Updraft

Updraft: January 25, 2011 Archive

Warm Front: 30s ahead, snow "drought" continues

Posted at 9:13 AM on January 25, 2011 by Paul Huttner (1 Comments)
Filed under: Hockey, Snow, Winter

Good news from the weather department if you're looking for a warm up.

A rare January warm front up may evolve into a "mini-thaw" later this week. That's great news if you're longing to hear the sound of dripping water, or see the pavement on your favorite street again. Maybe not such great news if you're looking for fast ice for a pond hockey tourney on Lake Minnetonka Friday.

Temperatures will climb this week, and should top out somewhere in the 30s Friday before the next cold front sails in Saturday. Here a look at the temperature ladder climb.1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 met tmps.png
Temps climb this week...cold front returns Saturday.

Pond hockey anyone?

I've talked to many people who are enjoying our "real winter" in Minnesota this year. The combination of ample snowfall and consistent cold has made for great snow conditions for cross country and downhill skiing. It's also making great ice on Minnesota lakes and outdoor rinks.

Count me in among those who appreciate the consistent cold from a winter recreational standpoint. I play outdoor hockey with a great group of guys every Friday night for the "Friday Night Game" at a local outdoor ice rink. The ice has been fast and hard this year, almost ideal.

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 pond hockey.png

That's also great news for Minnesota's outdoor pond hockey tournaments. Last weekend's U.S. Pond Hockey Championships was a smashing success. This weekend the Pond Hockey North America Championship takes place on Excelsior Bay on Lake Minnetonka. The ice may be a bit soft Friday with temps in the 30s. But a cold front should drop temps into the 20s Saturday and make for great ice again.

If you're looking for a great hockey movie to watch this weekend that sort of captures the essence of the pond hockey spirit I recommend checking out "Mystery Alaska." It's a good movie many people have never heard of, but it has some grown up moments so it may be better for adults than kids. People in "The State of Hockey" will get and appreciate this movie.

Snow drought:

It's been rare to have a week go by this winter without much snow. In the past 12 days, the Twin Cities has received 3 inches of snowfall. That's the longest stretch with that little snowfall since November!

Here are some other metro snow stats this winter:

January snowfall so far: 12"
January average snowfall: 13.5"

With little snow in the forecast in the next week, it looks like we might end up near average snowfall in January.

Season snowfall so far: 55.4"
Annual average: 55.9"

We've already piled up close to our seasonal (30 year 1971-2000) average snowfall of 55.9" so far.

The average snowfall for the rest of the winter season (Feb-Mar-April) is 22.8" for the metro. If we get average snowfall the rest of the winter, that will bring the metro total to about 78.2". That's just shy of the 80.3" needed to bust into the top 5 snowiest winters on record for the metro.

The snowiest winter ever? 98.4" back in 1983-'84. We'd need another 44" to break that record. Anything's possible, but that's a very tall order...even in this year of weather extremes.

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 top 5 snowfall.PNG

Enjoy the warm up!

PH


(1 Comments)

Brighter Days Ahead

Posted at 5:22 PM on January 25, 2011 by Paul Huttner (3 Comments)
Filed under: Astronomy, Climate

Okay I'll admit it. I've got a bad case of SAD.

I tired valiantly to fight it off as long as possible this year...but the January doldrums finally got me. I'm sick of winter, sick of gray, sick of the cold...and I know I'm not alone. Yes, even your friendly neighborhood weatherman gets a little SAD in mid-winter.

Thankfully I've got hockey...the best, adrenaline rush and endorphin pumping workout I know of during these cold winter months. It's also a great way to lose a few extra holiday pounds.

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1Jan sunset.JPG

The good news is even though it's the "dead of winter" there are signs that seasonal change is just a few weeks away. Dare I utter the word...? "Spring?"

Here are some positive benchmarks in the next few weeks:

-Daylight is now rapidly increasing! We're gaining more than 2 minutes a day now. We'll be gaining 3 minutes a day starting next week! You can caluclate the length of daylight for any location at the USNO site here.

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 sunset calendar.png
Daylight increases 1 hour 18 minutes in the Twin Cities in February!
(click for bigger image)

-The sun angle increases noticeably in the next few weeks. In less than a month the sun at noon will be 34 degrees above the southern horizon at solar noon. That's a full 12 degrees higher than the 22 degrees on the winter solstice last month.

- Temperatures respond to the increasing solar energy in the next month. Our average high temp reaches 30 degrees in just over 3 weeks, and 45 degrees in the next 60 days!

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1msp climate.png
(Click for more readable image)

-In just 6 weeks daylight saving time resumes...and the sun will set after 7pm (7:16pm) on March 13th!

-Meteorlogical Spring begins on March 1st, just 34 days from now!

-Asronomical Spring begins on March 20th at 6:21pm!

Bottom line for everyone who's (more than) a little tired of winter, hang in there. Brighter days are truly just around the corner!

PH

(3 Comments)
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