If you believe the forecasts, it will rain, possibly storm, then snow, while the temps are well above freezing. The ground is certainly warm still. By the time we get near 32, it looks like the precipitation will be pretty much gone.geonuc wrote:Ice storms maybe?Thumper wrote:Rain and 62 yesterday, rain and possible T-storms today, snow tonight, low of 17 tomorrow.
We appreciate it. It's been cold enough for the last day that the snow is still on the ground. Not for long. Temps heading back up, close to 60's over the weekend.pumpkinpi wrote:We sent it your way! Single digits the past two days to start. It's 21 now, on the way to 43.
I heard the peepers last night. Way too early.Swift wrote:On Sunday I saw red-winged blackbirds at the near-by National Park. That seems crazy early. I haven't even seen a turkey vulture yet.
Thumper wrote:Weren't you reporting a prolonged drought last summer?
SciFiFisher wrote:Thumper wrote:Weren't you reporting a prolonged drought last summer?
It won't be as prolonged as it was.
Weirdly enough we have had a drought for so long that these storms help but not as much as people might think. For one thing, in a lot of areas, the run off winds up essentially going down the "drain" to the ocean. We don't have enough capacity to store the excess we might get in a short period. And it takes a loooooong time to restore the aquifers.
pumpkinpi wrote:Record warmth today and the past three. Snowstorm starting tomorrow night, we could get up to a foot.
I'm not complaining. I've been riding my bike to work because the roads are clear--yay!
And I love snowstorms, and am looking forward to skiing again!
The only complaint is that this wide variance at this time of year is not normal for Minnesota. It's even been a significant change since I moved here 10 years ago. The snow never used to completely melt in the middle of the winter.
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