Snow and Storms at Easter in Europe, Canada, and USA

Heavy snow is predicted for West Berkshire

More indicators of a colder than normal winter continuing in the northern hemisphere.

From the London Telegraph:

Britain is enduring its most miserable Easter for 25 years as Arctic winds sweep in, bringing snow, hail and sleet.

Easter Sunday temperatures could drop to as low as -3C at night with a band of snow and sleet forecast to move down from the North. The bad weather is most likely to affect the Midlands but snow could even reach London, forecasters said.

From the Sofia news agency:

Bulgaria Meets Vernal Equinox With Snow, Sun Gleams

From This is London:

It’s Bad Friday: Britain braced for worst Easter weather in 25 years as country is battered by gales and sleet.

From the Stars and Stripes:

Snow hits Germany military bases with more possible for Easter.

From CTV.ca

‘Spring’ weather nasty for Eastern Canada

Also from CTV.ca

Six more weeks of winter, top weatherman forecasts

From KDKA-TV:

Snow Advisory In Effect For Parts Of Western Pa

From RedOrbit:

Nebraskans and Iowans heading east for the Easter weekend were experiencing flight delays or snow-covered roads today, and the troubles could continue into Saturday.

From the Detroit Free Press:

Heavy snow across Michigan and points west meant increasing cancellations and delays at Metro Airport today, with things getting worse as snow piled up.

From swissinfo.ch

The Easter break has started with heavy snowfall and strong winds in Switzerland, causing some disruption to traffic.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
47 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
dearieme
March 22, 2008 4:35 pm

Here in East Anglia we’re having wind, snow and hail – it’s our first cold weather since December.

coaldust
March 22, 2008 8:54 pm

Just saw a post on solarcylce24.com refering to this article:
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23411799-7583,00.html
which refers to NASAs Aqua satellite, which I never heard of before today. According to the article, the data from the Aqua satellite indicates that increased warming (from CO2 or any other soucrce) causes a decrease in water vapor! If this is correct, then AGW is D-E-A-D. RIP.
The result does not surprise me because the climate system has a lot of negative feedbacks. The article does not state that magnitude of the feedback.
Don’t count on this appearing in the MSM anytime soon. When the truth finally does come out, I predict that the “climate change” crowd (don’t call them AGWers) will say: Oops we had it wrong. The sun has had this warming influence over the past century and we didn’t see it in the data before, but now look, clearly, there is it. Now the sun is going to a less active stage. And, CO2 causes a decrease in water vapor, cooling the earth. Oh my! Man is causing an ice age! Stop putting out CO2!
I hope that can’t get away with something like this but I’ve seen enough that I wouldn’t count it out. Hopefully there are enough people out there that can see how two faced this argument is. Or perhaps the the climate change crowd will go crawl into a hole somewhere. Place your bets.

tamborineman
March 22, 2008 11:30 pm

How would the IPCC rewrite their SPMs for global cooling?- “all policy makers must introduce additional GHG producing industries, required increase 90% by 2050– mandated maximum 10 mpg for all shopping trolleys to commence immediately–lights must be left on at all times”etc?
Coaldust, if I could get money on at IPCC odds [95% certain = 19: 1] I’d be in it like a flash. Know any possibilities?

Magnus A
March 23, 2008 2:44 am

pekke: Tjenixen! You’re right, winter in the list of records should be between december and februari, and we had a typical La Nina winter, just as 1999.
Unfortenately a few AGW supporters here in Sweden used this winter in Sweden – a winter pretty cold globally – as an argument. Also I’ve never heard about the globally cold winter yet in the media. Surprice surprice? Not! 🙁
But I think it’s right to not use one year of cold weather/climate to disprove the sloppy AGW scince. There are lots of far better argument against it. But if the coldness prevail that will be a problem for AGW apologists, the present political aganda and …the holy discourse of our times(?).

Stan Needham
March 23, 2008 5:51 am

Or perhaps the the climate change crowd will go crawl into a hole somewhere. Place your bets.
I’ll place two bets: (1) they will not go down without a fight because a whole lot of money as well as thousands of careers are resting on the outcome; and (2) they will never admit to being wrong but simply find a new “crisis” to champion and start all over again.

Evan Jones
Editor
March 23, 2008 9:48 am

In that case, Stan, they must be isolated.

Evan Jones
Editor
March 23, 2008 12:35 pm

What enrages my sensibilities the most in this whole debate is the false appeal to Pascal’s flutter.
The entire premise of Pascal (and expanded upon by Santayana in regard to the aesthetics) is that there is nothing to lose on the caution side of the equation.
There is everything to lose. Everything. There is the price of the continuation of mass death in the third and fourth world. There is the price of technological advance which can only be fueled by an intensity of wealth that does not today exist.
Technology which will make climate control a trivial solution.
Technology which will trnasform mankind and save the ecology of the planet.
Technology which will regenerate and rebuild our cells and prolong our lives, perhaps indefinitely.
Technology which will house and provide overplentiful resources cleanly for a hundred, where one was housed before, using less land providing more elbow-room than ever in history.
Technology which will bring an end of the great historical causes of human misery.
We are at a tipping point, all right. The great, glorious tipping point of humanity. The first time in history when “interesting times” is NOT an ancient Chinese curse.
THAT is what we are asked to sacrifice on the bloody altar of anti-industrialism.
Not only that, but it is widely acknowledged, even among its proponents, that Kyoto, even if implemented and upheld, would produce a miniscule result. Kyoto whould choke off wealth to an extent where mankind could not cope with climate severe change (in either direction) even stipulating that is is a real, severe, and anthropogenic problem.
Those who stand in the way of progress stand Pascal on his very head.
Kyoto is a promise by the great nations of the world to halt the progress of mankind. “I urge you to break this promise.”

March 23, 2008 12:55 pm

FWIW It tried to snow on the higher ground of the French Riviera today. Was only a few spots but there was distinct solid white stuff hitting the ground briefly. Also a dusting of snow was observable on the higher north facing slopes
Observed location: Le Broc and points above it alt 500-900m approx 15km inland from Nice.

Alex Cull
March 23, 2008 1:05 pm

Here in London we have had some light snow falling this morning (Easter Sunday). It has been too wet for the snow to settle, but it is still raw out there. Tomorrow we’re down to a max temperature of 3 degrees Celsius, with further wintry showers to come. They’re making snowmen up in Yorkshire!

old construcker worker
March 23, 2008 5:45 pm

I’m not worried about “the team” crawling into a hole. I want to stop the “BOYS and Girls” in Washington from any type of CO2 regulations.
By the way how many of you have read the NAPC study 308?
An Audit of the IPCC report
http://www.ncpa.org/pub/st/308

Magnus A
March 24, 2008 1:09 am

old construcker worker:
Thx a lot for the tip! Havn’t heard about it; this is only a URL correction:
http://www.ncpa.org/pub/st/st308/

AGWscoffer
March 24, 2008 4:58 am

This morning we had snowfall here near Bremen Germany. According to weather records, it’s the first March 24 snowfall since 1969.

AGWscoffer
March 24, 2008 5:09 am

I’ve noticed lately that it hasn’t been possible to write comments at the forum of the USA Today online weather page.
Maybe they’ve noticed that many of the readers are skeptics like me and Seth Borenstein and Co. got tired of us debunking their twisted AGW stories.

Alan D. McIntire
March 24, 2008 5:27 am

Slightly off topic, but here’s a simple way to compute the date of Easter:
“A simple program, used by the western church in computing the date of Easter, also giving accurate moon phases within a day or two is the following:
In this system, March is month 1, April is month 2, and so on. January
is month 11 of the prior year, February is month 12 of the prior year.
For a concrete example, let’s consider the phase of the moon on March 21,
1997.
1. Divide the year by 19, consider only the remainder. 1997/19 has a
remainder of 2
2.multiply the remainder by 11. 2*11=22
3.Add 8. 22+8=30.
4.Divide the number of centuries by 4, ignoring the remainder. There are
19 centuries in 1997, 19/4=4 plus a remainder. 30+4=34
5.Divide the number of centuries by 3, ignoring the remainder. 19/3=6
plus a remainder. 34+6=40.
6. Subtract the number of centuries in the year. 40-19=21.
7. Add the month number. March is month 1, 21+1=22.
8. Add the day of the month. March 21 is the 21st day of the month,
22+21=43. For a total over 30, cast out 30s. 43-30=13 so the moon
was 13 days old on March 21, 1997. 0 days would be a new moon, 15 days a
full moon. For calculating Easter, the spring equinox is assumed to
be on March 21. Easter is the first Sunday after the first full moon
occurring on or after the spring equinox. The moon was 13 days old on
March 21, 15 days old on March 21, Easter of 1997 was the first
Sunday after March 23, 1997. ”
Obviously, the earliest date Easter can fall on is March 22 of a given year.

SteveSadlov
March 24, 2008 11:33 am

RE: Brian (12:35:26)
Global food shortage – this year.

March 24, 2008 4:35 pm

I just dropped by your site because google gave me a link when I asked for sunspot activity, 2008 – I thought I would just mention that I live in the N.W. near Seattle. It isn’t warming up here… we get a few sunny days, but no ‘heart breakers’ – the sunny days we get sometimes between wet & chilly spring storms. When I got up this morning NOAA predicted SNOW in the evening. Now they are predicting rain and temps over 32 but below 40.
Winter = rain and warm (35-50) or clear & cold – very few snow storms below 500 ft. S.L.
with a usual ‘heart breaker’ week in mid-Feb. — didn’t have it this year. I don’t think we have seen much of anything over 58 F ( I admit I I might have missed it, but I doubt it.)
Thanks for the information. My husband told me about low/ minimum sunspot activity, today.

moptop
March 24, 2008 5:11 pm

Even the ice fishermen are sick of this winter. Not kidding.

Michael Ronayne
March 25, 2008 2:23 am

The Weather Anomaly Which Must Not Be Named.
There have been many reports in the news media of the rising food prices. One of the hardest hit crops is rice which is a staple food for billons of the world’s population. Three recent news reports in Google News attribute the rising prices to poor harvests caused primarily by “Abnormal Weather”, “Bad Weather” and “Erratic Weather”
Memo to Arroyo forecasts rice crisis: KMP
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=112750
Abnormal weather
The NFA memo also cited Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration’s (PAGASA) forecast of “abnormal weather” conditions this year as a factor for the projected rice shortage.
“The abnormal weather condition will more likely result to stress the standing palay crop, more especially during its booting stage which would result to low yields,” the NFA said.
The DA memo also noted that Vietnam and China have “now imposed volume limitations on their rice exports.”
Philippines Takes Steps to Secure Rice Supplies as World Prices Rise
http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-03-19-voa17.cfm
A number of factors are cutting world production of rice and driving up the cost. Secretary Yap says bad weather hurt crops in Thailand and Vietnam, which are leading exporters, and also cut production in China, a major consumer of rice.
“China’s winter harvest has been wrecked,” Yap said. “You’ve got flooding in Thailand, flooding in Vietnam. You’ve got high prices of fuel for transportation. Urea fertilizer is 150 percent higher in the last two years.”
The imminent crisis in rice
http://www.pcij.org/blog/?p=2256
Various reasons have been blamed for the sharp slide in supply: erratic weather; natural disasters; soaring fuel and transport costs; supply hoarding and smuggling; conversion of agricultural lands to cash crops, biofuel production, and other commercial purposes, etcetera.
Even as early as February 2008 weather related food price problems were being reported.
Worldwide shortage of rice shoots prices soaring
http://www.independent-bangladesh.com/200802212190/business/worldwide-shortage-of-rice-shoots-prices-soaring.html
The causes of the shortages and high prices are diverse, and vary from country to country. They include natural disasters or adverse weather; high fuel prices, which add to transport costs;
In South-east Asia, rice traders are waiting for the results of the rice harvest in another major producing country in the region—Vietnam.
Exactly what is this mysterious weather anomaly which doesn’t have a name? Other news sources provide us with a clue but don’t look for them on Google News. Fortunately Ice Age Now ( http://www.iceagenow.com/2007_Other_Parts_of_the_World.htm ) has been recording some of the events.
Severe cold spell kills over 13,500 cattle (In Vietnam)
http://www.nhandan.com.vn/english/news/150208/domestic_s.htm
Snow disaster leaves 1.6 mln people frostbitten in NW China province
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-03/02/content_7698015.htm
Searching the official English language news feeds of the Chinese and Vietnamese Communist Parties we learn the identity of the weather anomaly which is impacting rice production.
China island province faces severe agricultural losses for cold weather
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-02/29/content_7689597.htm
Hai Duong farmers fight cold to save rice
http://www.nhandan.com.vn/english/business/140208/business_ha.htm
The culprit for reduced rice production, the weather anomaly which doesn’t have a name is “Cold Temperatures”!
It is a sad commentary on the state of Western Journalism that one has to resort to reading Communist Party news feeds to learn about any event which doesn’t conform to the Anthropogenic Global Warming playbook. In the coming struggle against this new form of world totalitarianism, no news source is to be trusted. We must conduct our own research using multiple independent sources, verify every fact and then re-verify again.
In the meantime we will continue to be feed these lies:
UN makes special appeal for food aid money
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/03/24/europe/EU-GEN-UN-Food-Aid.php
From rice in Peru to miso in Japan, food prices are rising
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/03/25/business/LA-FEA-FIN-Mexico-Fighting-for-Food.php
Mike

SteveSadlov
March 25, 2008 11:09 am

Breaking news – 100 car pileup in Austria. Due to snow.

Gary Gulrud
March 26, 2008 4:41 am

MR: “It is a sad commentary on the state of Western Journalism that one has to resort to reading Communist Party news feeds to learn about any event which doesn’t conform to the Anthropogenic Global Warming playbook.”
Brutal and quotable.

SteveSadlov
March 26, 2008 1:00 pm

I’m definitely going to Costco this weekend. Got to top off preps again, to a higher level.

March 27, 2008 4:00 am

Here in the Catskill Mtns it was as low as 12F this past weekend over night and I heard that the maple syrup season is off to a delayed start from local producers. I seem to remember the prediction that the sap would start flowing in January due to AGW.