Seasonal & Holidays
Chances Of A White Christmas For PA In 2022
It could be a magical, snowy holiday for many, according to the latest long range forecasts.
PENNSYLVANIA — If you love the snow, then some good news just came down the pipe from AccuWeather in their latest long-range holiday forecast.
Chances for a white Christmas in parts of Pennsylvania and much of the country are better this year than in the past, AccuWeather says.
La Niña is active once again this winter, which could spark an active storm track across the northern tier of U.S. states.
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Southeastern Pennsylvania has about a normal chance of a white Christmas, while most of the state — from Pittsburgh to State College to the Lehigh Valley — has up to a 75 percent higher chance of snow on Christmas than normal, according to AccuWeather.
Meanwhile in the upstate Pennsylvania area, along with Buffalo, New York, a white Christmas is unsurpisingly likely. That's because of the massive snowfall they received in November, which is unlikely to melt by the holidays.
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The season is off to a slow start in New England, the only area east of the Rocky Mountains expected to see higher than normal snowfall this winter. But that likely won’t happen before the calendar flips to 2023, when snowfall totals are likely to be boosted by a few nor’easters, according to AccuWeather's winter forecast.
The holiday shouldn’t be a total bust in northern New England and upstate, central and western New York. Chances for a white Christmas are near normal in cities like Burlington, Vermont; Albany and Syracuse, New York; and Cleveland.
The spine of the Appalachian Mountains looks to have an above-normal chance of having snow on the ground in time for Christmas, but AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Paul Pastelok said brief periods of warmer weather before the holiday could reduce the amount of snow across the central Appalachians.
Across the central Plains and Tennessee Valley, chances for a white Christmas usually aren’t very good — about 25 percent, according to historical data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They could see snow in the first half of the month, and cold temperatures sticking around could keep it on the ground, increasing the chances of a white Christmas in those areas.
Chicago has a near-normal chance for a white Christmas, according to the AccuWeather forecast. The city had its first measurable snowfall on Oct. 17, nearly a month earlier than average and more than two months earlier than in 2021, when the first snowfall on Dec. 28 was the latest ever for measurable accumulation.
As Christmas week approaches, the weather could go through another transition that will bring storms to the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest around Christmas Day.
White Christmases occur with about a 75 percent probability on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, northern Wisconsin and northeastern Minnesota, according to historical data from the National Weather Service.
Pastelok and his team predict that snow chances will be higher than normal in those areas. Some areas of northern Nebraska could get snow from the same system, but Iowa and southern Nebraska, for the most part, will get cold weather, but lower-than-normal chances for snow.
The northern Plains can expect cold, snowy weather for the holidays. Billings, Montana, for example, is expected to have a higher-than-average chance of a white Christmas.
The Northwest and Rockies should see snow during the middle of the month. It’ll stick around in higher elevations, where AccuWeather puts the probability of a white Christmas around 90 percent. However, in Salt Lake City and Denver, chances for a white Christmas are only near to slightly above normal.
A cold front coming down from Canada to the Northwest will send temperatures plummeting in lower-elevation areas, which AccuWeather predicts will produce more snow in places like Seattle and Portland, Oregon.
Seattle typically doesn’t see its first snowfall until Dec. 31, but this year got almost an inch on Nov. 29.
AccuWeather is the latest to issue its long-range Christmas forecast. Both The Old Farmer’s Almanac and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Climatic Data Center previously made predictions for a white Christmas.
The Old Farmer’s Almanac expected large swaths of the country to have at least an inch of snow on Christmas Day. To determine the probability of a White Christmas in different parts of the country, the National Climatic Data Center looked at historical data from 1981-2010.
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