El nino

Admin

Administrator
Staff member
No way to tell with any reliability, but if I were a betting man, I would say no.

-John
 

jake

Member
John, from a historical perspective what have the snowfall amounts looked like the year following the last few El Nino winters? Hoping the data shows the snow totals rebounded nicely.
 

Bullitt69

Member
Actually heard on the Weather Channel (last night) that upon closure of this year's El Nino we will be heading into an El Nina pattern.
 

Admin

Administrator
Staff member
John, from a historical perspective what have the snowfall amounts looked like the year following the last few El Nino winters? Hoping the data shows the snow totals rebounded nicely.

I guess my first question would be for what area? Some areas of the Midwest are at or even above average in snowfall for this winter, although most is running around 75-90%. Secondly, I do not have the data readily available to me for snowfall for differing areas following an El Nino winter. Off the top of my head, I do not know of any strong correlation one way or the other.

-John
 

jake

Member
I was thinking basically the Northwoods of Wisconsin and on up to where you live. Was just wondering if snow totals in that general area for the winters after an El Nino winter make a nice rebound, or if temps remain more consistent so that the snow pack doesn't fluctuate so much. If you don't have the data readily available, then no big deal.
 

Admin

Administrator
Staff member
I was thinking basically the Northwoods of Wisconsin and on up to where you live. Was just wondering if snow totals in that general area for the winters after an El Nino winter make a nice rebound, or if temps remain more consistent so that the snow pack doesn't fluctuate so much. If you don't have the data readily available, then no big deal.

Sorry, but I just do not have the data readily available, but I really do not recall any kind of a correlation good or bad.

-John
 
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