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Record Warmth Predicted For December In Connecticut
Will we have a white Christmas in Connecticut? Right now, it doesn't look like it.

By Kara Seymour, Patch Editor
Are you hoping for a white Christmas?
You most likely won’t get it in Connecticut.
Find out what's happening in Greenwichfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Many forecasters are predicting record warmth for December due to a strong El Nino pattern.
The Washington Post reports this month’s mild conditions could be one for the record books. It may be one of the warmest Decembers on record for Connecticut, according to the Post. Forecasters attribute the mild weather to a strong El Nino pattern.
Find out what's happening in Greenwichfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
According to the long-term forecast by Accuweather for Connecticut, daytime temperatures will remain in the mid to upper 40s and into the 50s throughout the entire month.
No wintry weather is forecast for Connecticut in December, according to Accuweather’s monthly forecast. As of right now, temps in the 30s during the daytime will be a rarity if it happens at all, especially on the Shoreline and in southern Connecticut.
That forecast is in line with predictions by Michael Ventrice, a seasonal forecaster at WSI, who says December 2015 is expected to feature “near record warm weather” in the northern U.S.
“The highly anomalous warmth in December that is anticipated to develop across North America is attributed to weather patterns driven by the strongest El Nino observed in our data archives,” Ventrice said.
If Accuweather is correct, Santa may have to ditch his red suit for a rain coat. Temperatures around Christmas are predicted to be in the upper 40s for northern Connecticut and in the low 50s for the southern part of the state, and clouds and rain are possible, the long-term forecast shows.
Meanwhile, NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center says there is an 80 percent chance that warmer than average temperatures will stick around at least through mid-December.
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