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    #61
    For those of you with short and biased memories here are the above average temperatures for January.

    Reflections on a warm and dry January

    Daniel Bezte By Daniel Bezte
    Co-operator contributor

    Published: February 9, 2021

    I don’t know about you, but the first month of 2021 seemed to go by in a blink; maybe it had to do with all the warm weather. Unless you literally stayed inside for all of January there was no way you couldn’t conclude it was a warm month. Even the cold weather that moved in near the end of the month couldn’t put much of a dent into the near-record heat.

    Every location I checked across the agricultural Prairies saw well-above-average temperatures in January. The warmest absolute temperatures occurred in Alberta, but the warmest temperatures compared to average were found across Manitoba and in the Peace region of Alberta. Typically, when we see really warm winter temperatures it tends to be dry, and this January was no exception as all three Prairie provinces reported well-below-average amounts.
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    Let’s begin our look in Alberta, where mean daily temperatures in January ranged from -4.3 C in Calgary to -8.4 C in the Peace River region. While Calgary had the absolute warmest reading, it was only 2.8 C above average — which is still well-above average, but compared with other locations it was actually the cold spot. Edmonton came in about 5 C above average, but Peace River was the warmest location right across the Prairies, with a mean monthly temperature 6.5 C above the long-term average. Precipitation across most of Alberta was light to almost non-existent, ranging from around one millimetre in the Calgary region to around six mm in the Peace River region.

    Moving eastward into Saskatchewan, the well-above-average temperatures continued. The mean monthly temperature in Saskatoon came in right around -11 C, a good 4.5 C above the long-term average, while Regina saw a mean monthly temperature of -9.5 C, about 5 C above average. Precipitation was light, with both centres reporting between seven and eight mm, or about 50 per cent of average.

    Finally, in Manitoba, absolute temperatures may have been a little cooler but compared to average it was a very warm month. The “cold” spot was the Brandon region, which recorded a mean monthly temperature of -11 C, a good 5.5 C above average. Both Dauphin and Winnipeg saw mean monthly temperatures right around -10 C, about 5.3 C above the long-term average for Dauphin and about 6 C above average for Winnipeg. Just like in Alberta and Saskatchewan, precipitation was below average, ranging from about five mm in the Winnipeg region to about 10 mm in the Dauphin region.

    Overall, it was a very warm and dry start to 2021 and now the big question is whether the current cool-down will continue into February — or will the warm weather continue leading to what could be one of the warmest winters on record?

    Comment


      #62
      Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
      For those of you with short and biased memories here are the above average temperatures for January.

      Reflections on a warm and dry January

      Daniel Bezte By Daniel Bezte
      Co-operator contributor

      Published: February 9, 2021

      I don’t know about you, but the first month of 2021 seemed to go by in a blink; maybe it had to do with all the warm weather. Unless you literally stayed inside for all of January there was no way you couldn’t conclude it was a warm month. Even the cold weather that moved in near the end of the month couldn’t put much of a dent into the near-record heat.

      Every location I checked across the agricultural Prairies saw well-above-average temperatures in January. The warmest absolute temperatures occurred in Alberta, but the warmest temperatures compared to average were found across Manitoba and in the Peace region of Alberta. Typically, when we see really warm winter temperatures it tends to be dry, and this January was no exception as all three Prairie provinces reported well-below-average amounts.
      Related Articles

      Let’s begin our look in Alberta, where mean daily temperatures in January ranged from -4.3 C in Calgary to -8.4 C in the Peace River region. While Calgary had the absolute warmest reading, it was only 2.8 C above average — which is still well-above average, but compared with other locations it was actually the cold spot. Edmonton came in about 5 C above average, but Peace River was the warmest location right across the Prairies, with a mean monthly temperature 6.5 C above the long-term average. Precipitation across most of Alberta was light to almost non-existent, ranging from around one millimetre in the Calgary region to around six mm in the Peace River region.

      Moving eastward into Saskatchewan, the well-above-average temperatures continued. The mean monthly temperature in Saskatoon came in right around -11 C, a good 4.5 C above the long-term average, while Regina saw a mean monthly temperature of -9.5 C, about 5 C above average. Precipitation was light, with both centres reporting between seven and eight mm, or about 50 per cent of average.

      Finally, in Manitoba, absolute temperatures may have been a little cooler but compared to average it was a very warm month. The “cold” spot was the Brandon region, which recorded a mean monthly temperature of -11 C, a good 5.5 C above average. Both Dauphin and Winnipeg saw mean monthly temperatures right around -10 C, about 5.3 C above the long-term average for Dauphin and about 6 C above average for Winnipeg. Just like in Alberta and Saskatchewan, precipitation was below average, ranging from about five mm in the Winnipeg region to about 10 mm in the Dauphin region.

      Overall, it was a very warm and dry start to 2021 and now the big question is whether the current cool-down will continue into February — or will the warm weather continue leading to what could be one of the warmest winters on record?
      I thought that was weather not climate.

      Comment


        #63
        Comparing a few degrees above average to twenty degrees below normal is not convenient for NFU supporters.

        Comment


          #64
          None of this changes the fact that December and January average temperatures were way above normal across the prairies. Darn those facts!

          Comment


            #65
            Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
            None of this changes the fact that December and January average temperatures were way above normal across the prairies. Darn those facts!
            Across the prairies is a bold statement. The prairies are a big place. We had some warmer than usual weather, sure. But not unusually so.

            Looking back at February cold. Last three years now, have had brutal cold.

            Finally. Imagine if heat records were breaking at this rate? By six degrees? That would for sure be used by carbon tax supporters as proof of a climate emergency. Like the ski chalet in Switzerland which had a year with scant snow and had to close back a decade or more. Was supposed to be an example of our future. Has had great snowfall every year since.

            Or the pothole region of the strawberry hills west of Humboldt. Twenty years ago the water was dried up. Global warmists swore that this was the new normal. And then the rains came, refilled the water holes. Didn’t work out very well for the gore types, did it?

            Ahh. After typing all that I forgot. Our area is warming at three times the rate of the rest of the planet. Wait....

            Comment


              #66
              Yes across the prairies from the Peace River to Winnipeg! That covers the prairies pretty well.

              Why are you disputing temperature facts? LOL

              So almost record winter warmth for 2 months is followed by a record cold spell. No dispute on my end.

              The record cold must be Trudeaus fault!
              Last edited by chuckChuck; Feb 12, 2021, 10:10.

              Comment


                #67
                If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck it’s probably a duck unless you are chuck.

                Comment


                  #68
                  At North Battleford, Jan 2021 rated as the 14th average warmest on record.
                  There are 58 other January's on record that had the same or higher maximum temperature.
                  Highest January temp recorded belongs to January 1928 at 11.1 degrees.
                  Warmest average temp Jan in N.B. was 2006. Never went below -22.5C

                  Comment


                    #69
                    Originally posted by farming101 View Post
                    At North Battleford, Jan 2021 rated as the 14th average warmest on record.
                    There are 58 other January's on record that had the same or higher maximum temperature.
                    Highest January temp recorded belongs to January 1928 at 11.1 degrees.
                    Warmest average temp Jan in N.B. was 2006. Never went below -22.5C
                    Where do you find easy to navigate weather records going that far back?
                    Environment Canada seems to have forgotten that weather records existed before about 25 years ago for my local stations. So convenietly enough, all the record highs and lows and averages only extend back that far. Sorting through the prior records a month at a time through the EC site is painful.

                    Comment


                      #70
                      Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                      Sorting through the prior records a month at a time through the EC site is painful.
                      Yes...

                      Comment


                        #71
                        History is a passing interest of mine. What I gather the more I realize human nature never changes. I agree pollution of our air water and soil speeds our demise as well as drastic actions with little merit to fixing problems. Ancient cultures when faced with drought would at the very least would sacrifice an animal or two but in dire cases a few humans. The technocrats devoid of belief in a supernatural being will still perform sacrifices to appease in hopes it justifies their logic.

                        Comment


                          #72
                          Originally posted by farming101 View Post
                          Yes...
                          So, did you create your own record set from the EC site, and refer back to it for analysis such as this? Or does NB have more complete records going back much further?

                          Comment


                            #73
                            Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                            So, did you create your own record set from the EC site, and refer back to it for analysis such as this? Or does NB have more complete records going back much further?
                            EC has records for NB going back to 1879, but they are not more or less continuous until 1885. The values I mentioned are from the EC records.
                            In 1871 the Meteorological Society of Canada was established.
                            Everything before that is studied before it is allowed in the record. EC has records for some areas going back to 1840.
                            The Royal Meteorological Society has studied temperature records as far back as 1742 observed in Quebec

                            Comment


                              #74
                              https://www.weatherstats.ca/ https://www.weatherstats.ca/

                              User friendly EC statistics miner. Only carries stations that are current

                              Comment


                                #75
                                Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                                Yeah its cold outside. But December and January were way above average temperatures in our part of the world.

                                Here is the December temperature map:
                                [ATTACH]7526[/ATTACH]
                                Only a misguided , arrogant person could think they have the power to change the earths weather

                                Comment

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