33 F. high in St. Cloud Monday.
25 F. average high on February 9.
5 F. high on February 9, 2014, after waking up to -11.
Trace of snow on the ground at KSTC as of Monday evening at 7 PM.
February 9 in Minnesota Weather History. Source: Twin Cities National Weather Service:
1965: Snowstorm dumps 15 inches of snow at Duluth over two days.
1861:
 Ice storm near Elk River. Coatings of a 1/2 inch of ice reported. The 
ice broke off many large branches and saplings were bent to the ground.
1857:
 Extreme cold at Fort Ripley. E.J. Baily, Assistant Surgeon notes : 
"Spirit thermometer -50 at 6am. Mercury frozen in charcoal cup. Spirit 
thermometer at Little Falls 16 miles from the fort -56 at 6am. The 
lowest degree of cold on record in the territory.
Chirp Chirp
Signs
 of spring are popping up, a bit prematurely I fear. My tax accountant 
is leaving me cryptic messages. A pale white light is now visible at 
breakfast and dinner! Progress. And yesterday a few cardinals were 
chirping a happy tune outside my bedroom window. They may be jumping the
 gun.
January was milder than normal, based on a rolling 30-year 
average at MSP. February is 2.4F colder than average, and it's about to 
get even colder.
Arctic air doesn't arrive all at once, it 
comes in waves, like breakers on the beach; each one larger than the one
 before. Temperatures slip below zero Thursday, over the weekend - with 
an even colder surge by the middle of next week. Expect 4 subzero nights
 in the next week. Numbing, but probably not school-closing cold. Unlike
 last winter I see no evidence of polar air stalling nearby, no 
perpetual blocking pattern capable of long-term polar pain.
The 
approach of cold front number one sparks a period of snow this 
afternoon; a quick 2-4" of snow possible, enough to slush up roads later today.
I 
have new respect for what a lousy inch of snow can do to our highways at
 10-15F, but with highs today near 30F most freeways should be wet &
 slushy. In theory.
Staggering Amounts Of Snow in Boston. Over 22" from this last storm, on top of the 4 feet of snow that has fallen in the previous 2 weeks. 
USA TODAY has an article that made me think of Buffalo's ordeal back in December. This is what happens when 
unusually warm ocean water mixes with bitterly cold air pouring out of Canada - record snow events. Here's an excerpt: "...
Monday's
 snow depth in Boston was 37 inches, which was the city's largest depth 
ever recorded since weather records began. The National Weather 
Service's Boston office said on Twitter that the city has received 76.5 
inches of snow so far this winter. But nearby Providence, R.I., got just
 4.2 inches of snow from this storm, the weather service reported. 
Boston set a record for the most snow recorded in a 30-day period, with 
71.8 inches, breaking the record of 58.8 inches set in February 1978..."
Photo credit above: "
Taylor
 LaBrecque digs her car out of a snow pile on Beacon Hill Monday, Feb. 
9, 2015, in Boston. A long duration winter storm that began Saturday 
night remains in effect for a large swath of southern New England until 
the early morning hours Tuesday." (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
Nuisance to Plowable Snowfall.
 No Boston-style snows anytime soon. Beggars can't be choosy. Much of 
the metro will pick up an inch or two today, maybe 3-4" northern 
suburbs, the plowable potential increasing as you head north across the 
metro area. The south metro is not in the Winter Weather Advisory; 
details from the 
Twin Cities National Weather Service:
A POTENT...BUT FAST WINTER STORM WILL SPREAD A BAND OF SNOW ACROSS
THE ADVISORY AREA STARTING LATE TONIGHT IN WESTERN MINNESOTA...AND
MOVE EASTWARD ACROSS CENTRAL AND EAST CENTRAL MINNESOTA BY 9 AM.
THIS AREA OF SNOW WILL MOVE INTO WEST CENTRAL WISCONSIN BY LATE
MORNING. THIS SYSTEM WILL QUICKLY DEPART THE AREA BY TUESDAY
EVENING AS IT MOVES OFF INTO THE GREAT LAKES REGION.
THE HEAVIEST SNOWFALL WILL OCCUR NORTH OF ST. CLOUD MINNESOTA TO
CHIPPEWA FALLS WISCONSIN WHERE LOCALLY 3 TO 5 INCHES WILL
FALL. ELSEWHERE IN THE ADVISORY AREA...A QUICK ONE TO THREE
INCHES OF SNOWFALL WILL OCCUR BEFORE IT TAPERS OFF. SOME SLEET AND
FREEZING RAIN IS ALSO POSSIBLE DURING THE ONSET ACROSS PORTIONS OF
WEST CENTRAL MINNESOTA TUESDAY MORNING.
Fast-Moving Clipper.
 A couple of inches may fall midday into the afternoon hours, but with 
temperatures in the upper 20s MnDOT chemicals should do a better job 
keeping freeways more wet and slushy than snow-covered with this system.
 It may still be a slow PM commute, but I don't expect a rerun of last 
week's nightmare when 1.4" snow fell at ground temperatures in the low 
teens shortly before evening rush hour. That sure was fun. 60-hour 
accumulated snowfall: NOAA NAM model and Aeris Weather.
Cold Bias.
 I count 4 nights below zero, starting Wednesday night, again Friday 
night and next Monday and Tuesday night for good measure. Again, a pale 
imitation of last winter's polar pain, but still cold enough to get your
 attention. After today's clipper the next chance of a little snow comes
 Sunday. A cosmetic snowfall, not a Boston-snow. Graph: Weatherspark.
Bottoming Out Middle of Next Week?
 Various models are converging on the middle of next week for the 
coldest air temperatures, possibly dipping to -10F in the metro, but 
only lasting 1 or 2 nights. Some recovery is likely as we sail into the 
last week of February, but nothing springy is brewing just yet, based on
 GFS guidance from NOAA.
Slow Late-Month Moderation.
 The core of the coldest air shifts into Hudson Bay, eastern Canada and 
northern New England the last week of February with more of a 
modified-Pacific airflow reaching Minnesota. This would favor 
temperatures at or slightly below average with more clippers - no chance
 of southern moisture reaching us with 500 mb winds screaming from the 
northwest. Source: GrADS:COLA/IGES.
Warmer Air And Water Juicing Snowstorms in New England?
 Since 1958 there has been a 71% increase in the most extreme 
precipitation events (rain and snow) across New England. Warmer air 
holds more water vapor, increasing the potential for record amounts of 
precipitation. Here's an excerpt of a post from Climate Nexus: "
As you prepare to report on what is now the fifth
 in a series of snowstorms affecting southern New England, please 
consider some of the following information on the costs of extreme snow 
events and how climate change is linked to extreme events of this 
nature. Having received 61 inches so far this winter, Boston has already
 broken it’s 30-day snowfall record, and is now preparing for another two feet this week. Governor Baker said
 that enough snow has been plowed to fill the Patriot’s stadium 90 
times.  Snowstorms are an expected feature of winter weather in the 
Northeast, but the recent spate of storms in the region exhibits the 
fingerprints of climate change in several distinct ways.Above average sea surface temperatures
 add energy to the system, creating a stronger contrast with the cold 
front. That temperature gradient powers the storm, so a stronger 
gradient means a stronger storm. Also, warmer air holds more moisture, resulting in more precipitation..."
* graphic above courtesy of 
earth.nullschool.net shows Gulf Stream water temperature anomalies 11.5C warmer than average, roughly 14-15F warmer than average for early February.
 But Wait, There's More!
But Wait, There's More!
 One of pet peeves watching reporters doing weather stories. Invariably 
they'll scream into the microphone "...and meteorologists say another 
storm is ON THE WAY!" Uh huh. That's a pretty safe forecast. It's the 
where, when and how much that's problematic. But in the case of Boston, 
it may be true. ECMWF guidance brushes coastal New England with blizzard
 conditions this weekend as polar air invades. Yes, it actually can get 
worse. Map: WSI Corporation.
DSCOVR Satellite To Keep A Weather Eye On Solar Storms.
 It's primary mission is to provide additional early warning for 
potentially dangerous solar flares capable of bringing down the power 
grid. But cameras will also be trained on Earth, to provide (delayed) 
imagery of our planet from space. Here's an excerpt from 
Gizmag: "...
DSCOVR,
 formerly known as Triana, is a first step toward remedying this. It 
began in the late 1990s as an Earth observation satellite. Though DSCOVR
 was built, it ended up in storage when the mission was canceled in 
2001. There it remained until NOAA and the US Air Force took it out of 
mothballs in 2008. It was then refurbished by NASA and equipped with 
updated instruments, while the Air Force offered to foot the bill for a 
SpaceX Falcon 9 launch vehicle to put it into space on a five-year 
mission to provide warnings of incoming solar flares approaching the 
Earth..."
University of Iowa Study: Floods Not Markedly Bigger, But They Are Getting More Frequent. 
The Gazette in Cedar Rapids has a very interesting story - here's a link: "...
The
 central United States — including Iowa — has seen more flood events in 
recent years, although the magnitude of those events has not increased, 
according to a new study out of the University of Iowa. Changes in both 
seasonal rainfall and temperature across the Midwest appear to be 
driving the rise in flood frequency, causing “adverse societal 
consequences” — like decreased food production, displaced communities 
and residents, and other economic losses reaching the billions..."
Photo credit: "
Manhattan Park in Cedar Rapids is inundated by floodwaters from the Cedar River on Sunday, July 6, 2014." (Cliff Jette/The Gazette-KCRG TV9)
Mystery Of The "Milky Rain" In Eastern Washington Solved? It would appear it's Nevada's fault. 
KOMO News has an interesting article about a meteorological mystery; here's an excerpt: "..
.Strange
 things were afoot in eastern Washington and parts of eastern Oregon and
 the Idaho panhandle Friday when the day's rain showers left a bit of a 
milky residue on cars and whatnot...."
Photo credit: "
Photo
 of a dirty, milky substance that has fallen on cars outside the 
National Weather Service office in Spokane, Wash. on Feb. 6, 2015." Photo courtesy: 
National Weather Service, which has a good explanation of how a white rain may have formed.
Send In The Weathermen. The meteorological equivalent of Navy Seals or Delta Force? I had no idea. Check out the article from 
NBC News; here's a clip: "...
He
 was a weatherman. More precisely, he was a special operations weather 
technician, known as a SOWT (pronounced sow-tee). As the Department of 
Defense’s only commando forecasters, SOWTs gather mission-impossible 
environmental data from some of the most hostile places on Earth. They 
embed with Navy SEALs, Delta Force and Army Rangers. Ahead of major 
operations they also head in first for a go/no-go forecast. America’s 
parachutes don’t pop until a SOWT gives the all-clear..."
Hurricane Sandy Turned A New York Subway Station Into a Petri Dish of Antarctic Bacteria. 
Quartz has a fascinating tale; here's a clip: "...
The
 difference almost certainly came down to what Mason calls the 
“molecular echo” of Hurricane Sandy, whose tidal storm surge 
transplanted a colony of fishy, polar sea bugs.
 This is a phenomenon scientists have never before demonstrated—proof 
that, as Mason puts it, “an environmental disaster can be rendered onto 
the surfaces of a given area...” 
Photo credit above: "What lurks beneath?" (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
How Warming May Alter Critical "Atmospheric Rivers". 
Climate Central
 has a summary of new research focused on these firehoses of moisture 
that can turn drought into flood in the meteorological blink of an eye; 
here's a clip: "...
The hose has been turned back on full-force over 
Northern California: A stream of moisture is flowing over the 
drought-riddled state and dropping copious amounts of rain just days 
after the close of one of the driest Januaries on record. The influx of 
much-needed rain comes courtesy of a feature called an atmospheric river
 that is a key source of much of the state’s precipitation and water 
supply. A relatively recent meteorological discovery, these ribbons of 
water vapor in the sky are something scientists are trying to better 
understand. They are flying research planes into the heart of the 
current storm to study what fuels it, which could help improve forecasts
 of the events..."
Your Samsung SmartTV Is Spying On You, Basically.
 Add this to a long and growing list of things to be paranoid about. Be 
careful what you say in front of that big screen television set. Here's 
an excerpt from 
The Daily Beast: "
You
 may be loving your new Internet-connected television and its convenient
 voice-command feature—but did you know it’s recording everything you 
say and sending it to a third party? Careful what you say around your 
TV. It may be listening. And blabbing. A single sentence buried in a 
dense “privacy policy”
 for Samsung’s Internet-connected SmartTV advises users that its nifty 
voice command feature might capture more than just your request to play 
the latest episode of Downton Abbey..."
* Yes, this does bear a 
striking similarity to some of the plot lines in George Orwell's 1984. God help us when the machines take over.
How YouTube Changed The World. 
The Telegraph explains why many legacy media networks remain paranoid about YouTube, and for good reason. Here's a clip: "...
In
 the eight years since, YouTube has become a raucous town square for 
those who aspire to power, good and evil. Isil and KKK propaganda videos
 jostle for attention alongside English town council candidates and 
teenage pranksters. The veteran Middle East reporter, Jeffrey Goldberg, 
recently wrote that extremists no longer bother meeting with 
journalists. “They don’t need a middleman anymore. Journalists have been
 replaced by YouTube..."
The Life, Death, And Rebirth Of BlackBerry's Hometown. 
Fusion has the story; here's a snippet: "...
BlackBerry
 is still alive – it has 7,000 employees worldwide, trades at a market 
value of $5.25 billion, and turned a small profit last quarter – but 
most people here speak about it in the past tense. The company’s market 
value has fallen more than 90 percent from its peak, and it has less 
than a one percent share of the global smartphone market, having been 
reduced to rubble by Apple, Samsung, and other manufacturers years ago. 
President Obama still has his BlackBerry, but most other people ditched 
theirs a while back..." (Image credit: Gabriella PeƱuela).
High-Tech Hotel in Japan Will Be Staffed By Multilingual Robots.
 It's a slippery slope, automation, robotics and computers replacing 
things done by carbon-based lifeforms. Check out this story from 
The Verge; here's an excerpt: "...
This
 summer, a hotel will open in the Netherlands-themed Huis Ten Bosch 
amusement park in Nagasaki, Japan. It will have 72 rooms. Room fees will
 start at $60 per night. And it will be staffed by 10 humanoid robots. 
The Henn-na Hotel's blinking and "breathing" actroids will be able to 
make eye contact, respond to body language, and speak fluent Chinese, 
Japanese, Korean, and English, The Washington Post reports. They will check in guests, carry bags, make coffee, clean rooms, and deliver laundry..."
TODAY: Dry start. Snow develops. 2-4" by evening, a few isolated 5" amounts north/east of St. Cloud. Winds: SE 15. High: 28
TUESDAY NIGHT: Slick roads as snow tapers to flurries. Low: 17
WEDNESDAY: Windy, tumbling temps. Winds: NW 15-30+ High: 20
THURSDAY: Blue sky, light winds. Wake-up: -10. High: 11
FRIDAY: Mostly cloudy, colder surge late. Wake-up: -2. High: 20
 
SATURDAY: Hello January! Wind chill: -20. Wake-up: -9. High: 4
SUNDAY: Next clipper. Light accumulation? Wake-up: -11. High: 15
MONDAY: Gray, snow may stay south. Wake-up: 0. High: 23
Climate Stories...
State Looks At Health Impact of Climate Change. Here's the introduction to a story at 
The Star Tribune: "
Minnesotans
 will suffer from more asthma, respiratory problems, cardiovascular 
disease and such bug-borne diseases as West Nile virus and Lyme disease 
as climate change takes hold across the Upper Midwest, according to a 
new report from the Minnesota Health Department. It’s the latest in a 
series of “vulnerability assessments” that Gov. Mark Dayton ordered from his Cabinet to prepare Minnesota for the inevitable..." (Image: NASA).
White House: Climate Change Threatens National Security. The Hill has the story; here's an excerpt: "...
The
 present day effects of climate change are being felt from the Arctic to
 the Midwest. Increased sea levels and storm surges threaten coastal 
regions, infrastructure, and property. In turn, the global economy 
suffers, compounding the growing costs of preparing and restoring 
infrastructure.” The administration argues that effective action against
 climate change will bolster the security of the United States and its 
allies..."
Will Global Warming Bring More Tornadoes? Here's an excerpt of a story from LiveScience and 
The Christian Science Monitor: "...
Researchers examined how global warming will
 affect severe weather during the heart of tornado season — March, April
 and May. They found that while the yearly tornado total will climb by 
2080, the number of tornadoes will also vary wildly from year to year. 
That's because sometimes, the weather will get stuck in a pattern that 
favors tornadoes,
 and sometimes, conditions will stymie stormy weather, according to the 
report, published Jan. 15 in the journal Climatic Change..."
Graphic credit above: "
Average differences between severe weather in 1980-1990 and 2080-2090. Red means more severe storms, and blue means fewer storms.
" Victor Gensin.
Talking Like Grown-Ups About Climate Change.
 If you could pay a few dollars a month to lower the risk of 
(catastrophic) climate change down the road would you consider it? 
Here's an excerpt of an Op-Ed at 
Bloomberg View: "..
.If
 the second answer is the right one, then there may be an opening for an
 adult conversation about the topic. If we are worried about climate 
change, surely we would be willing to pay something -- at least if it 
isn't a lot -- to reduce the risk. According to some estimates, the U.S.
 could do a lot to reduce greenhouse gases if the average American paid a
 monthly energy tax, targeted to such emissions, of $10, along with an 
equivalent gasoline tax..." (Stock image above: PBS).
Climate Change, Weather Variability Challenge Yukon Quest Mushers. Where's the snow? An anthem being heard from Minnesota to Alaska, it seems. 
Alaska Public Media has the story; here's the intro: "
The
 Yukon Quest International Sled Dog race starts Saturday. For more than 
30 years, the race course has followed an old Gold Rush era trail that 
took advantage of the frozen Yukon River. But recently, there have been 
places where the river hasn’t frozen up. That’s starting to raise 
question about the impacts of climate change on Alaska’s state sport..."
Major Snowstorms In British Columbia Prompt Climate-Change Worries. In at least one case freak midwinter rains have forced one ski resort to close altogether. Here's an excerpt from 
The Globe and Mail: "
Warm
 weather and rain linked to the Pineapple Express weather system is 
forcing Mount Washington Alpine Resort on Vancouver Island to shut down 
its winter operations as of Monday, a rare situation that comes as 
industry operators fear the impact of climate change..."
Quantifying The Impact of Climate Change on Extreme Heat in Australia. The Climate Council has a full report; here's an excerpt of a summary: "...
Climate
 change is making Australia hotter. Hot days are happening more often 
while heatwaves are becoming hotter, longer and more frequent.
- The
 annual number of record hot days across Australia has doubled since 
1960. Over the past 10 years the number of record hot days has occurred 
three times more frequently than the number of record cold days. 
- The
 annual occurrence of very hot days across Australia has increased 
strongly since 1950 and particularly sharply in the last 20 years..."
 
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