned in a post yesterday, Burlington will have either the third of fourth latest first subzero day of any winter on record with this. 

Cold weather patterns like this usually suppress storms well to our south, and that's exactly what's probably going to happen. We'll see snow showers with the cold fronts during the upcoming week, but nothing substantial. 

Lake Champlain has very little ice in it for this time of year, so that opens the door for lake effect snows, mostly in southern Chittenden County and Addison County later in the week. A few places could get a couple inches of snow out of that. 

COMPARED TO HISTORY

Even the very cold worst case scenario on the forecasts isn't a big deal form Vermont in the grand scheme of things. 

Historically, late January to mid-February is when we most often have our worst cold waves. All of the record lows in Burlington from January 31 to February 13 are at least 24 below. A tie for Burlington's coldest on record temperature, minus 30 was on February 12, 1979.  It was 29 below on January 27, 1994 and 28 below on February 1, 1920 and February 9, 1934.

The power of Arctic blasts are about as strong as they could be right about now. The Arctic has been in darkness for months, and getting colder and colder. Some time that frigid air has to escape. To places like here in Vermont. 

This time of  year, there's more  likely to be deep snow on the ground, which further refrigerates things on clear, calm, Arctic weather nights. 

After mid-February, the strength of winter cold waves tend to diminish with the rising angle of the sun, 

Actually, long range forecast suggest the worst of the upcoming cold, modest as it may be, won't last all that long. If those forecasts are correct, it will last a week at most. 

We can handle that. 

 . 

Friday, January 27, 2023

More Bad Climate News: Frigid Top Of Greenland Isn't So Frigid Anymore

There's still an incredible amount of
ice in Greenland, but unfortunately.
recent studies suggest it is 
melting faster than first thought. 
 The top of Greenland's massive ice sheet is something like two miles above sea level. Given how high that is, and how far north it is, it's a frigid place. Thaws are rare, even in the summer. 

But even there, the climate change news is bad, as it seems to be everywhere. It's hotter up at the tippy top of Greenland than it's been in at least 1,000 years.  

Yes, yes, I know nobody was around to take the temperature of the Greenland ice cap 1,000 years ago, but scientists can still figure out how cold it was centuries ago.

As the Washington Post reports, that warmest in at least 1,000 years conclusion was reached by scientists  who looked at oxygen bubbles in ice taken from deep inside the ice sheet. '

The Washington Post tells us: 

"The samples allowed the researchers to construct a new temperature record based on the oxygen bubbler stored inside them, which reflect the temperature at a the time when the ice was originally laid down. '

'We find the 2001-2011 decade the warmest of the whole period o 1,000 years,' said Maria Horhold, the study's lead author and scientists at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany."

Warming has continued to ramp up since 2011, so the study's findings are probably underestimating how much the climate in Greenland has changed, the Washington Post reports. 

As I've said several times in this blog thingy, what goes on in Greenland doesn't stay in Greenland. Obviously, when any ice up there melts, it eventually flows into the Atlantic Ocean. This contributes to global sea level rises. 

If all of Greenland's ice melts, worldwide sea levels would rise by 20 feet. Obviously, the entire Greenland ice cap won't completely melt anytime soon. But any sea level rise, is bad, considering that melting glaciers around the world, and never mind all that ice thawing in Antarctica is feeding into the oceans, too. 

The warming at that high altitude top of the Greenland ice cap will eventually introduce a nasty feedback loop. 

Part of the reason why the ice cap over millennia has maintained itself is it's so high up. The higher you go, the colder the atmosphere is. That's why you have snow capped mountains in the summer if said mountains are high enough. 

But as the top of Greenland's ice cap melts, its surface will inevitably be at lower and lower elevations. So you end up combining increased temperatures from global warming with higher temperature for simply being at a lower altitude. The rate of melting would then increase for two reasons, not just one.

Climate denialists will note that at some point this winter, it was 65 degrees below zero at a station in Greenland. Yes, that's damn cold. But something called "winter" is going on. Greenland is a frigid place, and climate change has not altered that. 

All the warming we're talking about occurs in the summer. It's chilly in Greenland at the height of July, too, as we already explained. But those thaws are getting more and more disconcerting. 

  

Vermont Year Without A Winter? Subzero Cold In Vermont Is On The Decline

Photo taken earlier this month in St. Albans, Vermont is
not the look of a traditional January in the Green Mountain
State. No snow, fog, gloom, even hints of green grass.
Subzero cold is on the decline in Vermont. 
The weather pattern is finally changing.

We/ve managed to receive some decent, if definitely not colossal amounts of snow in the past week to ten days. It's also starting to turn a little colder, though so far it's not nearly like a winter hardy Vermonter has seen before. 

If longer range forecasts pan out, we might even see some below zero weather for a change. Those subzero readings could come as early as this coming Wednesday or Thursday. 

Such weather is a wintertime staple in Vermont, but not this year.  Honestly, it's been a banana belt winter so far. In some ways, it's unprecedented. I've got the receipts to prove it. 

WARM 2022-23 WINTER DATA

At Burlington, it still hasn't gotten to zero degrees or below yet. Subzero weather usually first hits in December, or maybe early January in the warmest winters. 

Since at least 1917, probably earlier, Burlington has had a first zero of the season later than this year only four times.  Well, three, to be entirely accurate.  During the winter of 2001-02, it never got below zero, the only winter on record that has happened. 

The coldest it has been in Burlington so far this winter is 8 above on December 24. 

All of those four winters whose first zeros were later than our current toasty winter still had colder conditions by mid-January than this year. 

Even in the continuously above zero winter of 2001-02, it had gotten as cold as 2 above in Burlington by the 19th of January. All of those other "late" subzero winters were colder than it's been so far this year. 

Back to this winter:  I've only counted 20 days that have failed to get above freezing this winter as of January 23.  We've had at least one winter with 51 days of subfreezing days in a row, never mind a winter's total. 

Neither December nor January this winter will be the warmest on record. But the combination of warmth, lack of intense cold, and until recently, a lack of snow has been really off the charts. 

That's not to say winter still won't hit with a vengeance.

BRUTAL LATE WINTERS 

Sometimes, winters that start out tropical turn into anything but by the time February rolls around. It's been plenty cold in past Februaries and Marches.  

So yeah, if you're a fan of extreme winter cold, there's still time to get your rocks off. In Burlington, it's been below zero as late March 29. (in 1923).

The coldest temperature on record in Burlington came on February 12, 1979 and it's been in the 20s below as late as early March. 

In the past week, we've certainly flipped to a snowier weather pattern, though it's still on the warm side.  Most days over the past week have been around ten degrees warmer than average.

WARMTH TO FRIGID PAST

Warm winters can easily shift abruptly to cold. It's happened before. There's examples.

On February 25, 2017, the temperature reached 72 degrees in Burlington, by far the hottest temperature on record for the second month of the year. It felt like summer, never mind spring. 

Just 17 days later, the Pi Day Blizzard struck. It dumped 30.4 inches of snow on Burlington, the city's second biggest snowstorm on record.

I can also point to a winter that was remarkably similar to this one up until this point. It illustrates how completely things can change. So let's harken back to the winter of 2006-07.

 Each of the 18 days ending December 26 got above freezing. After a near average few days to close out the year, January came in like April. 

Each of the first eight days of January, 2007 were in the 40s and 50s, peaking at a record high of 62 on January 6. It got a little cooler, but stayed mild through January 13

Then, starting in mid-January that winter, things started to get interesting. Temperatures stayed below freezing from January 15 through the end of the month, with the final seven days of the month all getting below zero. 

February, 2007 stayed cold, with only three days barely getting above freezing and all 22 nights dropping to 10 degrees or lower. And who can forget the Valentine's Day blizzard that year, which deposited two to three feet of snow on Vermont in one day. It's still Burlington fifth largest snowstorm in the city's history.

The winter of 2007 extended well into March, with the coldest night of the winter in Burlington coming at the late date of March 7, when the temperature fell to a record 18 below zero. Subzero cold in Burlington came as late as March 21 that year. 

Snowfall that winter amounted to 94.6 inches, well above normal. This,  despite only 14.8 inches falling through January 13 in the winter of 2006-07.

We most certainly might not see a repeat of 2007 this year, but I bring it up to show it's possible.

There's other examples, too. January, 2005 began quite mild, but turned frigid. The third week of the month had daily temperatures below zero, and all but one of those in the teens below zero at Burlington. 

WARMER TREND

So we know winter can abruptly take a colder turn, and this one might. However, in general, we've seen seeing fewer and fewer subzero days and night, at least judging from Burlington, Vermont data. 

In the years, between the early 1930s through about 1980, Burlington would see on average about 22 to 25 days each winter that got to zero or below. There was a peak in the 1960s and early 1970s when there was usually 25 to 35 below zero days during a winter. 

The most winter days in Burlington at or below zero in a single winter was 42 in 1919-1920.

The average number of winter days at or below zero dropped to very rough 15 between the 1980s and currently. But the number got more variable. For instance, the winter of 1993-94 saw 41 zero degree days, but the very next winter saw only 12. 

Since 2002 - two decades -  we've had ten winters with fewer than ten days below zero. In the 85 years between 1917 and 2002, there were only seven years with fewer than ten subzero days. Every winter from 1954 to 1990 had at least a dozen days at or below zero in Burlington. 

It's interesting that before the 1960s there usually wasn't much snow on the ground during subzero cold spells. Often there was only one to three inches on the ground. 

Starting in the 1960s and continuing through the 1970s, snow cover was usually much deeper during winter cold snaps. Snow cover nowadays is much more variable during spells of frigid winter weather. 

Part of the decrease in winter time subzero days might be due to increased urbanization near the Burlington International Airport, where official temperature records have been taken since 1941.  But climate change is very likely a major influence, too.  

This trend will almost certainly continue. Who knows? We might have a stunningly frigid February this year. Anything could happen. But the chances of intense winter cold are declining as the years go by.  

I expect in the future, we'll have more winters like 2002, when subzero cold seemed like ancient history. 


Thursday, January 26, 2023

Suddenly, Vermont Is Looking Almost Normal For Late January, That Will Continue Into February

Vermont Agency of Transportation web cam caught a 
lovely winter sunset late this afternoon along Interstate
89 in Milton. However, heavier snow showers were
making roads much slicker than they look here near
and in the Green Mountains this evening. 
 Vermont just got through the third in a series of quick hitting winter storms in about a week, and suddenly, this bizarrely warm winter doesn't look so warm and weird anymore. 

Oh, sure, January is still running way balmier than normal and the relatively colder conditions over the last five days of the month won't transform that. 

Snowfall has gotten much better, but is still unimpressive compared to some of the epic snow years Vermont has had in the past.

But the landscape now looks kind of the way it's supposed to in January.

The latest storm is all but over, and I'm sure the National Weather Service in South Burlington will drop winter storm warnings and winter weather advisories in Vermont pretty soon. Final accumulations seem to be in the five to eight inch range north, with a little less south. I did see a report of a foot of snow in Westfield, over in Orleans County.

There's some upslope snow showers on the western slopes of the Green Mountains as well.  As of about 4:30 p.m. there was nothing coming out of the sky near Lake Champlain, and some flurries inland a little bit where I live in St. Albans, about five miles east of the lake. 

Radar images looked like it was really dumping on the western slopes at that time. But that heavier snow shouldn't last that long this evening.  Flurries will probably last much of the night in the mountains, but won't be a big deal after, say 8 p.m. 

Do be careful on the roads, though. A sort of cold front has passed through late this afternoon. That has made temperatures drop and winds pick up. Roads are freezing back up, so you'll need to be careful as you're driving around this evening. 

Depending on where you are, some roads are still bad. Interstate 89 in Bolton looked snow covered and slippery on Vermont Agency of Transportation web cams. But the Interstate in Williston looked pretty good. Elsewhere, the webcams depicted a snow-covered Route 108 in Stowe with traffic seriously backed up. It looked like it was snowing pretty hard, with snow covered pavement along Interstate 89 in Waterbury. 

This photo captures the state of weather affairs in Vermont 
early this evening. In this view from St. Albans, 
clearing skies have appeared over Lake Champlain.
Where this photo was taken on the eastern end of
St. Albans, flurries and falling temperatures were 
making the road kind of slick. Heavier snow was
falling along the western slopes of the Green Mountains
to the east of where this photo was taken. 
Many areas of Vermont now have around a foot of snow on the ground after these three storms. The water equivalent of that snow seems to equate to about 1.5 to 2 inches with more in the mountains. isn't expected to last long. 

That is not at all impressive for late January, but it's definitely a closer to normal than it was about a week and a half ago. 

We're still behind in snowfall for this winter so far, but not ridiculously so, like it was just over a week ago. Back on January 18, Burlington was at 17.2 inches below normal for that point in the season. As of today, Burlington was just 8.8 inches below average. 

We at least stand a chance of seeing more installments of snow, although they will be small little incremental things. The best chance is on Sunday, when many of us could receive two to three inches of additional snow. Though, given the winter it's been, some computer models warm us up enough to get a mis. Let's hope not. 

Temperatures early next week look like they will actually be slightly below normal  for a change. It won't be a big deal for any of us, but highs near 20  to 25 and lows in the single numbers and teens will definitely feel like a change. 

Some computer models actually give us a sharp but brief Arctic outbreak around February 3 and 4 that could drop our temperatures way, way below zero. That's not an official forecast, because it's so far in the future a lot of things could change. 

But, it seems as if, for now anyway, it's winter in Vermont. About a month and a half late, but there you go. 


Heavy Vermont Snow Mostly Over, Period Of Mess, Then More Snow This Afternoon

Definitely looking like winter after 5.3 inches of snow in
St. Albans, Vermont last night. There's now about nine
inches of snow on the ground. Just eight days ago, 
there was none.
 Last night's big, quick thump of snow has long gone by and early this morning Vermont is in a soup of fog, light freezing rain, a little sleet, some wet snowflakes and even a little rain and drizzle in the warmer valleys. 

The warm air raced in pretty quickly in southern and central Vermont. Snow fairly quickly changed to a mix, so accumulations there were generally two to locally as much as five inches there.

 Northern Vermont - especially the northwest corner of the state - hung on to the cold air better, so they received a little more snow than the south. That's the opposite of the last two storms 

The most I've seen so far is 8 inches in Isle La Motte,  6 inches in Alburgh and Walden, 5.5 inches in Morrisville and 5.3 inches in Orleans. I also measured 5.3 inches at my hacienda in St. Albans.

Some of us weather geeks were hoping for some thundersnow last night, as the dynamic nature of the storm made that possible. I'm only aware of one lightning strike, somewhere near Lyon Mountain, New York west of Plattsburgh and Dannemora. 

As I feared, the conditions at rush hour last evening quickly turned atrocious as the snow dump turned on just as people were heading home from work. There were a bunch of slide offs, crashes and things like that, and they actually had to close part of Interstate 89 near Burlington for a time. Two people had to be taken to the hospital. 

What a mess!

As many of you have figured out by now, there's a ton of school closing and delays for the second time this week. If this keeps up, the kiddos will be going to school in July to make up for the time lost. Just kidding, kids!!!! 

Power outages developed as expected. The problems peaked at 4,300 Vermont customers out of electricity at around 4 a.m. Most of that has been fixed. Expect a few more power outages as a little snow and freezing rain continues to fall, and winds pick up pretty substantially this afternoon. It won't be a massive gale, but 25 to 30 mph gusts can do a number on some ice and snow loaded trees. 

Road conditions range from "meh" on the many of the main highways to "ugh" on the more back roads with still a lot of snow and ice on them.  Roads should remain tricky all day. Not the worst ever, but still, you'll need to keep on your toes if you're driving. 

While road conditions have improved somewhat this
morning, there's still snow and ice out there. This is
Route 78 in Alburgh around 8 a.m. this morning,
as viewed via a screen grab of a AOT traffic cam.

We're stuck in the schmutzy weather of mixed precipitation, wet snow and minor thawing until mid to late morning.

But a new storm forming in southeastern New England will start to pull in some cooler air from the north. At first, the colder air will only be aloft. That'll be enough to ensure the patchy freezing rain and sleet and stuff goes over to a wet snow.

Then, as the colder air becomes more entrenched, temperatures will fall and winds will pick up this afternoon.  Falling snow and re-freezing roads will make the trip back home from work less than lovely later today. 

The new snow won't be any kind of blockbuster, though. It'll just be a dusting to an inch on valley floors in most of central and southern Vermont, an inch or two in northern Vermont valleys, and maybe an extra few inches of fluff to cover the slightly icy stuff from last night up in the mountains. 

We're heading into that colder weather pattern we've been talking about. Friday will be average, Saturday might be just a bit warmer than average. Then it looks like we get a little more snow on Sunday. At this point, Sunday's system doesn't look like a biggie, maybe two to four inches. Or five or so in favored mountain or ski area spots. 

Frigid arctic air will be poised just to our northwest Sunday. That's the first time anything that cold has been in our neck of the woods since Christmas. I'm not sure how much of that nasty air will bleed south into Vermont early next week. 

It's possible, if enough cold blasts southward, places that have wildly managed to not have any below zero weather this winter could be out of luck. That's a big if, but check your fuel supply just in case. 

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Vermont Storm Has Arrived; Stay Home If You Can Tonight

As I write this shortly around 5 p.m. Wednesday, snow is ramping up as expected across Vermont. 

Vermont Agency of Transportation web cam along 
Interstate 89 in Colchester at around 5:20 p.ml shows
traffic backing up due to slide offs and accidents.
Snow is expected to intensify further this evening. 

There was an interesting little band of snow that formed over northern Vermont late this afternoon. There was a pretty steep contrast between temperatures along the Canadian border compared to along Route 2 a little to the south. This was essentially a mini warm front that touched off an initial burst of snow. 

The main show at around 4:30 p.m. was in southern Vermont and advancing north pretty fast. Honestly, I hope you're home by now, as road conditions are deteriorating pretty quickly. Even ahead of this intense band of snow we have plenty of reports of traffic crashes. 

The heaviest burst of snow will probably come between now and midnight, with the later version the further north you go.

It seems like in general, the forecasted warm push of air keeps getting a little stronger. Compared to this morning's forecast, it looks like there will be a little less snow than originally predicted in southern and central Vermont, and perhaps a bit more than earlier predicted in far northern Vermont. The bad news is that means there will probably be a little more ice accumulating in central Vermont than originally thought.

The National Weather Service is still going with a dump of six to 12 inches up the spine of the Green Mountains, and along the eastern slopes. 

In the Northeast Kingdom, Champlain Valley, and the valleys of western Vermont, forecasters are still expecting three to seven inches of snow, with the least in low elevations of southwest Vermont. 

I suppose this is a fairness issue of sorts? Areas of far northern Vermont that missed out on the bulk o the last two storms will partly make up for that with somewhat heavier snow totals tonight. 

As of 4:30 p.m., the snow was falling only lightly to moderately in most of the state, but for a couple or few hours, it will really come down hard this evening. It'll snow at a rate of  one an to two inches per hour in many places, which is too fast for our crack team of state snow plow drivers to keep up with. Stay home. It's really not worth going out there tonight. 

That's especially true as we get into later tonight. Schmutz, in the form of sleet and freezing rain, will also come down heavily for a time tonight, especially south and central. 

The bulk of this storm will be within this initial big thump of snow, ice and rain this evening and tonight. There has been thundersnow in places from Indiana to southern Ontario. I doubt we will see thundersnow in Vermont, but the chances of it happening are not zero this evening.

The National Weather Service in South Burlington has 
slightly reduced expected snow accumulation in Vermont
tonight and tomorrow because more of a mix is expected.
Snowfall totals in the northern Champlain Valley 
have increased a little bit. 
Speaking of electricity, I can't guarantee your power will stay on tonight. Between the existing snow loads on trees, the fact that the snow will keep getting wetter and heavier as the night goes on, and then it will go over to sleet and freezing rain, that's not a great recipe for the power lines.

The strongest risk for overnight power outages is in southern and central Vermont, especially along and near the east slopes of the Greens. Winds overnight could get pretty gusty on the west slopes of the Green Mountains as well, which would expand the problem. 

Green Mountain Power tweeted: "Stay safe #vt! We are prepared for the difficult forecast. With some areas having wet snow on trees, there could be potential for damage. Crews will response as soon as safely possible!" 

A dry punch of air aloft between say, 2 and 10 a.m. Thursday will make the precipitation spottier, lighter, but still annoying. Anything that comes down will be a mix of sleet, freezing rain or a cold, non-freezing rain.

That won't last long. The atmosphere over us will cool off as the day wears on, so anything that comes out of the sky during the afternoon will be snow. It looks like the western slopes and summits of the Green Mountains, and parts of the Northeast Kingdom, should receive a few inches of snow out of that little backlash.

Most of the Champlain Valley should receive maybe an inch or two of additional snowfall. Temperature will slump back below freezing in the afternoon and evening, so slush and water on the roads and sidewalks will freeze.

Expect another round of busy hospital emergency rooms as ice underfoot will lead to plenty of people falling and hurting themselves.

Winds from the northwest will turn gusty Thursday afternoon and evening, too. So yeah, Thursday looks like a miserable winter day.

In the warmer valleys of Vermont, it hasn't gotten below zero yet this winter. That might or might not change in the coming week. Stay tuned!

Racists Apparently Hate The Fact That Spanish Speaking Public Receive Critical Weather Warnings

One of several Spanish language tornado warnings
issued Tuesday by the National Weather Service
office in Houston. Bigoted and racist snowflakes
 sometime object to these, as they insist
everything be in English
 A winter storm is affecting Indiana today. Cody Moore, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Indianapolis on Tuesday decided to post storm alerts and messages on Facebook in both English and Spanish.  

That's a common and good practice at many NWS offices, as it's best to relay warnings in ways that are best understood by everyone. After all, the primary language of at least 300,000 Indiana residents is Spanish. 

But racists always crawl out from under rocks everywhere, including in Indiana. Moore's post received a bunch of racist and bigoted replies because he had the temerity to post some of his weather warnings in Spanish. Do note his winter storm warnings were obviously also posted in English. 

Moore, sadly, ended up having to post this message to Facebook. It read in part: 

"Unfortunately, there have been a lot of racists comments on our posts because they are not in English. Racism and bigotry will not be tolerated on this page and your comments will be removed immediately. Thank you for your cooperation and kindness."

Racists and bigots have to whine about everything, don't they? They're such snowflakes, and the last thing Indianapolis needs today is more snowflakes.

 Just the tiniest exposure to the sound of someone speaking in Spanish gets their panties in a knot because....I don't know.  They clutch their pearls over a Spanish-language weather forecast because seeing "Aviso de tormenta invierno" gives them the vapors.

I can just see the racists hyperventilating now. "They'll ban English language weather warnings!" The (racist slur here) want us to die in storms. It's an evil leftist plot!

Yeah, I'm sure George Soros, Bill Gates and Tom Hanks are all in on this.

It's not exactly difficult to ignore Spanish-language weather warnings if you don't like them. It's super, super easy to access English language weather forecasts. Don't bigots have anything else to worry about than a Hispanic person receiving a weather forecast in Spanish? 

To racists, it's a crime against humanity if a Hispanic person is convinced by a Spanish language weather warning not to go out driving in a blinding Indiana snowstorm. Maybe the bigots want our Hispanic friends to drive off into a blizzard and die? Who knows?

Moore further unloaded about this idiots on Twitter: "Spent much of my shift tonight translating winter weather graphics into Spanish. Well the racist comments and bigotry got so bad I had make this PSA about how we won't tolerate any of that on our page. Just sad. So much hate" He included an angry face emoji and hashtag #peoplesuck. 

They sure do suck! 

The bigot butt hurt continued after Moore posted his message rightfully demanding an end to racist messages on his (accurate!) weather forecast. 

As IndyStar pointed out, the messages continued. 

"'Well since you don't believe English is the United States language then I guess I'll unfollow this page,' Bill Benedict announced in his response.

The weather service offices retort, 'Go right ahead Bill! Adios amigo,'"

The NWS Indianapolis "adios amigo" was definitely the right touch. 

To be fair, Moore got a lot of feedback on Facebook and Twitter from lots of people who appreciated him calling out the racists. 

Meteorologist Caleb Taylor at WPTA in Fort Wayne, Indiana declared that "Adios amigo" exchange "my favorite thing on the internet today. Shout out to @NWSIndianapolis for posting posting in Spanish and clapping back"   

Moore also, thankfully, got a boatload of comments on Twitter thanking him for posting weather information in two languages and making smacking the racists down.  I know it sometimes isn't a great idea to respond to social media trolls, but I think it's good to call them out, as Moore did. 

Bigots whining about meteorologists trying to broadcast weather warnings in Spanish isn't a new thing. Unfortunately, it crops up from time to time. 

KFOR meteorologist Emily Sutton in Oklahoma City a couple years ago used a Spanish translator during a report on one of Oklahoma's many weather emergencies. 

A wacko with the delicious name Richard Weathers objected strenuously to this. And I quote:"I remind one and all this is the Untied (sic) States of America, I am offended that KFOR overtly shoved the American English aside ion favor of the foreign language presentation."

He then went on the usual rant about the southern border, invaders, Make America Great Again,  blah, blah blah. I'm also unsure what the "Untied States of America" is. 

Sutton, in response, pointed out that a dozen people died in a May, 2013 Oklahoma flood in part because there were language barriers and the victims hadn't understood flood warnings.

She concluded, "You will find that we are all humans. Be kind to each other. Don't be a Richard."

You see what she did there.

Sutton ended up getting the last laugh, too. A local Mexican restaurant was so happy with Sutton's take on all this that they offered her free food and margaritas for life.  

Snow And Schmutz Storm Still Due To Harass Vermont Today Into Tomorrow

This morning's National Weather Service forecast map.
Hasn't changed much since yesterday. Orange areas 
get the most snow, eight or more inches. 
We're still gearing up for a rather messy storm, one that will harass anyone trying to drive anywhere between late this afternoon and later Thursday. 

Most of us here in Vermont should see a net gain in snow depth on the ground, but many of us will see a little sleet, freezing rain or even rain during the middle of the event. 

The overall forecast hasn't changed much since yesterday, but there are some subtle differences that will matter to us. 

TIMING

First of all, the timing of this storm is turning into an issue. It looks like it will come in a little earlier this afternoon than original forecasts indicated. That's a problem for many of you who drove to work or school this morning. 

Main roads were perfect this morning. Not so much later today. The snow is expected to begin in far southern Vermont early this afternoon, mid-afternoon around Rutland and Windsor counties and late afternoon in most of the rest of central and northern Vermont.   

Once the snow starts, it will ramp up quickly and come down hard. The snow is riding a surge of warm, moist air, and there's pretty cold air to the north. At least at first. That temperature contrast will force that surge of air to go up and over the cold air. That's a recipe for a quick thump of heavy snow, lasting a few hours. 

Since that burst of snow will start landing on pavement during the afternoon and evening commute, that's bad. It seems every time a storm is scheduled like this, you end up with long traffic jams on the interstates, lots of slide offs, and just general road chaos. 

If you can sneak out and get home before it starts snowing, that would be great. The fewer cars on the roads this afternoon and evening the better. I'm grateful I can get my errands done this morning out there, and stay put at home this afternoon and tonight. 

This initial thump of snow tonight will be the main part of any accumulations. The eastern slopes of the Green Mountains still look like they'll do best, with a half a foot to locally a foot of snow. The mountains will block moisture from the Champlain Valley and Northeast Kingdom, so those places should see just four to six inches of new snow.

ICE AND SCHMUTZ

Another big issue is this blast of warm air aloft is a little stronger than earlier forecasts indicated. Overnight and into Thursday morning there should be a mix of a little lingering snow, but also sleet, freezing rain and even areas of just plain, cold rain. 

Most of Vermont should get a thin glaze of sleet and 
freezing rain with this storm (yellow shading). I'm a
bit worried about the red shading in far southern
Vermont, which means the ice on already snow loaded
trees could contribute to power outages. 

Luckily, this precipitation won't come down really hard, as the best moisture will have passed us by when this mix happens. But most of us should see a bit of a glaze of ice on the snow, and this will also affect drive time Thursday morning. 

In terms of power outages, I'm worried mostly about southern Vermont. There's already a pretty good snow load on the trees. Additional snow will make it worse. And the most freezing rain in the state looks like it will happen in some of the mid and higher elevations of far southern Vermont. 

This could set the stage for more power outages. Which southern Vermont in particular has had quite enough of with storms over the past five weeks. 

Thursday morning will feature light mix, a little rain, fog and just general ugliness and gloom.

As that's happening, a secondary storm will form along the coast and take over. This one could cause some heavy rain and flooding in eastern New England, but not here in Vermont. 

While the storm develops and moves toward Canada, cooler air will be drawn southward, so everything changes to snow. It'll mostly be light stuff, but with falling temperatures, wet roads freezing and more snow being added, Thursday afternoon drive time won't be a picnic either. 

Most of us will only get an inch or two of snow out of this last gasp of the storm, though a good few to several inches could pile up in the central and northern Green Mountains. 

I'm not going to get into a forecast beyond Thursday night here, as this is quite enough. A bit of a spoiler though, is we will be in a colder, and still somewhat active weather pattern after this storm blows by. 

Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Tuesday Evening Storm Update: NWS Slightly Increases Expected Snow, Ice Amounts

The forecast snow accumulation map from the National
Weather Service in South Burlington  has slightly
increased expected snow totals from the upcoming storm. 
 The new late afternoon forecasts from the National Weather Service in South Burlington are kind of steady as she goes for tomorrow night's storm. 

However, they have increased snow and ice totals a bit since this morning. 

Before we get into that, do note there was a cold front in southern Quebec as of 5 p.m. It's coming south into Vermont with a band of snow showers. Some of these might be briefly heavy. Temperatures will drop with these, too.

So road conditions might quickly deteriorate in some areas this evening. Keep an eye on that if you're driving around. Those pesky winter cold fronts! 

On to the bigger storm now. 

A winter storm warning covers all of Vermont except a good chunk of the Northeast Kingdom, the Champlain Valley and the western half of Rutland County.  Within the winter storm warning zone, five to 10 inches of snow should fall with this. At least in general. A few places, especially up in the Green Mountains and upper eastern slopes of those mountains could easily get a little more than that. 

A winter storm warning means a storm dumping at least seven inches of snow is occurring or imminent. In this case it's imminent, since it won't start until tomorrow afternoon.

Those areas not under the winter storm warning are covered by a winter weather advisory. Those areas should expect four to seven inches of snow. 

This storm still looks messy and wet, and that makes me wonder about a renewed round of power outages. 

As of late this afternoon there were still a few outages in southeastern Vermont lingering from Monday's storm. I'm guessing those should largely be repaired by tomorrow, but then this new storm comes in. 

Luckily, at the onset, temperatures will likely be solidly below freezing in most areas, so the initial snow shouldn't be too wet and heavy. Then again, trees in southern and central Vermont are still heavily weighed down with snow, so even this more powdery snow could create problems.

You'll notice tomorrow afternoon that the summits of the mountains will begin to look blurry. That's snow falling. At first, the snow will evaporate on the way down, so that's why you'll see signs of snow at the summits but not in the valleys.

But soon enough, the snow will hit the valley floors, probably mid to late afternoon south and late afternoon to early evening north. Give or take. 

Plan on a possibly exciting drive home in the snow late afternoon or evening Wednesday. The first thump of snow will come in quick and hard. For a few hours, the snow could come down at a rate of one to two inches of snow per hour. The snow will get wetter and heavier as time goes on. Not a good night to be out and about. 

Then, overnight, it will warm up and this storm has a lot of warm, moist air to work with. As the night goes on, we'll probably see a schmutz of wet snow, freezing rain and sleet, and even rain, work south to north into at least central Vermont. 

The heaviest snow will be on the east slopes of the Green Mountains, as moisture will be forced up the slopes of the hills. When that happens, moisture gets squeezed out of the atmosphere, and precipitation gets heavier.

In the Northeast Kingdom and western slopes of the Greens, the mountains will block some of the moisture, which is why less snow will fall there. By the way, winds could get pretty gusty at times overnight on the west slopes of the Greens. 

This still looks like it will not be anything like that huge storm on December 23. But it could be enough to risk a few additional power problems. 

Late at night and early morning Thursday, a tongue of drier and warmer air aloft will tend to taper things off to drizzle, freezing drizzle or a bit of sleet.

Winds will turn west and northwest during the day Sunday. That will usher in colder air at all levels of the atmosphere. So any mix will change to snow. Most of that snow will hit the western slopes of the Green Mountains and the Northeast Kingdom, areas that will have been "cheated" out of snow in the earlier phase of the storm. 

Near Lake Champlain, it might not snow all that much Thursday afternoon and night, so that area will probably have some of the lowest snow totals with this storm.

It'll probably get kind of windy during the day Thursday and Thursday night, so there might be a few problems with blowing snow. 

The above is the current forecast scenario for this storm. Expect changes, and as those changes do occur, I'll update with subsequent posts. 

TEXAS TORNADOES

I have to put in a word about the rough weather this same storm has been causing near Houston today,.

What looks to have been a rather powerful, long lasting tornado swept through largely industrial and commercial areas east of downtown Houston. 

This area is rife with oil refineries and chemical plants. But I'm sure a big tornado going through someplace like that is just fine. 😬

Shell Deer Park Chemical in Texas tweeted out, "We're currently experiencing an incident due to severe weather. We're taking steps to minimize any noise, light and smoke associated with this flaring activity. This is being handled within the boundaries of the facility. There is no threat to the community."

I'm uh, reassured?

This Texas tornado stuff is breaking news and will of course need updates. The dangerous weather was spreading into Louisiana and had its sights on southern Mississippi, Alabama and the Florida Panhandle tonight. 

Winter Burn Piles Warm The Heart, The Eyes And the Psyche

An image from the brush pile at my house that I burned
away earlier this month. Wintertime bonfires are lovely. 
 Here at my St. Albans, Vermont, hacienda, we had to cut down a series of large poplar trees because they were dying and becoming a hazard. 

To save money, we told the tree cutters to leave the debris here and I'll take care of it. 

With great effort, because I need the exercise, I organized some of the debris into a burn pile. Once I set the fire, I just keep throwing branches and logs onto the fire. Once the burn pile gets really hot, it's amazing how efficiently even green wood burns. 

To dispel the question as to whether I'm wasting wood that could heat homes or be put to good use as wood products, unfortunately, poplar is junk wood. It's terrible for wood stoves and is even worse for furniture or other wood products, so it has to burn.

I like burning these piles in the winter, because there's snow on the ground. It's pretty much impossible for my fires to get out of hand that way.  

Another image from my recent burn pile/bonfire
And frankly, on even a moderately cold winter day, the heat from the fire has a unique comforting quality, much more so than the warmth inside my house, for some reason. 

When it gets dark, the slowly subsiding fire is especially hot, and the burning branches fascinate me.

 I think that's a human trait. We've always been obsessed with fire, ever since at least the day of the cave men. Watching a nighttime fire is absolutely mesmerizing. 

I still have a lot of tree debris to clean up, so there will be more fires this winter. 

For now, I have recent footage of my recent burn pile. Most of the video was taken in the evening, to get a sense of the scorching beauty of those hot burning logs, branches and embers.   

The video is below. If you don't see the image of it, click on this link to watch. Otherwise, click on the image below to view it on YouTube.