just the Kronix on here posting lately lolol. Guilty!
We've lost Catnip due to this sad season we called winter(region wide snow totals of 0cm), but it was really just an extension of Autumn. I mean lets face the facts! Sky high freezing levels the entire winter pretty much. If next winter is a Mod or Strong EN, i mean can it be any worse than this winter? Probably not.
Rant over
Looking forward to our first 3 day stretch of sun and 20c++
Willoughby Langley at ~320ft / Similkameeeens ~3400ft
Abbotsford 1.4°C
Agassiz 0.0°C
Burns Bog -0.2°C
Hope 2.3°C
Langley 0.0°C
MBY 2.6˚C
Pitt Meadows 0.8°C
Squamish 4.5°C
Vancouver Harbour 6.0°C
Vancouver YVR 3.1°C
West Vancouver 4.8°C
White Rock 4.1°C
Hawk wrote: ↑Sun Feb 08, 2026 8:21 am
just the Kronix on here posting lately lolol. Guilty!
We've lost Catnip due to this sad season we called winter(region wide snow totals of 0cm), but it was really just an extension of Autumn. I mean lets face the facts! Sky high freezing levels the entire winter pretty much. If next winter is a Mod or Strong EN, i mean can it be any worse than this winter? Probably not.
Rant over
This winter is about as bad (or, if you are on Team Pineapple, as good) as it gets. Even most El Niño winters average more snow than we have gotten so far. So I would have to say the odds disfavour two epic duds in a row.
Rubus_Leucodermis wrote: ↑Sun Feb 08, 2026 8:26 am
This winter is about as bad (or, if you are on Team Pineapple, as good) as it gets. Even most El Niño winters average more snow than we have gotten so far. So I would have to say the odds disfavour two epic duds in a row.
With the trajectory of our climate, it can always be worse. Less ARs and more ridgy but still hella warm is my prediction.
PortKells wrote: ↑Sun Feb 08, 2026 9:35 am
With the trajectory of our climate, it can always be worse. Less ARs and more ridgy but still hella warm is my prediction.
I have seen and read projections in terms of climate change impacts that the PNW region would actually increase in moisture. Maybe less frequent rains but an increase in higher damaging intense rain storms.
stuffradio wrote: ↑Sun Feb 08, 2026 11:03 am
I have seen and read projections in terms of climate change impacts that the PNW region would actually increase in moisture. Maybe less frequent rains but an increase in higher damaging intense rain storms.
Sure, some years. Other years will be droughts. I think the word that resonates for me is chaos. It will be unpredictable and unbalanced. But generally warmer with the odd exception of.
PortKells wrote: ↑Sun Feb 08, 2026 11:07 am
Sure, some years. Other years will be droughts. I think the word that resonates for me is chaos. It will be unpredictable and unbalanced. But generally warmer with the odd exception of.
Precipitation Projections are mixed, with some models projecting wetter conditions and some projecting drier. However, a majority of models project increases in precipitation for winter, spring, and fall precipitation and decreases in summer precipitation.
stuffradio wrote: ↑Sun Feb 08, 2026 11:03 am
I have seen and read projections in terms of climate change impacts that the PNW region would actually increase in moisture. Maybe less frequent rains but an increase in higher damaging intense rain storms.
stuffradio wrote: ↑Sun Feb 08, 2026 11:23 am
Precipitation Projections are mixed, with some models projecting wetter conditions and some projecting drier. However, a majority of models project increases in precipitation for winter, spring, and fall precipitation and decreases in summer precipitation.
This. Annual precipitation amounts in our region have actually increased over the period of record. The effects of climate change during this time have and will likely lead to an increase in more concentrated, extreme heavy precipitation events (ARs).