Saturday February 2nd, 2013 we celebrate Groundhog's Day! A very important day to a weather person! Groundhog’s Day really has nothing to do with a rodent seeing his shadow, and in the Rocky Mountains it would be rare to not have at least six more weeks of winter. The real significance of Groundhog’s Day is that it marks the halfway point of the "Winter Season", between the Winter Solstice (Dec. 21st) and the Spring Equinox (Mar. 21st).
Skiing In Grand Teton National Park in late December 2012 |
The first half of the winter
throughout the mountains of the western United States was up and down. In
general, it could be characterized by healthy snowfall in December, followed by
a long stretch of drought, along with some brutally cold temperatures for a
good portion of January. With a period in there when even up at elevation temps
were well below zero, before inversions set in.
Jackson
Hole Snowfall
In the Teton Mountains, the
snowfall and snowdepths we have presently are not too far off of the averages ,
December’s above normal snowfall in the mountains almost balanced the below
normal snowfall of January.
At the at the bottom of
Rendezvous Bowl at 9,580-ft. at the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, 114 inches of
snowfall was recorded in December 2012 and 45 inches in January. That’s a total
of 159 inches for the two months, and the historical average for the two months
is 163 inches.
As of this morning, February
1, 2013, there was another 7 inches recorded and the settled snowdepth at the Rendezvous
Bowl site was reported to be at 73 inches. The average on February 1st
is 78 inches. Last year we were at 72 inches. (See summary table below).
Total snowfall so far this
season at the Rendezvous Bowl site was at 240 inches. The average at this time
of year would be 249 inches, and last year we were only at 198 inches.
Just under average, and just
ahead of last year.
First Half
of Winter Snowfall Summary & Comparison
|
||
Total Season’s Snowfall
as of Feb. 1st |
Settled Snowdepth
on Feb. 1st |
|
2012-13
|
240 in.
|
73 in.
|
2012-12
|
198 in.
|
72 in.
|
2010-11
|
306 in.
|
87 in.
|
2009-10
|
265 in.
|
83 in.
|
Average
|
249 in.
|
78 in.
|
|
What’s Ahead for the Second
Half?...............
I’ll put that in a post later
this weekend. After I ski Rendezvous Bowl on Saturday and before the Super Bowl
this Sunday. (Providing I don’t ski in the morning before the Super Bowl).
Post by meteorologist Jim Woodmencey
Data from Bridger-Teton Avalanche
Center
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