Would you please be so kind as to cite a source?According to the long range forcasters heavy snow later. February and March. The la Nina is going to fizzle out.
Same here in central CT. Right next to my place, there's a short, steep hill, created when this site was developed. It's hill with a consistent angle, and would make a great sledding hill. Anyways I've really been wanting to practice ice axe self-arrest there, but we haven't had enough snow in like 3-4 years to be able to go play around on it, with axe or sled.I think we can just say that this is now normal. It's one more reason I'm sick of living in Rhode Island. It's been years since we've had a decent winter!
Human induced global warming is an inconvenient truth. There is no denying it.Is the prediction for less snow due to whatever precipitation falls being rain rather than snow, or is it due to less precipitation of any kind? Things have been pretty dry around here (CT) for the past couple of months, so if that lack of precipitation persists for a few more months, there will certainly be less snow.
But the only thing funnier than the folks who think they can predict the weather a few months from now are the folks who think they can predict the climate 50 years from now.
Course, they could get lucky...
Would you please be so kind as to cite a source?
https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/ensodisc.htmlWould you please be so kind as to cite a source?
“In summary, La Niña is most likely to emerge in October-December 2024 (57% chance) and is expected to persist through January-March 2025.”
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