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Winter 2013 - 2014 Banter Thread


NEG NAO

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February is statistically our snowiest month. Starting next week we really enter the prime of our snow season which ends President's Day weekend. Once you get into the last week of February we can of course still get snow but the odds begin falling. Sun angle starts becoming an issue into March. By then I'm ready for Spring anyway.

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February is statistically our snowiest month. Starting next week we really enter the prime of our snow season which ends President's Day weekend. Once you get into the last week of February we can of course still get snow but the odds begin falling. Sun angle starts becoming an issue into March. By then I'm ready for Spring anyway.

The first week of February typically marks the halfway point for seasonal snowfall. Even if we're only at 20" by that point we can still potentially double it.

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February is statistically our snowiest month. Starting next week we really enter the prime of our snow season which ends President's Day weekend. Once you get into the last week of February we can of course still get snow but the odds begin falling. Sun angle starts becoming an issue into March. By then I'm ready for Spring anyway.

You are speaking for your area only.

My location, we can get snow into April.

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February is statistically our snowiest month. Starting next week we really enter the prime of our snow season which ends President's Day weekend. Once you get into the last week of February we can of course still get snow but the odds begin falling. Sun angle starts becoming an issue into March. By then I'm ready for Spring anyway.

I agree with this. I'm ready for spring. Start mowing and mulching. Cold and dry with dusting are just annoying. Plus all other activities that come with warmer weather

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Typically January is the least snowiest month of the season.

Plenty of time left for a short term storm to develop.

 

 

January is the least snowiest month? I always thought February was the snowiest, followed by January, March and December. Hard to believe December averages more snow than January. That doesn't sound right.

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January is the least snowiest month? I always thought February was the snowiest, followed by January, March and December. Hard to believe December averages more snow than January. That doesn't sound right.

 He is wrong February is the snowiest month in most areas of the Northeast...followed by January...then March and December are fairly close.

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You are speaking for your area only.

My location, we can get snow into April.

 

The low spots in North Jersey average about an inch of snow in April...the high spots...1 to 3 inches...so no big difference.

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I just checked. January averages 7.5" of snow in NYC while December averages 5.5". March averages 5". So Darkstar, you're incorrect when you say January is the least snowiest month of the winter. December and March average less. February is the snowiest with an 8.5" average.

 

 

thanks for checking. I have never lived in the city,

I trust your are correct for averages.

For locations 20-50 miles NW of  I 95, I know the snowiest months are December & February.

 

Best.

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thanks for checking. I have never lived in the city,

I trust your are correct for averages.

For locations 20-50 miles NW of  I 95, I know the snowiest months are December & February.

 

Best.

No, the snowiest months are February...then January...then December or March where you are as well...or the general region you cite.

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Correct, my last snow last year was on the March 16th last year at 6 inches.

I was only poking when I mentioned April. Odds only favor a dusting to 2 inches if at all in April.

 

Best.

 

April snow is common in higher parts of Northern New Jersey...but does not occur every April...which tends to knock the mean down to the aforementioned one to three inches...off to your northeast...in the Litchfield Hills of NW Connecticut, April snowfall is a good deal heavier...averaging between 5 and 10 inches.

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No, the snowiest months are February...then January...then December or March where you are as well...or the general region you cite.

 

you maybe correct. I typically find January to produce less snow compared to other months recently.(feel free to produce records).

I do recall many years with no snow living in the Philadelphia burbs through.

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April snow is common in higher parts of Northern New Jersey...but does not occur every April...which tends to knock the mean down to the aforementioned one to three inches...off to your northeast...in the Litchfield Hills of NW Connecticut, April snowfall is a good deal heavier...averaging between 5 and 10 inches.

 

Norfolk, CT, perched at 1337', picked up 10 inches of snow yesterday...once again living up to their reputation as the snowiest town in CT.

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Norfolk, CT, perched at 1337', picked up 10 inches of snow yesterday...once again living up to their reputation as the snowiest town in CT.

 

Norfolk, Connecticut, is a small village in the northwestern corner of the state, about 5 miles south of the Massachusetts border.  It is situated in Litchfield County and has an elevation of 1337 feet above mean sea level.  The remarkable thing about this town is that its average annual snowfall was, from 1952 -1973, a whopping 110 inches...the same amount of snow that falls in Caribou, Maine in a normal year.  Even Pittsfield, Massachusetts (elevation 1170 feet) only receives 78 inches per year - and Pittsfield is 30 miles north-northwest of Norfolk.  The average has come down a bit over the past 40 years or so...down to the mid 90's...but still exceptional.  

 

Norfolk is snowier than Pittsfield because Norfolk is on the eastern slopes of the Litchfield Hills and easterly winds are forced upslope, creating orographic enhancement of the precipitation. Pittsfield is on the western slopes of the Berkshires and stormy east winds sink and compress as they come down the hills, promoting drying.  Moreover, Norfolk is near the top of a quasi-plateau, and this is even more snow inducing than being on a mountaintop, as it tends to wring all the moisture out of the air. Many years ago, when I first heard of the incredible (for a non-lake effect station) snow totals that are often recorded in Norfolk, I did not believe them.  So, I drove up to the town on a few occasions immediately following storms that had brought a mixed bag of precipitation to southern New England, and there was never less than a foot of snow on the ground in the village of Norfolk.  But it still seems astonishing that this town,  just 60 miles north of Bridgeport, can rack up such impressive snow amounts.

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Norfolk, Connecticut, is a small village in the northwestern corner of the state, about 5 miles south of the Massachusetts border.  It is situated in Litchfield County and has an elevation of 1337 feet above mean sea level.  The remarkable thing about this town is that its average annual snowfall was, from 1952 -1973, a whopping 110 inches...the same amount of snow that falls in Caribou, Maine in a normal year.  Even Pittsfield, Massachusetts (elevation 1170 feet) only receives 78 inches per year - and Pittsfield is 30 miles north-northwest of Norfolk.  The average has come down a bit over the past 40 years or so...down to the mid 90's...but still exceptional.  

 

Norfolk is snowier than Pittsfield because Norfolk is on the eastern slopes of the Litchfield Hills and easterly winds are forced upslope, creating orographic enhancement of the precipitation. Pittsfield is on the western slopes of the Berkshires and stormy east winds sink and compress as they come down the hills, promoting drying.  Moreover, Norfolk is near the top of a quasi-plateau, and this is even more snow inducing than being on a mountaintop, as it tends to wring all the moisture out of the air. Many years ago, when I first heard of the incredible (for a non-lake effect station) snow totals that are often recorded in Norfolk, I did not believe them.  So, I drove up to the town on a few occasions immediately following storms that had brought a mixed bag of precipitation to southern New England, and there was never less than a foot of snow on the ground in the village of Norfolk.  But it still seems astonishing that this town,  just 60 miles north of Bridgeport, can rack up such impressive snow amounts.

 

Some other interesting things about Norfolk, CT...during the 1955-56 winter, they measured 177.4 inches of snow, including 73.6 inches in March 1956.

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