Anchorage is about a foot shy of breaking winter snowfall record (2024)

Anchorage is about a foot shy of breaking winter snowfall record (1)

Anchorage set several daily and monthly snowfall records this winter, with more than 10 feet of snow dropping on town. But it doesn’t look likely the city will break its all-time record of 134.5 inches of total snowfall for the season.

That’s according to National Weather Service climate researcher Brian Brettschneider, who joins us for our regular Ask a Climatologist segment.

Brettschneider says the city has only got about a foot of snow to go to beat the record, but he doesn’t see it happening.

Listen:

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Brian Brettschneider: So in Anchorage, we are about 12 inches shy of setting the new record. If no more snow fell the rest of the season, it would still be the fourth snowiest winter season on record. So from this point onward, we average only about seven or eight inches of snow the rest of the season, and only about one out of every five years would have enough snow the rest of the way to end up breaking the record. So it’s not looking real good for setting that record. Of course, it just takes one big snow event.

Wesley Early: And I’m curious, is there any indication of when the last snowfall could be? You know, when people can expect, maybe now’s a good time to take off the snow tires?

BB: Well, that’s really hard to say. Typically, the long-term average is that the snow goes away completely around April 14 or 15. But of course, the roads are a lot clearer. They’re usually free of snow and ice well before then. So I know driving around town right now, most roads are free and clear of ice. Of course, we’re getting a lot of melting and refreezing in the morning. So it’s been quite slick the last few days.

WE: So we were in an El Niño winter, which means that it was set to be a little warmer than normal. Maybe it didn’t feel that way because of all the snowfall. Did we actually have a warmer than normal winter due to El Niño?

BB: Well, there’s a couple of ways to think about it. If you just add up all the highs and lows kind of statewide, and you say, “Well, how did the numbers shake out,” we ended up almost exactly normal, as far as when you compare to the most recent period from 1991 to 2020. Although historically, we were a couple degrees warmer than normal if you look at long-term. But for an El Niño winter, we were quite a bit cooler than normal. We were probably about five degrees cooler than what we would expect going into an El Niño winter. So we were kind of the one cooler-than-normal bullseye to that extent, really for all of North America and most of the Northern Hemisphere.

WE: And is there any reason why that sort of warmer winter didn’t come?

BB: You can look day to day or week to week and evaluate the atmospheric flow, and we ended up with maybe more northerly flow than we would have ordinarily expected. But almost everyone else was above normal. Just one small area was less warm than normal, and that was us. And that’s just really impossible to forecast at the seasonal timescale. We just really kind of won the luck of the draw. For North America as a whole, it was by far the warmest winter on record. For the Lower 48 it was the warmest winter, for Canada it was the warmest winter, for all of North America it was the warmest winter. For all of the northern hemisphere and for all the world, it was the warmest.

WE: Yeah, it’s interesting, you know, we also had a more cool summer while everybody else was sort of having a really, really hot summer. And it seems that we had this cooler winter while everybody else was having a warmer winter. Is that sort of any indication of how things will be moving forward, it was kind of like a freaky year?

BB: So we didn’t really have a very cool summer by historical standards. It was cool compared to say the last decade, but it’s a very typical summer. The fact that we had a not-as-warm summer as we could have had and a not-as-warm winter as we could have had, is there any correlation between those two? No, they really function independently. And, you know, parts of northern Europe, Scandinavia in particular, they’ve had a run of cool months in a row, about six months in a row. Whereas, you know, region-wide, it’s been very warm. So they were kind of a little cool bullseye as well. So there’s just a lot of randomness to the climate system at that timescale. And we really can’t look forward to make any kind of extrapolation. So if we look back at the last really strong El Niño in 2015-16, we were the unusually warm spot. We were much warmer than everybody else, compared to normal. And a lot of people were asking, oh, what does this mean, why were we in Alaska particularly warmer? And so we’re getting to the flip side right now, we just kind of got lucky as it were.

WE: And as you mentioned, we’re about a month out from when it’s expected that all the snow is gonna be melted. Is there any forecast for what spring and summer, or breakup and construction season, are gonna look like?

BB: So just [Thursday], the Climate Prediction Center released their April outlook and their updated April, May, June outlook. And for Alaska, they’re quite warm. And that’s to be expected. You know, we talk about how El Niño winters in Alaska are especially warm. It actually turns out that the strongest relationship is in the spring. And so almost every single spring in an El Niño year is above normal and usually much above normal for Alaska. It’s really a stark map when you look at it in print. And the same is true for May. Now by the summer, by say June, we’re expecting the El Niño to completely fall apart and so we wouldn’t expect any signal one way or the other. But for now, we would expect a very warm and quite dry month of April.

Wesley Early, Alaska Public Media - Anchorage

Wesley Early covers Anchorage life and city politics for Alaska Public Media. Reach him atwearly@alaskapublic.organd follow him on X at@wesley_early. Read more about Wesleyhere.

Anchorage is about a foot shy of breaking winter snowfall record (2024)

FAQs

Anchorage is about a foot shy of breaking winter snowfall record? ›

Anchorage set several daily and monthly snowfall records this winter, with more than 10 feet of snow dropping on town. But it doesn't look likely the city will break its all-time record of 134.5 inches of total snowfall for the season.

Has Anchorage broken the snowfall record? ›

A whopping 132.4 inches of snow — just a little over 11 feet — fell on Anchorage over the winter, as of the latest measurement Friday. That's only 0.2 inches shy of the second snowiest winter of 1954 and '55 and about two inches away from the all-time record of 134.5 inches set in 2011-2012.

How many feet of snow does Anchorage get? ›

Anchorage has a frost-free growing season that averages slightly over one hundred days. Average January low and high temperatures at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport (PANC) are 11 / 23 °F (−11.7 / −5.0 °C) with an average winter snowfall of 75.59 inches, or 1.92 meters.

What is the record breaking snow in Alaska? ›

Another light snowfall last month pushed Anchorage into second place for its highest recorded winter snowfall ever, behind the record of 134.5 inches set during the winter of 2011-2012. With Thursday's snow, Kutz said the city stands at 133.3 inches of snowfall, just over an inch away from the snowiest year.

What is the world record for snowfall in feet? ›

Greatest Snow Depth on Record: 451 Inches

Tamarack, California, also holds the U.S. record for the greatest snow depth ever measured. A maximum snow depth of 451 inches, or 37.5 feet, was recorded there on March 11, 1911, according to Burt.

What is the snowiest city in the United States? ›

1. Syracuse, New York. When it comes to the snowiest cities in the USA, Syracuse most certainly claims the throne with almost 11 feet of snow each winter!

Did Alaska get 100 inches of snow? ›

'Pandemic of snow' in Anchorage sets a record for the earliest arrival of 100 inches of snow. A new storm has dropped nearly 17 more inches of snow on Anchorage, bringing the seasonal total past 100 inches. It is the earliest Alaska's largest city has reached that mark.

Where is the snowiest place on Earth? ›

The snowiest city on Earth is probably not where you think it is. It's actually in Aomori City in Japan. Here they received around 26 feet of snow every year! It also snows where you would least expect it to.

What's the coldest it's ever been in Anchorage Alaska? ›

In Fairbanks, normal winter low temperatures are about -20°F, and in Anchorage they are about +5°F. The lowest recorded temperatures at both places are, of course, considerably lower than that, reaching -66°F at Fairbanks and -38° at Anchorage.

What is the warmest city in Alaska? ›

Alaska
  • Hottest city: Fairbanks.
  • Number of days per year w/ temperature above 90℉: 0.
  • Number of days per year w/ temperature above 100℉: 0.
  • Average summer maximum temperature: 70.6℉
  • Average summer minimum temperature: 48.9℉

What is the snowiest city in Alaska? ›

The city of Valdez receives an average of 300 inches of snow annually. But that's in town, at sea level. Nearby Thompson Pass sees 600 to 900 inches each year on average, and during some winters 100+ inches can fall each month for up to five consecutive months.

What world city holds the record for being the snowiest? ›

Sukayu Onsen is the snowiest inhabited place on Earth with an average yearly snowfall of 17.6 m (58 ft) and a winter season record of 23.7 m (78 ft).

What is the most snow ever recorded on Earth? ›

And on February, 14, 1927, Mt. Ibuki, Japan, recorded the world's greatest snow accumulation: 38.8 feet.

Who got 50 feet of snow? ›

Two resorts in the Lake Tahoe area shared photos of chair lifts and ski patrol stations buried under more than 50 feet of snow to Facebook on Monday, March 13. That's about the height of a five-story building. The snowfall was piled so high, staffers could walk right up to the lifts.

Which state has the most snow in the US? ›

The United States of America is home to some of the snowiest places on the planet – its ten snowiest states being New Hampshire, Maine, Vermont, Alaska, Wyoming, Michigan, New York, Utah, Minnesota, and Massachusetts. The snowiest state of all is New Hampshire, which gets an average of 174.35 inches of snow each year.

Has it ever snowed 6 feet? ›

Most Snow Measured in 24 Hours: 75.8 Inches

If you are 6 feet tall and stood outside for 24 hours in Silver Lake, Colorado, April 14-15, 1921, you would've been buried by snow from head to toe. That location recorded 6.3 feet of snow in a single day at an elevation of 10,220 feet in the Colorado Rockies.

What was the heaviest snowfall recorded in Alaska? ›

In the winter of 1952–1953, 974.1 inches or 25 metres of snow fell—the most ever recorded in one season at one location in Alaska. It is not the most snow ever recorded in one season at one location anywhere in the fifty states as that record belongs to Mount Baker Ski Resort at 1,140 inches or 29 metres in 1998–99.

How many inches of snow has Anchorage gotten today? ›

0" Snowpack Depth
Geolocation61.12, -149.67
Past 24hrs0 inches
24hr Forecast0 inches
120hr Forecast0 inches
Peak Snowpack114 inches
5 more rows

Has it ever snowed in Anchorage in July? ›

When it comes to weather in Alaska, anything is possible — including snow in July. According to Brian Brettschneider with our Ask a Climatologist segment, Alaska holds the North American record for most snow on a single day in July.

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