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  • 5
    May
    2012
    3:31pm, EDT

    Looking back at La Nina's impacts

    By Chris Dolce, weather.com

    On Thursday, La Nina was officially declared to be over by the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).  Unfortunately, when it is reported to the public that La Nina (or its counterpart El Nino) are either coming or going, the impacts are often way too generalized.  While it's natural to desire explanations that are set in stone for what these two climate phenomena will cause in the United States, it's just not that simple.

    Senior Meteorologist Stu Ostro (Find him on Facebook | Twitter) reinforces the point, “I am driven to distraction by the way El Nino and La Nina are sometimes described by the press and even scientists. That they’re the be-all-end-all of everything, and when either one begins or ends, that always and absolutely equates to a particular weather outcome.  It’s not that black-and-white!”

    When the information came in last fall that a new La Nina was taking shape, the reports for Texas were dire since they were in a multibillion-dollar drought disaster and La Nina typically (notice I said typically) brings drier-than-average conditions to the Lone Star State.


    While La Nina did contribute to the intensifying drought over the previous winter (2010-2011), it was not the case this past winter.

    In fact, it was the 14th wettest December through February period on record in Texas!  This was followed by the 8th wettest March on record.  The percentage of the state in exceptional drought (worst category) has fallen from 88 percent in early October to 8 percent in early May.

    Two separate La Nina winters and two different outcomes.

    Below-average temperatures during the winter months are another aspect of La Nina's influence that we look for across a large amount of real estate from Washington and Oregon eastward to Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and the Dakotas.

    Not so much in the winter of 2011-2012.

    The December through February period turned out to be among the top fifteen warmest for Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota. Temperatures finished near average in both Washington and Oregon during this same timeframe, despite a colder-than-average December.

    La Nina winters also typically bring wetter-than-average conditions to western Washington and western Oregon.  While March was among the wettest on record for these states, the December through February timeframe was the 10th driest on record in Oregon and the 25th driest on record in Washington.

    More reports from weather.com

    So, where exactly might we have seen La Nina's thumbprint this past winter now that we've shown a couple of examples of where it didn't?

    From Texas, La Nina typically brings drier-than average conditions to the immediate Gulf Coast eastward to south Georgia and Florida.  As we emerged from winter into spring, this is where drought conditions had grown considerably.

    In late November, only 26 percent of the Sunshine State was in drought (northern Florida).  As of May 1, this figure is now at 89 percent.  Only far south Florida is not experiencing drought conditions.

    It's a similar story in Georgia, where drought conditions expanded significantly during the winter.  Almost all of southern and central Georgia is in extreme or exceptional drought (two worst categories).

    Here's one more example.

    Much of the country east of the Rockies experienced a winter with well above-average temperatures, propelling the United States to its fourth warmest winter on record.  This included the swath from the Mid-Atlantic to the South, which typically sees warmer-than-average temperatures during La Nina winters.

    Ironically, it's this same geographical region that actually saw well below-average temperatures the previous winter when La Nina conditions were also present.

    As you can see, not all La Ninas/El Ninos are created the same.  There can be other overriding factors in the atmosphere that can mute out or enhance certain aspects of what we typically expect from these climate influences.

     

     

     

    1 comment

    So, this article predicts that predicted weather will often be unpredictable... and by doing so, their predictions of unpredictability will make them always seem to be correct. Well played... well played.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, winter, la-nina
  • 10
    Jan
    2012
    6:29pm, EST

    Snow-starved California preps for driest year on record

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    The Aster Lake area inside California's Sequoia National Park is usually covered in snow this time of year, but on Saturday it was pretty bare. The snowpack water content in the Sierra Nevada mountain range is only 19 percent of the average for the beginning of January.

    By Patrick Healy, NBCLosAngeles.com

    It's tempting to attribute the unseasonably warm and dry January completely to the Pacific Ocean temperature pattern dubbed "La Nina," long-associated with reduced precipitation in California.

    But wait -- La Nina was also present last winter, when more rainfall than usual drenched Los Angeles and the snowfall in the Sierra Nevada was even higher than normal -- as much as 50 feet in places.  Now bare spots are evident even at higher elevations.

    "This is truly a tale of two 'Ninas,'" said Bill Patzert, PhD, the world renowned climatologist based at Pasadena's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.


    Patzert has focused his research on the weather implications of La Nina and its opposite, El Nino, associated with wetter than usual winters for California.

    Read the original story on NBCLosAngeles.com

    So how can two Ninas have such different outcomes?  Patzert believes the wildcard is to be found to the north in another meteorological phenomenon known as the "arctic oscillation," a variation in the strength of what can be imagined as an atmospheric barrier.

    When the arctic oscillation is in a weak phase, as last winter, cold, moist air can escape the arctic region and head south.  But when the oscillation is in a strong phase, as this winter, Patzert said it tends to reinforce the dry influence of La Nina at U.S. latitudes.

    Patzert likened it to a "fence" that shields us from the arctic air.

    The impact is dramatic. So far this season, the L.A. area has received only 3.76 inches of rain, compared to a normal to-date measurement of 5.24 inches, and 12.28 inches by this time last year, according to the National Weather Service.

    In December 2010, we received about 10 inches of rain. Last month, L.A. received only one inch, and not a trace since Dec. 17.

    January warm spells are not all that unusual in Southern California. But we're not alone in the warm and dry weather conditions. Apart from the Sierra, snowfall is far below normal in the Rockies of Colorado and the Wasatch Range of Utah.

    But there's no shortage of winter in Alaska

    Temperatures this past week in the ski resort of Park City, Utah, above 7,000 feet in elevation, have soared well into the 40s. Farther east, parents have been taking their children to outdoor playgrounds in Kansas City, Mo. Tennis players have been bringing out their rackets for outdoor matches as far north as Minneapolis. In the southern tier, the dryness has only intensified the ongoing drought in Texas and New Mexico.

    But California faces no imminent drought threat, according to Jeffrey Kightlinger, general manager of the Metropolitan Water District.  He credits the storage of water from last winter's bountiful runoff, noting that the MWD's largest Southern California reservoir, Diamond Valley Lake near Hemet, is well over 90 percent of capacity.

    The MWD is planning for the possibility that this could be California's driest year on record.  But even if that proves to be the case, Kightlinger said there is enough stored water to see us through "three tough years in a row" before cutbacks would be unavoidable.

    So how much longer will the warm, dry weather continue?

    La Nina might remain in place several more months. What complicates long-range forecasting is the fact that the arctic oscillation has a much shorter period, at times flipping in a matter of weeks or not, Patzert said. 

    Next month, February, usually is our wettest. Patzert advised it's too early to write off this winter. That said, he's sticking with his forecast that the rest of this season will be drier than usual, but added, "I'm going to keep my fingers crossed that I'm wrong." 

    Follow NBCLA for the latest LA news, events and entertainment: Twitter: @NBCLA // Facebook: NBCLA

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Women finally seeing signs of a jobs recovery
    • No shortage of winter in Alaska
    • Gayest US town? Surprise: It's Salt Lake City
    • Federal appeals court delivers blow to anti-Sharia efforts

     

    90 comments

    Weather varies people. Last year it never stopped raining. It even started to rain again early this year. We all thought, here we go again. But then Dec hit and bingo, we got sunny again. Feb & Mar are the rainy months for CA.

    Show more
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