While New York is getting this
Alaska is getting this...
Where's
the snow? Not in Alaska's largest city
One
week before Thanksgiving, much of the nation is digging out from
snowstorms, but the ground is bare in Alaska's largest city.
20
November, 2014
Anchorage
normally has nearly 17 inches of snowfall this time of year. Instead,
it's seen less than 4 inches — and that snow fell a month ago and
melted in unseasonably warmer weather.
Without
powder, local skiers are hitting the trails on roller skis or getting
fit indoors. Some people are finding frozen lakes to skate on, even
if it means leaving town. Others are celebrating.
A
light rain fell this week, only to later freeze into a slick layer on
roads. So far, however, Anchorage's high this month was 48 degrees on
Nov. 10, instead of the norm of 29 degrees for that day, according to
National Weather Service meteorologist Andy Dixon.
The
same system that is pushing frigid conditions from the north to the
Lower 48 states is bringing warmer and drier conditions to Alaska's
mainland from the south, Dixon said. It's sort of like trading
places.
"It's
not unprecedented by any means," Dixon said Thursday. "But
it is unusual."
He
said it should be winding down over the weekend and Anchorage
temperatures should be back to equilibrium by the middle of next
week. That means colder conditions but still no significant snow in
the foreseeable forecast.
While
waiting for snow, some children are playing games and exercising to
work on skills they eventually will use in a program of the Nordic
Skiing Association of Anchorage.
Tamra
Kornfield, program manager for the association, has seen that waiting
pattern over the years as a lifelong Anchorage resident. There are
winters when snow is late to arrive, and snow lovers look for other
forms of recreation.
"I'll
be glad when it's here," Kornfield said. "But I have been
training myself not to push seasons, so to enjoy whatever season
you're in."
Local
high school cross-country ski teams are practicing by running and
hitting school gyms and lifting weights, said Tim Helvey, activities
principal for cross-country skiing for the Anchorage School District.
But team members want snow and more snow.
"They're
ready to get out there and do what they want to do," Helvey
said. "That's ski."
The
lack of snow is just fine with Ebony Toland, who moved to Alaska a
year ago with her Army husband, who is stationed at Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage.
Toland
is originally from Batesburg-Leesville, South Carolina, and was
excited when she experienced her first Alaska snowfall last year. But
she said the novelty wore off after subsequent storms.
Toland
said she has no desire to build another snowman, and doesn't relish
the thought of shoveling snow or keeping it out of her shoes.
"I
think it looks prettier if it just stays in the mountains in the
distance," said Toland, an attorney practicing as a paralegal
until she takes the state bar exam in February.
"If
it just stayed there, it'd be great."
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