Albany Times Union

No snow’s nice — yet unsettling

NYC will set a record Monday for its latest first measurable flakes

- By Kimiko de Freytas-tamura The New York Times

NEW YORK — New Yorkers know that every year won’t bring a white Christmas, but by late January, the city has usually seen enough powder for sleds and snowball fights.

That is not the case this winter. It has been 50 years since the city has waited this long for the first measurable snowfall of the season. It’s a record-tying absence that has made many residents at turns grateful, wistful and worried.

Rachel Reuben, a private chef, is pleased she hasn’t seen measurable snow — which is defined as snow sticking above a tenth of an inch — in New York City over the past 325 days.

According to meteorolog­ists, the city is nearing two snowrelate­d milestones. New York City will set a record Monday for its latest first measurable snow of the winter, beating Jan. 29, 1973.

Less than a week later, New York City could eclipse its longest streak of consecutiv­e days without measurable snow. The record stands at the 332 days set Dec. 15, 2020.

The last time it snowed was March 22. But even as she enjoys the snow-free weather, Reuben feels somewhat uneasy.

“If it’s a harbinger for climate change, then it’s not a happy thing,” Reuben said Saturday as she walked her dogs in Central Park.

She echoed many New Yorkers who said that despite the small joys of not having to shovel snow or hike through streets covered in ash-colored slush, the mild weather felt eerie.

New York City usually sees snow by mid-december, but this snow no-show means New York has fallen more than a month behind its average pace.

New York and other major cities along the Interstate 95 corridor are experienci­ng some of their least snowy seasons of the last half century. Conditions were already in place for a relatively warm start to the winter, meteorolog­ists say: The region has been warmer than usual, thanks in part to La Niña — a recurring climate pattern originatin­g in the Pacific Ocean that is on its third consecutiv­e year.

“We’ve had warm winters in the past, but we’re seeing a lot more of what I like to call the yo-yoing of winters,” said Chris Stachelski, who oversees the East Coast for the National Weather Service.

“We’re seeing more extremes where it’s flipping from very snowy to not very snowy,” he said, adding the pendulum swings have become more frequent. “That’s where you could argue that there might be some definite influence from the overall global weather patterns going on.”

This winter’s extreme variation can be seen in a single stretch of upstate. Syracuse is one of America’s snowiest cities, averaging more than 120 inches annually, but it has received just 25 inches of snow, putting it 3 feet behind the norm for the season. Nearby Rochester has received fewer than 15 inches, compared with a typical 50 inches by this time.

Yet to the west of both cities lies a pocket of intense snow: Buffalo is having one of its snowiest winters of the past 50 years. Half of this season’s snow was dropped during a single, deadly blizzard.

Stachelski said the extreme divergence seen among different parts of New York had to do with storm tracks.

“Normally, we get a lot of our snowstorms from storms that come offshore, coastal storms, nor’easters and occasional­ly smaller amounts come from what we call Alberta clippers,” he said. “And we really haven’t had either of those this winter that would lead to snow.”

Bill Morache, 35, said he missed the snow. Morache, an architectu­ral historian who lives in Morningsid­e Heights, is originally from New Hampshire, a state that periodical­ly receives a lot of snow. He has been in the neighborho­od for about a decade and has been looking at old photos and reminiscin­g about having to dig his car out from under the snow.

“It is real,” he said of climate change. “You can see it happening.”

Stachelski, the meteorolog­ist, cautioned against coming to conclusion­s too soon.

“It’s still too early to stick a fork in winter,” he said. “There have definitely been some winters around here in the last 20 or 30 years where there’s been not much snow in the beginning of the winter, and then at the end, it’s bad.”

 ?? Janice Chung / The New York Times ?? Children play Saturday at the Mary Whalen Playground in Queens. New Yorkers are conflicted by the lack of snow; they don’t miss the hassles of cleaning it up but they do miss the opportunit­ies it offers for recreation.
Janice Chung / The New York Times Children play Saturday at the Mary Whalen Playground in Queens. New Yorkers are conflicted by the lack of snow; they don’t miss the hassles of cleaning it up but they do miss the opportunit­ies it offers for recreation.
 ?? David Dee Delgado / The New York Times ?? The sun rises Saturday on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. The last time it snowed in New York City was March 22, 2022.
David Dee Delgado / The New York Times The sun rises Saturday on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. The last time it snowed in New York City was March 22, 2022.

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