| A gloomy sky over St. Albans, Vermont on November 6. The month was chilly by modern standards, but kind of middle of the road by 20th century comparisons. |
The average temperature in Burlington for November was 37.3 degrees, or three degrees chillier than what is considered normal.
Remember, this is the new, warmer normal, influenced by climate change. Had the same November weather occurred a generation or two ago, it wouldn't have been considered all that cold.
Out of the past 134 years, this November was pretty much right in the middle of the pack in terms of temperatures.
Seventy Novembers were as chillier or chillier than 2025 and 64 of them were warmer. From a historical perspective, and from the perspective of your parents or grandparents, it was actually a pretty normal November.
Other weather stations in Vermont were also about a degree or two colder than the average of the past 30 years, but more or less in line with historical averages.
Precipitation was close to normal, too. Burlington had 2.87 inches of rain in November, just 0.17 inches above normal. That made it the 53rd wettest out of the past 134 years. Nothing extreme there.
Elsewhere in Vermont, rain and melted snow came out more or less average, trending slightly on wet side west, and a little drier east.
Temperatures were strangely consistent in November. The month can feature almost summer like warmth near 70 in the early part of the month, and then hitting bitterly cols, wintry lows near the end.
There are some wacky extremes in the history of November. In 1938 the highest temperature for the month in Burlington was 74 and the low as 3 below. In November, 1996, temperatures ranged from 74 to 9. As recently as 2022, we had a November with a high of 76, an all-time record for the month, with a low of 15 toward the end of that month.
November, 2025 in Burlington ranged between 58 and 21. I've seen a few individual days with that kind of range, never mind a whole month. Digging further, I've found that only six Novembers had a low as warm or warmer than 21 degrees. Usually, the low for the month is in the upper single numbers and teens.
On the opposite end, only 25 Novembers, have had highs as cool or cooler than this year. Additionally, if you love statistical quirks, the lowest high temperature this month was 34 degrees. Only 11 Novembers had a "lowest high" that warm or warmer.
Snowfall, by the way, was heavy, at least in the north. Burlington's snowfall was only 2.1 inches above normal, and St Johnsbury's was 2.9 inches on the heavy side.
As the month closed, there was still a healthy 10 inches of snow on the ground in Westfield and eight inches in Montgomery. Most towns in Vermont had no snow cover or just a few inches.
But the Green Mountains killed it in terms of snow, especially the central and northern mountains.
Jay Peak reported an incredible 119 inches of snow during November, obviously their snowiest on record. On a few days during November, Mount Mansfield set records for the deepest snow for the date. On the final day of the month, there was 40 inches on the ground near the top of Mount Mansfield, the second highest for the date.
LOOKING AHEAD
Incredibly, each of the past four years in Burlington were among the top ten warmest on record. It looks like 2025 might finally break that streak.
If December temperatures this year come out around the "new normal" of 28.2 degrees, 2025 would once again be in the top 10 list of warmest years.
But early indications are this December has a better than even chance of being solidly on the cold side. No guarantees of course. Long range forecasts are notoriously tricky. But we are entrenched in a shivery weather pattern that shows little sign of breaking.
We have a decent chance of seeing the coldest December in a quarter century, but that would be nowhere near the coldest on record. That honor goes to December, 1989, that awful month that featured an average temperature of 7.5 degrees which was 20.7 degrees colder than our current "new normal." December, 1989 also featured 19 days in Burlington that got below zero.
I'm quite sure that December, 1989 cold record is safe, despite this year's chilly forecast.

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