Are you dreaming of a white Christmas?
Here’s a handy map. Click it or follow this link to zoom in interactively on your city or town.
Minnesota. Maine. Upstate New York. The Allegheny Mountains of Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Practically anywhere in Idaho. And of course, the Rockies or the Sierra Nevada Mountains. These are the parts of the Lower 48* where weather history suggests you want to be if you’re looking for the best chance of a white Christmas.
The map at right shows the historic probability of there being at least 1 inch of snow on the ground in the Lower 48 states on December 25 based on the latest (1981-2010) U.S. Climate Normals from NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). The background map shows interpolated values for all locations. (Interpolating means estimating unknown values using known values and physical relationships, such as the way temperature is known to change with altitude.) You can also click and zoom in to specific stations used for the interpolation.
Darkest gray shows places where the probability is less than 10%. (Sorry West Coast, Gulf Coast, Deep South!) White shows probabilities greater than 90 percent.
The 1981–2010 Climate Normals are the latest three-decade averages of several climatological measurements. This collection contains daily and monthly normals of temperature, precipitation, snowfall, heating and cooling degree days, frost/freeze dates, and growing-degree days calculated from observations at approximately 9,800 stations operated by NOAA’s National Weather Service.
While the map shows the historical probability that a snow depth of at least one inch will be observed on December 25, the actual conditions in any year may vary widely from these because the weather patterns present will determine the snow on the ground or snowfall on Christmas day. These probabilities are useful as a guide only to show where snow on the ground is more likely. For prediction of your actual weather on Christmas Day, check out your local forecast at Weather.gov.
If you would like to keep track of the snowfall across the United States on a daily basis, see the National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center’s National Snow Analyses. For a more detailed assessment of the probability of a white Christmas as well as documentation of the methodology used to calculate the map’s underlying climatological statistics, see the scientific paper, White Christmas? An Application of NOAA’s 1981-2010 Daily Normals, by NCEI scientists and published in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. You can also download a spreadsheet to see the full list of stations and their historic probabilities.
*The station network in Alaska is too sparse to allow scientists to interpolate with confidence.
From NOAA/NCEI Authors: Susan Osborne Rebecca Lindsey
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Circulation in the Pacific still does not indicate El Niño.
https://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/soi/
I’m dreaming of May and seeing dirt again. It’s been winter in Northern Maine for two months already. I define winter as, “wearing longjohns and plowing snow”.
Thank you for this. I’m having a good laugh because I’ve just come inside from plowing two foot drifts of global warming. Tomorrow I’ll have to rake some global warming off the roof in preparation for a predicted freezing rain and rain event on Friday. Ugh.
The Sky Really Is Falling financially for potato growers across Canada and some of my neighbors as well. Thousands of acres of potatoes are still in the ground, and now ruined, which represents many millions of dollars of losses.
I wonder if they qualify for some of that “climate change” money we’re all supposed to cough up.
I guess I am spoiled, as it is a rarity that we DON’T have a white Christmas in MN. It is all I have ever known. Nothing better than wood heat on a snowy Christmas in a cabin in the woods.
Stick around. Big change for the weather in the Eastern 2/3s of the country around the middle of January.