The Boston Globe

Record-breaking warm, snowless winter confounds Midwestern­ers

Temperate season exposes climate change concerns

- By Ernesto Londoño and Michael Levenson

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Lucy Wallace, a recent transplant from San Diego, had been warned about the bone-chilling winters of her new hometown, Minneapoli­s. She bought a $900 winter coat, two pairs of boots, and metal spikes to make her running shoes usable on icy sidewalks.

So she was at once befuddled and relieved by the recordbrea­king warm temperatur­es that made for a rare snowless winter holiday week in much of the upper Midwest.

“I spent hundreds of dollars on a new wardrobe and winter gear that so far has gone totally unused,” said Wallace, 35, who ran 5 miles on Christmas Day wearing a T-shirt. “Here I am wearing my San Diego wardrobe in December in Minneapoli­s.”

A high of 54 degrees made this Christmas Day the warmest on record in the Minneapoli­s area, according to the National Weather Service. Across much of the region, people contended with a string of days heading into the new year that felt like a mild autumn. Ice fishing was particular­ly perilous on lakes covered by thin ice caps.

And a hack to host large holiday gatherings was foiled. “Thinking of all the Minnesota families who rely on using the porch as an extra freezer during Christmas entertaini­ng when it’s almost 50 degrees outside,” Minnesota Lieutenant Governor Peggy Flanagan wrote on Threads.

It is not unpreceden­ted to have a warm or snowless Christmas in Minnesota. But such days are likely to become increasing­ly common because of climate change, said Jessica Hellmann, director of the Institute on the Environmen­t at the University of Minnesota.

“It’s a big cultural shift to experience 50 yesterday and how disorienti­ng that is from a geographic perspectiv­e,” Hellmann said in an interview Tuesday. “It’s a visceral feeling of what climate change looks and feels like for people who are accustomed to living in a particular climate.”

In northern Minnesota, emergency personnel have warned people to stay off lakes, which are covered by an unusually thin layer of ice.

Last week, a Cessna plane that landed on Upper Red Lake broke through the ice, according to Beltrami County Sheriff Jason Riggs.

“Upon landing, the absence of snow resulted in the plane having difficulty slowing down,” he said in a statement. “Eventually the plane slid into an area of thin ice and the nose of the plane broke through into open water.”

The plane’s two occupants, who had flown from Michigan for a day of ice fishing, were rescued.

In nearby Becker County, a 67-year-old man was found dead Saturday after his ATV cracked through thin ice, according to the Becker County Sheriff ’s Office.

Ted Bonde, president of the Wisconsin Interschol­astic Fishing Associatio­n, said ice-fishing competitio­ns in much of the state had been pushed back at least a week as wintertime anglers waited impatientl­y for the cold to set in.

“I know nature is doing this and it’s going to turn around at some point; it’s just a matter of time,” Bonde said, adding, “Once it happens, there’s going to be a mad rush to get out there.”

Bonde, who coaches the high school fishing team in Kiel, Wis., about 45 miles south of Green Bay, said that on Dec. 10, there were 3 inches of ice — enough to walk on — in his area. No longer.

“It’s all gone,” he said. “Everybody is getting their boats back out where there used to be ice.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States