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Redneck Fishing. Is your ice house off the lake? Might be a good idea to get serious about getting it off - soon would be good.
Welcome to a well-earned, hard-fought March! We made it - today is not only March 1, but the kick off of "Meteorological Spring"! Say what? O.K. Here's the deal: apparently Mother Nature does not consult the calendar. If you look at what is (historically) the coldest 90 days of winter - and who among us hasn't - winter really begins close to December 1, not the 21st. And it ends closer to March 1, not the 21st of March. Yes, the coldest days (and nights) of winter are behind us now. We may still have a couple of subzero lows, although so far this winter we've enjoyed fewer subzero nights (33) vs. a typical winter (39). Odds are we'll see at least another 10-15" of snow, but there's a big difference between March snow and January snow. January snows tend to linger, seemingly indefinitely. When it snows in March (when the sun angle is as high in the sky as it is in early/mid October) any accumulation tends to melt rapidly, usually within a few days. March snow is - temporary. I know it's awfully hard to believe gazing out at the seemingly immovable glacier in your yard - but most of the snow you're staring out at now will be gone by the end of the month (when the average high will be close to 50 degrees).
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* St. Cloud has seen a TRACE of precipitation since February 9. For the month: 9.2" snow (about 2" less than average for the month). I'm waiting for official confirmation from the MN State Climatology Office, but I'm pretty sure that February was SIGNIFICANTLY sunnier than average, based on the weather-winning-streak of sunny day we've enjoyed since mid February.
* February temperatures averaged .9 F cooler than average in St. Cloud, based on NWS data.
* March Smog? With high pressure stalled almost directly over Minnesota, producing unusually light winds (and a strong inversion - temperatures rising with altitude) man-made pollutants may collect near the ground. I half expect the MPCA to issue another air pollution advisory this week. Stay tuned.
* Weather in Vancouver officially receives the mud-medal, for what may be the lousiest, warmest, rainiest, foggiest weather in recent memory. It was too warm to use snow-making machines (temperatures have to be consistently below freezing for compressed air and water to turn into a snowy spray). Snow had to be trucked (and helicoptered) in from hundreds of miles away from Vancouver. Daytime highs consistently in the 40s contributed to some of the worst snow/ice conditions ever seen during a Winter Olympic event, and the outlook for Sochi, Russia four years from now for the 2014 Winter Olympics is questionable at best. Saturday's high in Sochi was 57, a morning low of 44. Ouch. Here is an interesting story on marginal Winter Olympic city venues - cities can make a lot of promises to IOC Olympic officials; the one thing they have no control over is the weather. Unlike Salt Lake City or Turin, Italy, weather in Vancouver (and Sochi) is extremely marginal for a successful event. Everything would have to go like clockwork from a meteorological standpoint. Sadly, it didn't. That said, it was still a pretty amazing spectacle - I was still hoping for a Grand Snowball Finale, a spirited snowball fight between all the nations of the world with fireworks going off overhead. Dream on...
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Paul's SC Times Outlook for the St. Cloud and all of central Minnesota:
Today: Plenty of sun, feels like March out there! Winds: NW 5-10. High: 36
Tonight: Mostly clear and chilly. Low: 12
Tuesday: Blue sky, unusually light winds. High: 34
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, serious PM dripping. Low: 11. High: 35
Thursday: Lingering sun, a bit milder. Low: 13. High: 37
Friday: Sunny start, then increasing clouds. Low: 15. High: 38
Saturday: Cloudy, a little very light rain/snow - probably wet roads. Low: 20. High: 36
Sunday: Steadier, heavier rain developing. Low: 25. High: 35
Monday (March 8): A cold rain changes back to snow - slushy accumulation possible. High: 34 (falling)
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