1.2" snowfall so far in February.
15" snow on the ground at STC as of Sunday evening.
47 F. Sunday's high in St. Cloud.
26 F. normal high for Deb. 13.
Shift In The Pattern. The wintry death-grip that had much of North America (east of the Rockies) shivering for December and January is finally easing, the core of the coldest air finally retreating into Canada. We'll experience more cold fronts, in all probability a few more subzero nights (long-range guidance hinting at another - brief - blast of bitter air close to March 1). But the sun is as high in the sky as it was in late October, and with each passing day the odds of sustained, subzero weather drop off fairly quickly. Although more cold fronts are inevitable, it's probably safe to exhale: the very worst of winter is behind us now. Thanks to WeatherNation graphic artist (and mobile app developer extraordinaire) Nicholas Shipes for the graphical "explainer."
Shades Of March. Although today will be cooler than yesterday (to the tune of 10 degrees or so) expect more 40s by midweek, mid to upper 40s possible Wednesday and Thursday, nearly 20 degrees above average. The arrival of a colder front (bringing us back down to "average") by Friday may trigger a period of accumulating snow by the end of the week.
Reality Check. I suspect the GFS model may be overdoing the snowfall amounts by late-week, but a "few inches" may accumulate by Friday over parts of central and west central Minnesota as cold air comes rushing south of the border. Friday looks like a slushy, potentially sloppy day statewide.
Friday Slap. After a hope-inspiring run of 40s Wednesday and Thursday Friday will be a rude awakening, a reminder that Old Man Winter is not nearly done with us yet. Not by a longshot. We'll see a few more subzero nights (no doubt), probably a few more days with highs in the teens, but I believe worst of the prolonged, subzero weather is probably behind us now. I hope that's more than wishful thinking on my part, but based on historical data (and the GFS model going out 15 days) I think the coldest nighttime lows, the 3-4 subzero nights/row of brutal weather, are now behind us. Time will tell if I'm just being a naive optimist.
2010: Minnesota's Wettest Year. From Mark Seeley's excellent WeatherTalk blog: "The DNR-State Climatology Office has evaluated the climate data from last year in the context of state records since 1891 and concluded that on a statewide basis 2010 was the wettest year in history. The state averaged precipitation in 2010 was 34.10 inches surpassing the previous wettest year of 1977 which showed a statewide average of 33.74 inches. Total precipitation in 2010 ranged from less than 24 inches in parts of Cook County (far NE) to nearly 50 inches in Wabasha County. At least three dozen communities reported 40 inches or more of precipitation during 2010. September was the wettest month of the year averaging nearly 6.50 inches of rainfall among several hundred observers."
China To Spend $1 Billion To Alleviate Drought. Talk about tinkering with Mother Nature on a grand scale. An excerpt from USA Today: "BEIJING — China will spend $1 billion to alleviate its worst drought in six decades — a long dry spell in the world's largest wheat-growing region that threatens further jumps in the commodity's global price. The funding announced late Wednesday is part of a government plan to boost grain production, divert water, build emergency wells and take other steps in the affected areas in central and northern China. Snow fell Thursday in some of the driest areas, but it was minimal and has not eased worries about the winter wheat crop. The main wheat belt, including Shandong, Henan, Hebei, Anhui, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Gansu and Jiangsu provinces, has gotten virtually no precipitation since October.
During Rare Southern Snowstorm Scientists Spring Into Action. I thought this was an interesting article, about a team of meteorologists who happened to be in the right place (Huntsville, Alabama) with the right gear at the right time (before a foot of snow was scheduled to fall). An excerpt from Our Amazing Planet: "Over the next few days the scientists captured the most detailed dataset yet on snowfall in the Deep South. The data could one day help forecasters precisely predict a storm's intensity.
All hands on deck
The scientists marshaled instruments from Huntsville's airport, the "instrument farm" at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and NASA. The goal was to model the storm from the ground all the way to the top of the clouds. The team rolled out radars on trucks and dialed in radars at the airport. They set up normal rain gauges and rain gauges with lasers attached. The team turned on video cameras that can image the precipitation and radars that could tell if it was liquid or frozen. Still other instruments could pinpoint the location and size of snowflakes. The alphabet soup of instrument names included ARMOR, 2DVDs, PARSIVELs and MAX, many of which were waiting to deploy to Oklahoma to study tornadoes. Their stopover in Huntsville could not have come at a better time."
For Easteners This Winter Hurts More Than Usual. Winter-related injuries have (not surprisingly) spiked upward in recent months. From a story at USA Today: "At Hartford Hospital in Connecticut's capital, about two dozen people have been treated in the past week alone after falling off roofs and ladders while trying to clear snow. Others have lost fingers in snow-blower accidents, a few have suffered heart attacks while shoveling, and some have been sidelined with broken limbs after slipping on ice. "We've seen this before, but never in these huge numbers," said Dr. A.J. Smally, the hospital's emergency department director. "It's an epidemic."
Was That A....Frost Quake? The great thing about meteorology? You're learning new stuff all the time. It can be a painful learning curve, but I don't know of anyone brave or daring enough to try and predict earthquakes (or in this case "frost-quakes"). An illuminating article from Accu Weather's Gina Cherundolo: "You're sound asleep on a cold, wintry night, and all of a sudden a loud boom wakes you up. A few things on your shelves rattle for a second or two, then all is silent. Was it an earthquake? Maybe, but the real culprit is likely a frost quake, a geological phenomenon brought on by winter weather. Unlike earthquakes, frost quakes are non-technonic seismic events, meaning they are not caused by the shifting of the Earth's tectonic plates. "Also known as cryoseisms, frost quakes are caused by a sudden rapid freezing of ground and bedrock, usually when temperatures go from above freezing to below zero."
Dark Chocolate May Be Healthier Than Fruit Juices For A Healthy Heart: Study. This sounds too good to be true, right? There seems to be some sound science to back this up, but first I want to see if the Chocolate Lobby funded this study. From a story in the New York Daily News: "Forget fruit juice - chocolate could be an even better way to boost your health, new research shows. Dark chocolate and cocoa have more anti-oxidant capacity than fruit juice, according to a study released Sunday in the Chemistry Central Journal. Chocolate products also have more heart-healthy flavanols and polyphenol, the study found. The good news doesn't apply to hot cocoa mix, which is processed. "When looking for a sweet snack, a square of dark chocolate might, in fact, be your healthiest choice," said Suzanne Steinbaum, a cardiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in Manhattan.
* Thanks to WeatherNation meteorologist Todd Nelson for filling in last week on this blog while I was thawing out. I appreciate it LT!
Paul's SC Times Outlook for St. Cloud and all of central Minnesota:
TODAY: Clearing, cooler, winds ease, cooler than average (but still 10 degrees milder than average) Winds:. NW 10-20. High: 34
MONDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Low: 23
TUESDAY: Dim sun, windy, "above average". High: 39
WEDNESDAY: More hints of spring. Some sunshine streaming through high clouds. High: 43
THURSDAY: Serious drippage. Drizzle possible - feels like March. High: 46
FRIDAY: Colder, mix turns to wet snow - a slushy accumulation is possible. High: 28
SATURDAY: Colder, passing flurries, feels like February again. High: 21
SUNDAY: Seasonably cold and cloudy - snow may stay south of town late Sunday and Sunday night. High: 27
Winter Survival 101
Living in Minnesota for 26 (winters) I've discovered a few tricks for maintaining some sense of sanity: wearing undershirts, investing in a good space heater, a sun-mimicking "full spectrum" lightbulb in my favorite reading lamp, and a few well-timed escapes. Is it me or is the ANTICIPATION of a southern vacation nearly as good as the actual get-away? Any guilt is quickly erased by returninto 2,000 e-mails, voice mails and urgent texts. Because none of us are expected to disconnect from The Matrix. My new definition of Heaven includes no bills (or Wi-Fi).
How the maps have changed, morphed, in the week I've been away. The jet stream has shifted, allowing Pacific air to finally chew away at those dagger-like icicles and glacier-size drifts in your yard.
Near 50 on February 13? Grilling weather! The greater the contrast in temperature, the faster winds have to blow to keep the atmosphere in equilibrium. That's why we'll see plenty of wind, fog and drizzle later this week as 40s return. Some new weather-words.
We'll see more snow and cold ahead, but the sun is as high in the sky now as late October. The upshot? The coldest subzero nights are now behind us. Hallelujah!
Armageddon Time Again Already? No, not every weather event (or news headline) can be linked to climate change, but some economists, insurance companies and Pentagon analysts are attempting to connect the dots, as described in this article at salon.com: "Global warming, bad weather, rising food prices, massive demonstrations in the Mideast -- Paul Krugman's Monday New York Times column provocatively connects the dots. 2010 was a year packed with an unusual profusion of floods, droughts, mega-blizzards and heat waves -- a pattern of extreme events considered by many climate scientists to be the expected result of higher temperatures. The weather played havoc with grain harvests in Russia, Australia, China and many other regions, sharply depressing production. Global food prices consequently hit record highs in January -- fueling popular discontent in Egypt, Yemen and Tunisia....The evidence does, in fact, suggest that what we're getting now is a first taste of the disruption, economic and political, that we'll face in a warming world. And given our failure to act on greenhouse gases, there will be much more, and much worse, to come."
Record Arctic Sea Ice Loss in January, 2011. Some VERY strange things have been witnessed over the Arctic region this winter, from Alaska and northern/eastern Canada to Greenland - some things meteorologists have never seen before. Jeff Masters reports on the negatively-phased Arctic Oscillation, coupled with a persistent NAO (North American Oscillation) that funneled unusually mild air into much of the Arctic Region in December 2010 and January 2011 in his Wunderblog: "Arctic sea ice extent for January 2011 was the lowest on record for the month, and marked the second consecutive month a record low has been set, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center.
....The warm temperatures in Canada and record sea ice loss in the Arctic were also due, in part, to a strong negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation (AO). The Arctic Oscillation and its close cousin, the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) are naturally occurring pressure patterns in the Arctic and mid-latitudes. A negative AO and NAO results when we have weaker than normal low pressure over the Arctic, and weaker than normal high pressure over the Azores Islands. This fosters an easterly flow of air off the warm Atlantic Ocean into the Canadian Arctic, and also weakens the winds of the polar vortex, the ring of counter-clockwise spinning winds that encircles the Arctic. A weaker polar vortex allows cold air to spill southwards out of the Arctic into eastern North America and Western Europe. Thus, the strongly negative AO and NAO the past two winters have been largely responsible for the cold and snowy winters in these regions, and exceptionally warm conditions in the Arctic."
Cherry-Picking Data To Hide The Disappearance Of Arctic Ice. Anyone can pluck a single factoid and craft a narrative around it to "prove" a case or validate an argument. But does it hold up when all the available data is factored in? Another bad example of bad science highlighted in this article - here's an excerpt: "As the climate science continues to strengthen, and as the observational data around the world continue to accumulate, those who deny the reality or severity of human-induced climate change are getting increasingly desperate. As evidence piles up and as our weather worsens, their positions get weaker and weaker and their claims that the climate isn't changing, or isn't changing because of human actions get harder to support, their voices get more strident, and their language and vitriol get uglier. Climate deniers cannot make a case against human-caused climate change without desperately manipulating, misrepresenting, or simply misunderstanding the science. While there are examples of their bad science (BS) every day, a particularly egregious case has played out in New Mexico in the past week."
Skepticism vs. Denial. Skepticism is healthy, a natural part of life (and science). Scientists are - by their nature - born skeptics, and highly competitive with each other. The fact that an estimated 97% of the thousands of peer-reviewed professional climate scientists worldwide agree on ANYTHING is a pretty big deal. Could they all be wrong? Absolutely, but until a better theory comes along that (better) explains what the data is showing - I'll stick with the experts. More on skepticism and it's role in science in this pdf.
Climate As The New Dirty Word? In spite of overwhelming scientific evidence many people are still a). confused, or b). skeptical about climate change. Nothing like a cold, snowy winter to make a significant percentage of people fixate on (short-term) weather and miss the larger (long-term) global climate trends. Should we give up on trying to communicate climate science and focus on green energy (which should, over time, reduce carbon emissions). Focus more on (job-producing) new energy alternatives, less on the science, and hope that things just work out over time? From a Reuters article: "A new movie on climate change, called Carbon Nation, debuts this week. It’s positioned as the anti-Al Gore climate change movie. Basically, you don’t have to believe in the science of climate change to watch the movie and want to support clean power and greener transportation. While I’m not supporting ignoring science, there’s clearly been a growing movement around re-marketing climate change over the past few months, and I think that’s generally a positive move. In President Obama’s State of the Union Speech, he called for 80 percent clean power and touted green businesses, but didn’t state the issues of climate change head on, much to the dismay of environmentalists. But clearly, the climate change coinage isn’t working all that well. A year ago, the now-infamous Gallup poll found that almost half of Americans thought the threat of climate change was exaggerated. And as The Daily Show‘s John Stewart has spoofed so well, there’s been a lack of successful federal energy policy over the past eight Presidents. From the Obama administration’s perspective, why play into American skepticism? Instead, focus on the economic benefits of a green economy."
$110 Billion In Climate Change Damage In 2010. A U.K. climate researcher reports 375 natural disasters across the planet last year which may have been impacted by a warmer (stormier) atmosphere, resulting in an estimated 300,000 deaths, displacing some 207 million people. More details here.
Climate Scientists Sues Skeptic For Libel. A story from the New York Times: "A prominent Canadian climate scientist is suing a leading climate skeptic for libel, arguing that an article published online in January contained false and malicious claims. Andrew Weaver, a climate modeler at the University of Victoria, filed the lawsuit against Tim Ball, a former professor of geography at the University of Winnipeg and a vocal critic of the science linking man-made emissions to global warming, over an article published by the Canada Free Press, a conservative Web site. The article described Dr. Weaver, who was lead author for the 2007 United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, as lacking a basic understanding of climate science and incorrectly stated that he would not take part in the next I.P.C.C. panel because of concerns about its credibility. Dr. Weaver is already involved in the preparation of the next report from the panel and has never said that he was ending his involvement with it."
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