Friday, December 12, 2025

Periodic light snow and colder weather through Tuesday and then we get tested with milder pushes of air

 December is a notoriously challenging month in a ski season in terms of avoiding some sort of damaging warm thaw. Glancing back through history, I was surprised to find that even in one of the colder and snowier winters of our new millennium, 2000-2001, we managed to interrupt that December with a 2-inch 40-degree rain. Not since 1989, ironically my first ski trip to the state, did we make it through an entire December without rain or a significant thaw. We will certainly earn half a trophy for 2025 since cold temperatures and occasional light snow are both expected through December 16th. After that we get tested and I don't think we go down without a fight. 

Temperatures near 10 Saturday morning won't feel too cold thanks to calm winds and a few glimpses of morning sunshine. Much of Saturday is expected to be cloudy, especially in the afternoon when light snowfall begins once again. That lighter snow will continue into Saturday evening with a minimal accumulation of an inch or two. Much of the moisture with this latest polar jet buckling will remain disorganized, though it will produce the first accumulating snow for NYC and portions of southern New England early Sunday morning. For us, Sunday will become blustery especially as the day progresses. Clouds and snow flurries will accompany some brief interludes of sunshine. Temperatures will turn colder once again with readings on the mountain hovering around 10 degrees along with those increasingly strong winds. 

Monday, December 15th will start out very cold and a period of morning sunshine is possible. Once again we can expect clouds to encompass the region and more light snow later in the day. Monday will feature less wind than Sunday but with similar temperatures of around 10 degrees. The lighter snow which will persist into Monday night marks the advance of milder temperatures. Expect Tuesday to be a bit less cold as a result with temperatures reaching the 20's. Our first real shot at above freezing temperatures, the first of the month, will come Wednesday as west to southwest winds send the thermometer to near 40 in the valleys and 30's across the high country. 

Ensembles have a wound up system tracking north of Lake Huron on Thursday, December 18th and with that comes our first real test I was speaking about. We are going to need this system to be weaker, farther south or come at us in a few disjointed pieces or else some rain and a period of mild temperatures is likely. Right now, this is tracking as a Thursday night to early Friday rain before temperatures turn sharply colder Friday morning. 

The longer range outlook consists of a lot of mild weather which is expected to dominate the middle part of North America, at least the United States portion around and after the winter solstice and through Christmas. Vermont and the rest of New England is never really expected to be at the center of this warmer outlook and arctic air is expected to remain close by in Canada. Though some rain seems probable prior to solstice weekend, we will see cold weather throughout that weekend and my preliminary thinking is that we remain on the colder side of this battle into Christmas and some winter weather is possible. This pattern is certainly capable of sending another wintry mix type system at us again. We might as well go for the inverted mush at this point regarding the holiday. We've managed to get some sort of mild intrusion almost every winter it seems so if we work that into our expectations, we can only get surprised in the right direction. Enjoy the weekend. 

 

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Snowfall Wednesday and Thursday set to bring us 7-14 inches of snow across the mountains and more farther north

The Wednesday/Thursday weather map wouldn't appear ideal for snowfall at first glance, but we are enjoying a special kind of early December winter weather run and we appear in line to make the most of this event. Low pressure will track over Lake Ontario midday Wednesday and then head close to the Canadian border. This position can leave us on the short side of accumulating snowfall and it certainly isn't optimal in this case. That said, southwesterly flow does not appear to be as well defined as it did a few days ago and models are indicating a decent enough plume of moisture over most of the state. Though temperatures will approach or even exceed the freezing mark in low lying areas Wednesday, temperatures across the high country and certainly ski country will support a more powdery snowfall beginning around 9 am Wednesday and continuing in occasional bursts throughout the day. As the upper air support associated with this feature moves closer to Vermont Wednesday night, the snow intensity should become even more elevation sensitive and certainly capable of producing 5-10 inches of snow by Thursday morning at MRG, half of which occurs during the day Wednesday and half the ensuing night. Expect a lesser 3-5 inch wetter snow in valley locations. 

Better also is the support for more snow showers as the day progresses Thursday. The support for this looks sensational closer to Jay Peak, and we should see some additional accumulation in our region as well with 2-4 inches, most of which falls in the later part of the day as the flow becomes more favorable. We can expect some gusty winds both Wednesday and Thursday with Thursday featuring the colder temperatures and wind chills. Temperatures on Thursday are likely to settle in the teens before dropping into the single digits Friday. I think we are in line for some sunshine to conclude the week thanks to a weaker storm system consolidating clouds and some snow well to our south. 

The upcoming mid-December weekend continues to look wintry with some early sunshine Saturday giving way to clouds. Another buckling of the polar jet is expected to bring both a surge of colder weather and a chance for some snow. Models had been teasing the idea of a bigger storm and although this still appears somewhat possible further south, a lighter snow is more likely over the state of Vermont late Saturday night into early Sunday followed by a blustery and cold weekend conclusion. What a remarkable cold start it has been for all of New England. Early season cold has been very difficult to produce here since the coldest arctic air is required to squeeze through so many open bodies of water that have yet to freeze. We manage to pull it off however and on target to finish the first half of the month at more than 10 below the 30 year average. The second half is not expected to be nearly as chilly with arctic air shifting its focus on western North America. I continue to believe the milder intrusions will be short-lived in New England and longer in duration south of us. Some warm advection snow is possible Tuesday ahead of the first push of milder temperatures and there should be additional chances for winter weather as come colder temperatures make a return around Winter Solstice weekend. 

 

 

 

Monday, December 8, 2025

Ligher snowfalls continue the early winter binge until 12/16 when the outlook turns "less cold"

It was another cold bluebird December powder day Monday across the state of Vermont. It is especially unusual to see cold this intense so early in the winter season since the pattern is required to funnel arctic cold in a very particular direction. We managed to get a widespread outbreak of sub-zero cold Friday morning and a second such occurrence is expected Monday night thanks to the clear skies and light winds. 

Following that sub-zero Tuesday morning, temperatures are expected to warm to about 20 degrees in spite of clouds.  Light snow will fall from those clouds later in the evening and accumulate about an inch by Wednesday morning. The ski day Wednesday will feature the mildest weather of the week with readings getting pretty close to the freezing mark as southerly flow tries to establish itself. The milder wind direction is in response to an approaching weather system, the strongest of the week, expected to approach us from the eastern Great Lakes. Recent model runs have managed to move this system a little further south, yet the track is still falling short of idea with the area of low pressure expected to track near the Canadian border Wednesday evening. In spite of this, models still indicate a decent period of snow later Wednesday, enough to produce a 2-4 inch snow. The risk of over-promising on these type of storms is high so I would suggest that although accumulating snow is likely in the MRV, much more is likely from Stowe northward. 

The flow is expected to turn and become west-northwesterly late Wednesday night and with that comes a window where snow showers can be expected. I was hoping this storm would be capable of producing a more extended window, persisting into Thursday, when snow showers might add to the accumulation, but with this event models are limiting this. After the 2-4 late Wednesday, we can expect another 1-4 Wednesday night with higher snow totals farther north. Conditions will be blustery Thursday with readings hovering in the high teens before falling into the single numbers Thursday night. Before I sign off on snowfall for late in the week, it is possible that a smaller disturbance enhances the snow shower activity for Thursday night or early Friday. Later Friday should feature some sunshine however as storm system well south of  us acts as the focusing mechanism for moisture, precipitation and clouds. 

The upcoming weekend is lined up to be very wintry. At the very least we can expect clouds with the chance for some light snow on Saturday. The Sunday weather map consists of a possible more organized storm that could bring snowfall anywhere between some of the bigger east coast cities to interior New England. With the early winter polar jet quite involved in the pattern, getting a handle on the eventual track can take a little longer. Regardless, temperatures will be well below freezing and will land in the teens on the mountain on both the weekend ski days. A strong dose of arctic chill is then expected to get driven into eastern North America by the aforementioned polar jet later Sunday and Sunday night. With that is likely some well below zero wind chills and a chilly Monday December 15th. 

The longer range has shifted to the less cold side in recent days. The pattern across North America is still being anchored by a really nice blocking couplet in the jet stream centered over the middle Pacific. Downstream of that, the cold is indicated to shift its focus on the western part of the continent more, mainly the Pacific Northwest along with the Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Alberta. Promising warmer weather for the south-central and southeastern United States is easy, but we still expect arctic cold to remain anchored across most of Canada. The pattern toward the solstice offers the possibility of  short-lived rainy intrusion with two caveats. 1) The milder weather should not persist beyond 1-2 days and the possibility for a bigger snowfall will continue if the dominoes fall the right way.  

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Wintry outlook continues into the middle of the month as opening day '25-'26 is announced

Opening Day incoming ! And it's always good to get that announcement before December 10th. Following a bluebird and very cold Friday, with temperatures on the mountain struggling to exceed 10, opening day Saturday should be more comfortable though cloudier as a disturbance well to our north eventually brings some very light snow our way. Don't expect much from this feature, maybe an inch by late Saturday evening. Arctic cold is then reinforced for Sunday, which has the possibility of featuring a period of sunshine. Wind speed should not be too much of an issue after some very cold wind chills early Friday. Winds will be out of the southwest on Saturday and will be a little gusty on the lifts along with temperatures in the 20's. Sunday will be the colder day but with less wind. 

A little more clarity is starting to emerge for next week and mostly in a positive way in terms of how it makes the snowfall outlook appear. Sunday's cold intrusion will tighten its grip on the region Sunday night into Monday, producing a very chilly early December day Monday, our 2nd in 4 days. Once again, temperatures will struggle to reach 10 on the mountain after starting below zero. Any sub-zero is impressive this early in the season since it would happen before arctic typically reaches its peak winter intensity. There are at least 2 weather systems after a sunny day on Monday that could produce snow. A clipper system will bring clouds and some snowfall late on Tuesday and Tuesday night. This system should remain a clipper so this limits the upside potential on snow, but the system after that could evolve into something capable of being more significant. This would be in the time frame of Wednesday and Thursday when parts of eastern North America are set to receive a bit of milder air while Vermont hopefully remains on the snowy side of that equation. The end of next week is likely to conclude colder with the possibility of snow showers as the said colder air again reestablishes itself. 

The longer range is interesting. One of the more important features will be a jet stream block expected to situate over the Chukchi and E Siberian Sea mostly west of the Bering Sea and Alaska. After neutralizing for a few days, the EPO should thus turn negative once again and allow cold air to dominate most of Canada. This above mentioned feature is far enough to the west however to favor cold in western over eastern North America, yet Vermont and much of interior New England sits a favorable location for colder air and additional snowfall. At no point does it look like the cold is forced into a major retreat across the continent and this is very encouraging. We should continue to see snow dot the forecast for the 2nd full weekend of the month and into the week beyond. 

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Early season cold expected to take a firm grip over Vermont through at least 12/11 even if snowfall opportunities are on the lighter side

Just a beautiful gentle early winter snow across the entire Mad River Valley on Tuesday. Hard to do better in a typically erratic part of the season and what's even better is that we've got cold locked into place through most of next week. Wednesday is a terrific day to enjoy Tuesday's fallen snow as well. We get some limited sunshine and temperature that mostly land in the 20's on the mountain and 30's in valley locations. 

Arctic reinforcements arrive Thursday and with them come snow showers and snow squalls. There's a brief window  Thursday afternoon when a burst of snow is likely to get intense, but the arriving airmass is a stable one and should quiet the convective snow shower activity Thursday evening. Expect 1-3 inches across the high country Thursday with an dusting to an inch down low. Thursday night turns very chilly with readings dropping to near zero Friday morning along with strong northwest winds. On Friday however, winds should diminish some and we will left with a cold but bluebird day more typical of the middle of winter. Readings on the mountain will struggle to reach the teens. 

The weekend outlook does not consist of a ton of new accumulating snow. Saturday will feature clouds, temperatures in the 20's and perhaps a period of light snow with little accumulation. Sunday should feature more sun and it again turns colder with more arctic air entrenching itself over Vermont in preparation for the 2nd full week of the month. This period, the 8th through the 12th of the month looks solidly sub-freezing yet the outlook has turned drier from the vantage point of well-organized weather systems. Ensembles do suggest snowfall from multiple clipper systems right now though that type of outlook can evolve quickly as the period continues to get resolved by models. 

The longer range is interesting since we have a really solid core of very cold early season arctic air over the North American continent. The teleconnections, led by the EPO (weak Pacific jet stream) are supportive and most indications are that they turn from favorable to neutral by around the 10th of the month. Clearly though, there are no indications that there is a mechanism in the jet stream that will force a continental type retreat of arctic air. The core of the cold might shift west for a period after the 10th, perhaps enough to allow for a 1-2 day Vermont thaw after next week though indications are it would be very short-lived. It's quite possible that we see no such thaw at our latitude and simply receive another round of decent snow. Again, relative to a typical early December weather situation, it's hard to take too much of an issue with any of this outlook.  

 

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Tuesday snowfall is the best of what appears to be a pattern capable of producing a few chances for snow through December 10

December coming in with a bang across Vermont with a terrific looking pattern featuring plenty of cold air. We can expect most of the first 10 days of the month to stay sub-freezing and this is a major victory considering the adversarial relationship this time of the winter season has with Vermont. Most importantly, we get a chance to add some depth to the healthy base of November snow that has already been provided to us (at least across high elevations). There are several chances for snow with some events clearly looking better than others now. 

A plethora of Saturday college football games featured snowfall and that system will push some snow into Vermont Sunday. Unfortunately, we can't really turn the flow out of that nasty southwesterly direction and those systems typically turn out dry for us. We can expect some on and off light snow and about an inch during the day followed by another inch Sunday night. Cold, early season arctic air then envelops the region for Monday with temperatures hovering in the high teens on the mountain for much of the day. The day should feature some sunshine, especially after the early morning. 

The storm that certainly has my attention approaches on Tuesday. We've had a promising set of model simulations and even 1 or 2 that certainly fit the "eye candy" category. This is a pretty standard variety east coast weather system however with low pressure consolidating near the Virginia tidewater region midday Tuesday and then strengthening as it moves up along the New England coastline. We need a northward shift for this storm to become the 1-2 foot powder producing snowstorm it certainly could become. When the polar jet is involved sometimes that can be more difficult, but considering the early stature of the winter season I would not rule a heavier snow total out at all. As it stands, the safer bet is for a 6-12 inch steady snow beginning around daybreak Tuesday and persisting into the evening. Wednesday appears dry with temperatures making a run into the 20's on the mountain and 30's in valley locations. 

The 2nd surge of arctic air should arrive late on Thurday and bring with it a brief period of snowfall, possibly in the form of some quick hitting squalls. Some early December sunshine is likely for Friday, which should again be a very chilly early winter day with temperatures holding in the teens and wind chills well below zero. As far as snow chances, one storm to watch late on Friday that may or may not stay to our south followed by better storm potential on the 7th and 8th of the month. 

The colder pattern is being anchored by a beautiful high latitude blocking set up over Alaska and now the Bering Sea with a very chill jet stream over the Pacific. This is allowing arctic cold to flood much of Canada with no real mechanism to force it into retreat mode through the first 10 days of December. There are signs on some of the longer range simulations that the cold will shift west after December 10 without totally giving up a presence in eastern North America. Certainly an excellent start to the season. 

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Winter 2025-26, already off to a strong start, has some support to be a stellar snow season

Welcome to another incoming weather season powder and Mad River Glen enthusiasts. Never does it cease to amaze me how fast the descent in to winter takes place. It was only about 7 weeks ago when  much of northern New England was finished a multi-week stretch of gentle 70-80 degree warm autumn weather. As of the middle of November, deep snow has enveloped the high country of northern Vermont. Perhaps not enough to call it Snowvember 2, but enough to send the snowpack at the stake at Mt Mansfield soaring to a mid November record. 

 


 

Drought concerns have unfortunately replaced the run of recent flooding events over the past few years. October was a healthy wet month over all of northern Vermont with most areas procuring 125-200 percent of normal rainfall and this has finally begun to ease drought conditions and we can only hope that a season featuring heavy snowfall will end any drought entirely. Temperatures have been up and down throughout the calendar year. The cold start to 2025 gave way to a mild March. Bouts of cool weather in both May and early June gave way to record heat right after the summer solstice. This was then followed by warm weather in July which gave way to a cooler finish to the summer season in late August and early September. The foliage season, from a color standpoint was stunted by the dry weather but the times of first frost/freezes have been relatively normal and the Vermont landscape has the "ready for winter" look. 

Last winter exceeded many preseason expectations and it seems to have also fueled a better set of expectations for the current year. Last year was also one which defied expectations regarding ENSO with much of the season remaining relatively neutral. A weak La Nina has finally developed this summer and although some gradual strengthening has been observed, conditions remain just a shade under what I would consider to be a "moderate" ENSO event. Personally, I consider strong ENSO events of both varieties to have adverse impacts on winter weather for different reasons. Strong Pacific forcing during El Nino events often inhibit the southward progression of arctic air even as they strongly fuel the southern branch of the jet stream which can in turn lead to many east coast snow events. La Nina winter seasons are very often characterized by a strong buildup of cold over Canada but the stronger Nina seasons have been known to feature persistent southeast ridging over the North American continent. This can have the impact of severely limiting the winter below 39 N (let's call this Baltimore, MD) while Vermont repeatedly fends off inland runners that often produce some snow followed by ice and rain. I find the weaker La Nina winters preferable for this very reason. We want a jet stream capable of allowing for a buildup of arctic cold across the northern latitudes of North America, but not one strong enough to entirely eliminate the concept of split flow in the jet stream. We've really seen La Nina go both ways in Vermont and the relationship I was alluding to in this paragraph is hardly perfect. We've had some of our most historic snow seasons during significant La Nina events and also some of the worst seasons. I've also watched over hyped weaker La Nina winters become big disappointments. All we can do is use the data we have and make the best probabilistic-based guess.  

 


 

There's a happy ending in this story. The snowiest winters at MRG and northern Vermont more generally have featured similar ENSO conditions. The two standouts are 1970-1971 and 2000-2001 which are easily top 5 winters in our 76 winter dataset and maybe top 2. 2016-2017 was another winter with a similar La Nina. We had some incredible periods of snow with two extended blowtorch interruptions. 1996-1997 was similar in that regard and featured the "extension" with deep snow well into the middle of spring. The winter's of 1988-89 and 2011-12 serve as a reminder however that this relationship can break down quite easily. Overall though, we are in a good place from the standpoint of ENSO with the chances for a snowy winter more elevated. 

The Pacific Decadal Oscillation  (PDO) and state of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific continues to sing a less happy tune. We managed to record some of the highest indices I've ever seen over the summer months, but have managed to bring the values down considerably in the recent months. The situation in the eastern Pacific, closer to Norrth America has been encouraging perhaps suggesting that the index might be ready to flip. What was most encouraging was an area of warm water that seemed to be developing over the Gulf of Alaska though that has been neutralized in recent weeks. It's the central Pacific which seems to be the driving force behind the positive values with very warm water concentrated near the IDL (180 Longitude). In totality, the changes in the eastern Pacific make the story look more encouraging than prior winters but the warmth in the central Pacific can't be neglected. I would imagine it playing a disruptive influence on the jet stream, shortening the duration of colder patterns which is somewhat typical during most La Nina winters. 

SST Anomaly

 The buildup of snow and  ice has managed to proceed in a fairly typical way this autumn. One has to make statements adjusting for the fact that climate change has had a material impact on ice coverage across the arctic regions during the late summer months. With that qualifier in mind, we managed to retain ice well this summer relative to recent prior summers. We then proceeded to begin building ice over the arctic regions on schedule, but in recent weeks, notable anomalous warmth in the arctic has slowed the expansion of ice and we again are challenging record lows for November for coverage. Snowfall has been better and expanded at a relatively normal pace. The coverage of snow across the northern hemisphere was rounded to 18 millions of square km which is average. Recall last  year that we were very slow to freeze the Hudson Bay which still showed some open water even in late January. Interestingly, both years that were uncharacteristically slow were exceptional snow years in Vermont (2011 and 2025). I have entirely no explanation for this and only point it out because it is likely to be another slow year unless the expected cold weather in eastern Canada early this December can expand the ice very rapidly. 

 



 

Our next section tries to "count cards" or assess some of the recent characteristics in the weather pattern as a means of predicting the future. I find there are times it's easier to simply go through this exercise than trying to lean too heavily on some poorly understood variable which can sometimes become the "hot item" in seasonal weather prediction. I've been watching a few things this fall with one being the drought which has had such a broad impact on upstate New York and interior New England. Though the water deficits remain, the weather pattern has turned in accordance with what we might expect in a La Nina season. Interior sections of the northeast are seeing precipitation and should continue to see such in December. I'll preface the next statement with some caution, but it's very encouraging to see eastern North America be a favorite spot for cool weather in a relative sense. The warm almost always outweighs the cold because again, climate change, but the long wave weather pattern can still have propensity to focus the warmth or the cool weather in certain locations and it seems, for the time being that eastern North America is the spot. Last winter turned out to be surprisingly cold also as you might recall, but in the period from March through July, western North America was the cooler part of the continent. By the middle of August, we saw a switch and in spite of a very warm interruption in late September and early October, the cool train has been on the schedule more than the warm one. 

Going to bring one more item to the seasonal forecast discussion and that relates to what make last season so spectacular. Can we pull off the trick again? It's a bit cruel to the snow lovers along the coast, but it proved be decisively important for us the last few seasons. Once again, can we kill the coastal storm ? This relationship has been utterly fascinating to me and certainly educational. Even as widespread cold gripped huge swaths of the eastern United States last year, a coastal storm and big city snow never really materialized. Models advertised several times, the internet hypesters climbed on board a few times and in the end snowfall was very limited. Not the case however across Vermont where every clipper seemed to over-deliver which is a striking contrast to all those winters where it seemed the clipper might be gone for good. The reality is that the clipper and the coastal have a relationship and both can't occupy the same space and there are winters where one is preferred over the other. It's a bit beyond my pay grade as a non-PHD level to do an appropriate analysis as to why this is. My intuition tells me it's a local sea surface temperature thing in the coastal Atlantic but I can't say this with confidence. I can say I am watching closely however. We saw two "Miller-A" style coastal storms in October. Those types of events are usually good for everyone, especially for us, but we didn't see any of that last year. Do we see more of that this year or is it a continuation of the trend we saw last year with limited coastal snow. It will hurt some feelings, but coastal pain is MRG's gain. 

With all that said we can make a forecast for the winter. Though promising sustained cold weather would be a bridge too far, I tend to believe the following winter will more closely resemble 2024-25 than the three mild winters prior to that. We managed to isolate the mild weather last  year to November, March and the Christmas holiday and with November hitting the books as a cold month, we will likely face a milder period either later in December or in early January. Still, with the ENSO under control, the PDO situation a bit adverse and the propensity of the long wave pattern to support relative chill in eastern North America, a winter with closer to normal temperatures appears more probable than an above normal winter.  Regarding snowfall, we can hang our hat on two important items. The first is the weaker La Nina and the snowy winters that have occurred in similar ENSO years such as 1970-71, 2000-2001, 2007-08, 2010-11 and 2016-17, the second is the similar sea surface temperature configuration in the coastal western Atlantic Ocean which would suggest it's another clipper over coastal situation. This latter part of the statement is some hypothesizing on my part, but so is seasonal forecasting as a whole. You expect to get surprised and hope it comes in the right direction. Enjoy the Thanksgiving holiday folks and welcome to another season.