5/4/13, "In Alaska, May showers bring snow flakes," Alaska Dispatch, Jill Burke
"If you’re among the Alaskans motivated by the sunny final week of April
to launch familiar spring rituals, waking up Saturday morning may have
dampened your soul. Perhaps some of us cleaned up the garden beds,
excavated a winter's worth of dog poop from the back yard, and tidied up
the home during the sunny days earlier this week, only to gaze out onto
the lawn May 4 to see a blanket of snow with more flakes descending from
cloudy skies above.
Even the U.S. National Weather Service, Alaska, couldn't refrain from putting the depressing weather in context. “If
you're keeping track, today's snow on May 4th makes nine consecutive
months that the Anchorage area has seen accumulating snow,” it posted Saturday morning to its Facebook followers.
This follows the revelation a few days ago that April 2013 was one of the coldest Aprils in Alaska over the last 74 years. For those living in the state's Interior, it was the coldest since 1924 – or the chilliest spring month in 89 years.
Organizers of the Nenana Ice Classic
continued their wait for signs of breakup, too. Standing proud and firm
in the middle of the Tanana River in a webcam photo on the
organization’s website is the famous black-and-white tripod. Not a hint
of liquid water exists near the riverbank. Of the 24 days between
mid-April and mid-May that have witnessed the Tanana River ice go out in
past years, half have already passed. And as of May 2, nearly 37 inches
of ice was measured on the river.
For many of us, May
begins the time of year when we instinctively expect liquid
precipitation. We long for it. With so much daylight beckoning after a
dark winter, rain seems fitting – the magic ingredient that will help
our plants rocket into summer, greening and growing as the days grow
longer and warmer.
But the National Weather Service advised early Saturday that the snow showers would continue, adding up to three inches of accumulation at higher elevations.
Making
for an even sloppier weekend? The Saturday snowfall would be
interrupted by rain in the afternoon. Saturday night and into Sunday
morning, the National Weather Service expects precipitation to continue,
with a chance of snow returning after midnight. If the forecast is
accurate, Anchorage residents will see the sun for at least a few hours
Sunday morning before clouds return.
Alaska's big-city dwellers who've had enough of winter can thank
themselves they're not hunkered down in Alaska's interior. North of
Anchorage and closer to the Canadian border, towns like Tok and Eagle
are in a region where a winter storm warning is in effect until noon
Sunday. Snow, blowing snow and freezing rain are expected tonight
throughout the upper Tanana Valley and an area known as Fortymile
country." via Tom Nelson
.
No comments:
Post a Comment