After months of waiting, La Niña conditions finally emerged in the tropical Pacific last month, according to the National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center.
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.
It’s been a particularly good season for skiing and snowboarding in Oregon so far. Thanks to heavy early snow, ski areas across the state saw their earliest openings in years. In late December, Oregon’s ski resorts boasted the deepest snow in the entire country.
Portland’s winter so far has been notably without snow. When it’s been wet, it’s been above freezing and when the temperatures have dropped, the sky has been clear.
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.
PORTLAND — Energy Trust of Oregon advises it is time to prepare for the big chill, especially with below-freezing temps across much of Eastern Oregon this weekend and during the
We are halfway through winter and after an exceptionally warm start, North America’s winter is transitioning toward more predictable patterns with La Niña.
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
Significant snow totals will likely be from the Cascades of the Pacific Northwest, Western BC, and the northern Rockies.
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.
Weeks of frigid temperatures and lagging precipitation are expected to be on the way out as February approaches.
After a record-breaking Gulf Coast storm, cities like New Orleans and Pensacola, Florida, have had more snow this winter than Omaha, Des Moines and New York.