Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    18,676
    Total Members
    14,841
    Most Online
    Donut Hole
    Newest Member
    Donut Hole
    Joined

March 2026


snowman19
 Share

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, PhiEaglesfan712 said:

The colder global temperature sweet spot ended with the 1997-98 el nino. Temperatures jumped with that super el nino, and have never went back to the pre-1997 baseline. Pinatubo was most likely the reason for the colder global temperature sweet spot.

We didnt have a volcanic eruption this winter and look how it turned out. I think people are too fascinated on that aspect about a volcano helping or hurting the atmosphere. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 3/1/2026 at 12:04 PM, doncat said:

Central west shore, town of Travis.

Hi Don, if you are in the Travis section of Staten Island, then I am 6 to 7 miles to your southwest.  I live across the Arthur Kill from Tottenville, Staten Island; directly across from the historic Conference House (Billop House), there.

You are across the Arthur Kill from Carteret, NJ.

ps - I am at 49.4 inches for the season-to-date.  I see you are at 53.9.  4.5 inches above my total.  I often get less accumulation from marginal events due to a slightly warmer micro-climate here.  @doncat

undefined

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, PhiEaglesfan712 said:

The colder global temperature sweet spot ended with the 1997-98 el nino. Temperatures jumped with that super el nino, and have never went back to the pre-1997 baseline. Pinatubo was most likely the reason for the colder global temperature sweet spot.

Providence had it second snowiest winter in history! If they are to challenge the highest it will have to occur after mid month. They only need 6 inches.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

48 minutes ago, North and West said:


Do you have the full list? Or Top 25?


.

Here's the Top 30 data for through March 1st. The ranking is higher, as I excluded years with 25 or more missing days. Their inclusion previously skewed some of the results. I also used average of days (not months) when calculating the DJF mean temperature. That also led to minor adjustments from the prior list e.g., 1854-55 had a mean temperature of 29.1° vs. 29.0° (when all months were weighted equally).

Rank Winter DJF Temp Snow Score
1 1872-1873 25.7 62.5 -2.225
2 1867-1868 25.0 53.3 -2.027
3 1904-1905 25.4 49.8 -1.856
4 1960-1961 30.6 69.5 -1.752
5 1917-1918 24.9 42.3 -1.684
6 1855-1856 26.4 46.8 -1.616
7 1947-1948 28.9 57.6 -1.609
8 1919-1920 26.7 45.9 -1.544
9 1977-1978 28.7 52.9 -1.485
10 1874-1875 25.6 38.9 -1.474
11 1864-1865 27.9 49.0 -1.473
12 1995-1996 31.6 62.8 -1.392
13 2013-2014 31.3 60.5 -1.360
14 1922-1923 28.9 48.9 -1.327
15 2010-2011 32.8 66.0 -1.324
16 1903-1904 24.7 29.9 -1.311
17 1906-1907 28.9 46.9 -1.262
18 1993-1994 31.0 55.8 -1.250
19 1853-1854 30.7 53.0 -1.203
20 1851-1852 28.0 41.0 -1.199
21 2025-2026 31.7 54.5 -1.108
22 1866-1867 29.8 46.0 -1.104
23 1854-1855 29.1 42.5 -1.090
24 1933-1934 28.0 37.0 -1.069
25 1876-1877 27.9 35.4 -1.032
26 1859-1860 29.4 41.4 -1.012
27 1856-1857 27.9 34.5 -1.002
28 2002-2003 30.7 44.8 -0.936
29 1898-1899 29.2 36.5 -0.881
30 1870-1871 29.6 37.1 -0.844
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...