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Winter 2025/26 Banter Thread


Chicago Storm
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2 hours ago, McHenrySnow said:

And ftr, I do realize my data set is very limited, so not making huge extrapolations off of 5 years, just generally commenting on what has happened thus far. 

What goes up must come down. The region saw a slew of unusually snowy winters in the 2000s-10s. Many areas of the Great Lakes and northeast saw their snowiest decade on record in the 2010s. It was an unrealistic pace that came down.

Avg annual snowfall at Detroit is around 43". The past 10 years averaged 39.1" but the previous 10 years 53.3".

Avg annual snowfall at Chicago is around 37". The past 10 years averaged 31.9" but the previous 10 years 46.9".

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19 hours ago, Chicago Storm said:

you forgot this one...

Jan12-13_snowfall_totals.thumb.png.7a53819d2a1bd307b3a3dfc5b827ebb2.png

Yeah, I didn't mention it because the city really got screwed on that one. It was the rare recent storm where the NW won out. That was a heartbreak for the city - models literally changed drastically as the storm was ongoing and it cut further north.

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19 hours ago, A-L-E-K said:

2_1_2015%20Event%20Summary%20Graphic(1).

The 2015 storm I'm talking about was in November, before Thanksgiving. The one you highlight was the last widespread "big dog" across all of Chicagoland. The 2018 fun was a couple separate storms as I recall. I just know I was miserable in Mexico and my husband getting pissed at me over it b/c I kept looking at models and radars and complaining I wasn't there. Sad, I know.

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On 3/4/2026 at 5:12 PM, michsnowfreak said:

What goes up must come down. The region saw a slew of unusually snowy winters in the 2000s-10s. Many areas of the Great Lakes and northeast saw their snowiest decade on record in the 2010s. It was an unrealistic pace that came down.

Avg annual snowfall at Detroit is around 43". The past 10 years averaged 39.1" but the previous 10 years 53.3".

Avg annual snowfall at Chicago is around 37". The past 10 years averaged 31.9" but the previous 10 years 46.9".

Snowiest EVER! This undersells the departure since the 1981-2010 normal was 67.2. :clown:

drILbGh.png

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10 hours ago, TheClimateChanger said:

Snowiest EVER! This undersells the departure since the 1981-2010 normal was 67.2. :clown:

drILbGh.png

:clown:Who uses "ever" when referencing weather stats? I know it absolutely drives you insane that so much of the region saw above avg snowfall in the 2000s-10s. Ohio was clearly an anamoly in the well above avg snow that dominated MI/WI for many winters (particularly 2005-2015) but the trend of up then down the past 20 years is the same at Cleveland and toledo as the rest.

TOL- past 10 years, 24.2", previous 10 years- 42.9"

CLE- past 10 years 38.0", previous 10 years- 65.6"

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Hard to knock a winter that started in late November and will finish with over 90" inches of snow, but having winter completely disappear after early to mid February along with the 3 complete melt offs in early December, Christmas, and early January take me from what would have been a A/A+ to an A-.

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1 hour ago, WestMichigan said:

Hard to knock a winter that started in late November and will finish with over 90" inches of snow, but having winter completely disappear after early to mid February along with the 3 complete melt offs in early December, Christmas, and early January take me from what would have been a A/A+ to an A-.

Ill probably go B+ but I dont like grading before April. Im sitting at 39.8" of snow, so snowfall itself very average overall. A hot start but a shitty February and so far a non-existent March. However despite very mundane weather since mid-February, that does not take away the fact that the winter featured well below avg temps and well above avg snowcover. A huge majority of Decemer to mid-February featured a thick glittery blanket of snow, constant flakes, and crisp cold winter air. The "early exit" sucks, but doesnt take away the early arrival either. Cant recall a winter when deep winter set in so early. We had just two brief meltoffs between Thanksgiving & mid-Feb (Christmas & 2nd week of Jan), surprised you melted in early Dec. 

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