


The rumors are true: the weather honeymoon is drawing to a close; Minnesota's weather will become stormier, travel more problematic as the week goes on. As is often the case, Mother Nature is about to throw us a curve. In spite of the St. Paul Winter Carnival kicking off the 10 coldest days of the year (on average) an unusually strong storm - tracking unusually far south and west of Minnesota - will pull enough warm air north for a period of rain and freezing rain (rain freezing into glaze ice on contact with cold surfaces) by Friday night and Saturday. Snow lovers are indignant, as well they should be: if this were a typical January with highs in the teens (north) and low 20s (south) we'd be looking at 12-16"+ of snow by Monday of next week. So close, and yet so far.

Tuesday afternoon tornado warnings were issued for south central Los Angeles. No typo there - that's how violent and energetic the latest Pacific storm is, sweeping inland with torrential rains, hail and high water. One wrinkle of moisture and energy ejecting northeastward from the Four Corners region of the Desert Southwest will spark a little snow/sleet mix Wednesday night into Thursday, models still hinting at 1/2 to 2" of slushy/icy snow across much of Minnesota tomorrow. Give yourself some extra time to get around town, I expect commute times to be double, even triple normal, air temperatures holding in the mid/upper 20s, meaning potentially snow-covered secondary roads, let's hope treated major highways/freeways are mostly wet and slushy. Friday should be a better travel day, in-between storm systems, as we wait for the Main Event.


The storm now slamming into California with gale force winds, mudslides and raging fits of thunder and lightning will cross the Rockies, gulping down vast quantities of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico late in the week, before turning almost due north over the weekend, pushing a shield of "precipitation" into Minnesota Friday night and Saturday. Notice I said precipitation, a wonderfully vague word, which could mean almost anything under the sun, except for the sun. To get all snow temperatures (usually) have to be colder than 32 throughout the lowest mile or so of the atmosphere. Even a thin layer of air > 32 F. can turn falling snowflakes into rain, dashing the hopes and expectations of snow-lovers stuck on the ground far below. A perfect storm track for snow runs from Kansas City and Des Moines to near La Crosse and Eau Claire, keeping Minnesota on the colder, northern side of the storm track. But this area of low pressure shows signs of "hooking" to the northwest, pushing into South Dakota (!) That, in turn, will probably yank enough mild air north for a significant period of sleet (ice pellets), changing to freezing rain (glaze ice) then finally over to plain-old-liquid-rain during the day Saturday, turning our snow to slush and mush (as I feared more than a week ago). As the storm does a big loop and finally tracks due east, then northeast across Wisconsin, toward the Great Lakes, a changeover back to mostly-snow is likely Sunday, finally tapering Monday. By then there may be 1-3" of new snow on the ground for southeastern MN, but a band of 3-6" is still very possible across central Minnesota (including St. Cloud), probably less near the Twin Cities - more like 2-3" - possibly 4" far northern and western suburbs.

We've been living on borrowed time in the temperature department, readings a good 10-15 degrees above average. The GFS model is now (strongly) suggesting a return to much colder weather next week (teens north, 20s south); an even colder push for the first few days of February, some single digits highs up north, maybe a week's worth of subzero lows for much of the state. I don't think it'll be as brutal as early January, but it will definitely get your attention. Our midwinter intermission was nice while it lasted, a welcome, nearly 2 week reprieve from the coldest, most controversial winds of winter. Old Man Winter got a "time out", but nights are (still) long, there's still a lot of snow lurking to our north - at some point the laws of physics kick in and the Yukon Express starts to roll once more. Give it about a week to 10 days, there will be no doubt in your mind that spring is NOT right around the corner.
Paul's Outlook for St. Cloud
Today: Mostly cloudy - hanging onto good travel conditions. Winds: E 10-15. High: 26
Tonight: Chance of a little light snow, freezing drizzle. Low: 19
Thursday: Light snow, mixed with freezing drizzle at times, a slushy, slippery 1-2" possible. High: 27
Friday: Temporarily improving conditions - overcast, damp and gray. High: 30
Saturday: Wintry mix of wet snow, ice and rain - very slippery outside of town. High: 32
Sunday: Changeover back to mostly snow, starts to accumulate. Potential for more than 3-6" of snow. High: 30
Monday: Light snow quickly tapers to flurries, slowly improving travel conditions, turning colder. High: 18
Tuesday: Partly sunny and chilly, a few degrees cooler than average. High: 17
Wednesday: Yep, feels like a real January again. Intervals of sun, delightfully numb. High: 15
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