With a weak La Niña returning in the equatorial Pacific, our weather across the Great Lakes could turn more active for the remainder of winter.
La Niña has arrived and is likely to be impacting the winter season, including how much snow and rain New England might see before the start of spring.
Does it seem like it is unusually dry this month? The last significant rainfall in Western Washington was Jan. 10.
Significant snow totals will likely be from the Cascades of the Pacific Northwest, Western BC, and the northern Rockies.
The drought declared in April 2024, is still in effect while experts keep an eye out for signs of improving conditions.
StormTRACKER meteorologist Lydia Blume explains what La Niña conditions are and what that means for the northern Plains for the rest of the winter in terms of temperatures and precipitation.
We are halfway through winter and after an exceptionally warm start, North America’s winter is transitioning toward more predictable patterns with La Niña.
With a wimpy winter and weak La Niña, Western Washington didn't see any snow at the end of 2024, and the flakes haven't fallen so far in 2025. But that could change on the first day of February. Will it snow at the start of February?
A La Niña winter just started, but it isn’t expected to last long. National forecasters are already looking ahead to the spring season. A new long-range forecast released Thursday shows
High school and local college results and highlights from the Southland, Aurora, Elgin, Naperville and Lake County.
For Florida, the current prediction is one that many residents will be very happy with after the January we experienced. The extended forecast shows a trend of above-normal temperatures. In February, the average high temperature for West Palm Beach is 76.7 and our low temperature is 60.1. In Vero Beach, the high is 75.6 and the low is 54.5.
Virginia has a mid-winter thaw after a frigid January. Are cold and snow done, or will they come back? We ponder the possibilities.