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The National Weather Service has noted that those of us in Georgia, northern Florida, southern Alabama, and the Carolinas can expect some wild weather in the next few days. On Friday, March 12, warm and moist air ahead of an approaching front will bring a widespread threat of severe weather to SE Alabama, southern GA,…
Posted in: Climate outlooks -
The latest La Nina discussion in NOAA’s Climate blog came out today, and it shows that surprisingly, La Nina strengthened in February instead of weakening as expected. The latest forecasts for La Nina now indicate that it is likely to last into summer 2022. In addition, the predictions indicate that we may go back for…
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The dry conditions we have seen over the last few weeks remained in place through the Drought Monitor map cutoff on Tuesday. This resulted in widespread increases in the amount of area covered by abnormally dry (D0) and moderate drought (D1). A small area of severe drought (D2) was introduced to the northwestern part of…
Posted in: Drought -
The State Climate Office of North Carolina released their winter summary this week. You can read all the snowy details at their blog at https://climate.ncsu.edu/blog/2022/03/winter-recap-2021-22-warm-weather-prevails/.
Posted in: Climate summaries -
The latest monthly and seasonal climate summary for the United States was released today by NOAA. The maps show that February was quite a bit warmer than normal across the Southeast with dry conditions across most of the region. For the winter, we saw a very typical La Nina pattern, with drier than normal conditions…
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If you missed today’s webinar on Southeast climate, never fear! You can read a summary and find a link to the recording at Southeast Climate Monthly Webinar: March 8, 2022 | Drought.gov. Be sure to watch the special presentation on the CoCoRaHS network, which is in its March Madness annual recruiting period. These webinars are…
Posted in: Climate summaries -
The recently released report on rising sea levels provides ample cause for concern along the Gulf coast. It’s not just rising sea levels that are causing problems, though. It is also heavier rains from hurricanes, toxic red tides caused in part by drainage of agricultural chemicals off of lands far upstream of the Mississippi delta,…