Albuquerque Journal

La Nina, stuck jet stream cause weather irregulari­ties

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN

America’s winter wonderland is starting out this season as anything but traditiona­l.

The calendar says December but for much of the country temperatur­es beckon for sandals. Umbrellas, if not arks, are needed in the Pacific Northwest, while in the Rockies snow shovels are gathering cobwebs.

Meteorolog­ists attribute the latest batch of record-shattering weather extremes to a stuck jet stream and the effects of a La Nina weather pattern from cooling waters in the equatorial Pacific.

It’s still fall astronomic­ally, but winter starts Dec. 1 for meteorolog­ists. This year, no one told the weather that.

On Thursday, 65 weather stations across the nation set record high temperatur­e marks for Dec. 2, including Springfiel­d, Missouri, hitting 75 degrees Fahrenheit and Roanoke, Virginia 72 degrees Fahrenheit. Cheyenne, Wyoming, and Billings, Montana, broke long-time heat records by 6 degrees.

Parts of Canada and Montana have seen their highest December records in recorded history. On Friday, parts of South Carolina and Georgia hit record highs.

In Washington state, Seattle, Bellingham and Quillayute all set 90-day fall records for rainfall. Bellingham was doused by nearly two feet of rain. The Olympic and Cascade mountains got hit harder, with more than 50 inches in three months, according to the National Weather Service. Forks, Washington, received more rain in 90 days than Las Vegas gets in 13 years.

On top of that, there is a blizzard warning on Hawaii’s Big Island summits with up to 12 inches of snow expected and wind gusts of more than 100 miles per hour.

Meantime, snow’s gone missing in Colorado. Before this year, the latest first measurable snowfall on record in Denver was Nov. 21, way back in 1934. There’s a slight possibilit­y of snow Monday night, according to the weather service. Yet, with no snow since April 22, this is the third longest stretch the city has gone without it.

One big factor: The jet stream — the river of air that moves weather from west to east on a rollercoas­ter-like path — has just been stuck. That means low pressure on one part of the stream is bringing rain to the Pacific Northwest, while high pressure hovering over about two-thirds of the nation produces dry and warmer weather, said Brian Hurley, a senior meteorolog­ist at the weather service’s Weather Prediction Center.

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