Monday, December 1, 2025

Limping into December

November is in the books and except for the last day we can be glad it is in the rearview mirror.  The last day did bring a bit of snow to the Salt Lake Valley, resulting in a beautiful start to the morning today. 

Avenues Twin Peaks from University of Utah Campus 1 Dec 2025

That said, it was a bad month for skiing due to warmth and lack of snow.  At the Salt Lake City International Airport, this November was the warmest on record.  


Records in the mountains are spottier.  At Alta, the Average temperature was 37.5°F, which is the 2nd highest on record, but observations there are much spottier and I don't put much faith in that number.  The warmest November on record there (1949) has 9 missing days.  It's safe to say it was warm, but definitive statements are not possible with the historical record at mountain sites due to limited data. 

So we limp into December.  The next storm system comes on Tuesday night.  It's another system dropping in from the northwest with some similarities to Sunday's storm in that it will likely produce snow or a rain/snow mix on the valley floor with accumulations of a trace to 2" in the valley and perhaps a bit more on the benches.  Worth watching forecasts in case this changes.  

For Alta-Collins, there's pretty big spread in the models with some giving less than 2" and the biggest outliers being in the RRFS ensemble where there are two members in the 8-9" range.  

Think 3-6" and hope for more. 

After that, the forecasts range from sad to optimistic.  The Utah Snow Ensemble shows that most members of the European ensemble (ENS, yellow-orange liens below) are calling for a bit more snow later in the week and into the weekend.  The mean of the ENS is perhaps another inch of water and 10" of snow, although there are a few of ENS members going for game-changing amounts in excess of 30".


The US ensemble (GEFS) has more members who are putting out much bigger amounts over a multiday period, yielding a mean snowfall of 40" over the next 10 days.  The difference between most ENS members and most GEFS members is the storm track with the ENS members tending to be a bit stronger on the western ridge, resulting in a drier forecast (although we still get some snow), whereas the GEFS members bring more action into northern Utah.  

Bottom line is that you should be rooting for America. 

2 comments:

  1. One thing is sure enough: I’ll be limping in May

    ReplyDelete
  2. what is going on with the mid 40's next week at PC/Heber elevations?

    ReplyDelete