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.
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
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.
Top Chef” is returning for Season 22, as Bravo announced today, and though the new season won’t feature any contestants from Oregon, one very prominent Portland chef and restaurateur will be back for a guest appearance.
A line of snow squalls moved through southern Maine on Jan. 28, 2025, bringing intense periods of snow to areas, including Lewiston.
A group of Maine business owners are banding together to help some of the most vulnerable victims of the Los Angeles-area fires.
Full parking lots, the ice fishing huts dotting the lake and the skaters enjoying laps. Winter recreation spots are loving this brisk, snow-filled winter.
Boston and the rest of New England have been dealing with well below-average temperatures, in some cases falling 20 degrees, as an expansive mass of Arctic air spreads across the eastern half of the United States. This cold surge is making our region this week feel colder than Anchorage, Alaska, which is topping out at 36 degrees.
Dr. Johnna Infanti from NOAA's Climate Prediction Center joins FOX Weather to discuss the potential impacts of a La Niña in the U.S.
We are halfway through winter and after an exceptionally warm start, North America’s winter is transitioning toward more predictable patterns with La Niña.
La Niña is the counterpart to El Niño which caused drought and deadly heat in 2024. View on euronews