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Accuweather Winter forecast 2025-26: Snowy season ahead for parts of the US

293 views 11 replies 10 participants last post by  paulm12  
#1 · (Edited)
#5 ·
I still haven't prepped my machine yet. I just had three days in a row with high 70's maybe 80. That's too warm for outdoor work. Maybe I'll do it real late this year and we might actually get some real snow. I had my machine ready to go late Sept. and I only needed a shovel. I used my machine once in Feb. for 3" of heavy wet stuff. I knew it was probably going to be my last chance, and it was.
 
#6 ·
I watch seasonal predictions with the same ***jaundiced cynicism I allow for local weather reports for more than a few weeks from current. Somehow, years that start out with La Nina predictions somehow transit to El Nino someplace around the new year. Or vise-versa.

*** Same as a yellow-eyed squint from one eye, and a partial bilateral eyebrow raise...

For those that hate snow or just make the best of it as a curse, 'no possible snow' is the only good news they will cling to in the winter. My advice: Move to somewhere where snow doesn't happen. We lived on a hilltop above Los Angeles for long enough to see one very rare snow event, and it was gone by that afternoon. Prior to that I had a home in a private Orange County beach community for a few decades, no snow there. Each spot had other offsetting challenges, like fire risk on the hill, coastal flooding and erosion at the beach. No paradise is immune from challenges. The ones with the fewest are choked with a brazillion (that's a lot!) of you closest friends, all of whom believe they have slight more right to be in front of you than behind you. For Everything. From the beach I kept homes in other places too, all with plenty of snow. Mammoth Lakes and Lake Tahoe (Incline) for the skiing and such. I planned projects for both places, and each held enough draw to grab homes there when the opportunities were correct. Then, if conditions at one home got to be too much, just dash to one of the other places for a change. I was a wannabe ski bum, and the wannabe included not-poverty. I -Love- snow and winter even more than I detest summer heat and humidity.

I look forward to winter as the season when all I need to deal with is the snow. No yard work, gardening, or other outdoor labors. There's plenty of world-class skiing a shuttle ride from town away. We have no commute, and when we do need to go out it's no problem with the right car and tires. I try and keep the now-vintage Husky in tip-top shape so we don't have surprises when it snows. Two of my former five driveway owners are new in the last couple years, might add two others. I don't -have- to clear snow for them. But we still need to keep the street cleared for paramedics. I'm in my early 70's now and the second youngest person in the neighborhood. With a working snowblower too. At least it was working when I prepped it for hibernation last spring.

Cool rain today, mountain snow predicted for the next few days. Sprinkler blowouts next week as the forecast overnight lows get down to the freezing mark more regularly.

Snow! Bring It On!
 
#9 ·
Closest marker on that prediction map shows 150". But that number could be at the ski area, in one of the higher villages south of us. Or at @SnowCat in Bend's bungalow just northwest of us. Or where we are at the SE corner of town in Bend.

The last 'serious' snow years here were 2014, 2017, and 2019. The last two we were raking roof snow. I think we might be overdue at this point. Still, we always need the mountain snow for water in our little river. Endangered spotted frogs, endangered Native-American salmon, and a ton of other uses demand river water flow these days. Every mountain snowflake, every spring runoff drop is precious these days.

Trees are starting to turn. Guess I'd better get after a couple deferred fixes pretty soon. Ethanol-free winter gas should be in the ground in a few weeks too. All sure signs!