Too early? A snowy, very difficult commute in Calgary Canada this morning. Photo via @mookalicious on Twitter. |
There's nothing like that this year, and no snow on the summits is in the forecast for the foreseeable future.
Sure, it's chilly and wet today, but it's surely not snowy. The forecast calls for near to above normal temperatures for at least the next week.
It might even get almost summery for a time next week. There's a chance it could hit 80 degrees i Vermont then. We'll see.
But it's fall. If it's warm in one place, it has to be chilly in another. Sure enough, western Canada and the northern Rockies fit that wintry bill.
Actually, while we roasted in September, most of Canada was unusually chilly. Only the southeastern part of that country was warm. Yellowknife, in northwestern Alaska, had its coldest September on record and Calgary had its chilliest September since 1985.
Overnight, four to eight inches of snow, with locally higher amounts, really screwed up the morning commute in Calgary. I don't know about you, but I'm not quite ready for a morning like that yet. Let's wait until after Thanksgiving here in Vermont, at least.
The cold air and snow has been starting to bleed across the Canadian border into places like Montana. In Billings, 1.4 inches of snow came down Sunday. Yes, it was still September. Today, in the high elevations around Glacier National Park, winter storm warnings are up as some areas in the peaks will get more than 18 inches of snow.
If anything, this winter pattern will intensify out west next week. It's possible a wide area of the northern Rockies and the western Dakotas could get quite a bit of snow.
It's a little early for that, but not unheard of in that part of the country.
Here in the Northeast, a northward bulge in the jet stream will keep us protected from any real snow, at least through the middle of the month. It's possible the highest peaks could get a little rime ice or flurries in that time, but there will be no snowflakes in the valleys, like we can get this time of year.
Don't worry, winter will come and some of us will probably regret it.
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