Weather

Farmers’ Almanac Predicts 'Temperamental' Winter In Texas

Intervals of 'tranquil weather' in the Lone Star State will usher in cold and wintry precipitation, forecasters predict.

AUSTIN, TX — Because you can never have too many long-range winter forecasts when summer is still stinking hot in many places across America, the Farmers' Almanac has released its long-range 2021 winter forecast for Texas.

The Farmers’ Almanac calls its forecast the “winter of the Great Divide” with “cold and snowy conditions in the North, drought in the West and everything crazy in between.”

In Texas, forecasters predict, Mother Nature will mix intervals of tranquil weather with occasional shots of cold and wintry precipitation but overall may seem to be a bit “temperamental.” The same conditions are expected in New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana, according to the Almanac.

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Hold the phone. You might be experiencing a sense of deja vu upon reading the forecast. That's because you may have read a similar prognostication from the Old Farmer’s Almanac 2021 winter forecast. That publication and the Farmers' Almanac are both compendiums of useful weather information, and laden with gardening and nature tips.

The two publications are both venerable, with the Old Farmer's Almanac established in 1792 and the Farmers' Almanac in 1818. Both publications claim about 80 percent accuracy in winter forecasts over the 200 years they’ve been peering into looking glasses that rely on different measurements that are somewhat mysterious.

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The Old Farmer’s Almanac forecast was originally based on a still-secret formula developed by founder Robert B. Thomas of Dublin, New Hampshire. Thomas believed magnetic solar storms influenced the Earth’s weather. His notes remain locked away at the almanac’s offices, but they provide the basis of a new forecast model informed by weather, solar and atmospheric science.

The secret formula used by the Farmers’ Almanac is based on sunspot activity, tidal forces resulting from the moon’s gravitational pull, planetary alignment and other factors. It’s known only by the almanac’s weather prognosticator, who goes by the pseudonym Caleb Weatherbee.

As winter approaches — it officially arrives in the United States on Monday, Dec. 21 — “preparing for the unexpected is more important than ever,” Peter Geiger, Farmers’ Almanac editor, said in a news release.

Here’s a snapshot of what the Farmers’ Almanac says could be in store across America:

  • Cold in the Great Lakes and Midwest, the Northern and Central Plains and the Rockies, with abundant and possibly above-normal snow in parts of the western Dakotas, Wyoming, northern portions of Colorado and Utah.
  • Average precipitation and chillier temperatures in the Southeast.
  • Mild temperatures but continued drought conditions in Arizona and Southern California.
  • Tranquil weather mixed with shots of cold and wintry precipitation in New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma and western parts of Arkansas and Louisiana.
  • Rainy, wet weather along the Pacific Coastal Plain from Northern California to the western portions of Oregon and Washington.
  • “Winter wild card” weather from the Tennessee and lower Ohio River valleys to the north and east through New England, with a mix of intense systems delivering a wintry mix of rainy, icy and snowy weather throughout the winter.

The Farmers’ Almanac predicts winter’s biggest storm may come around mid-February with a blizzard dumping 1 to 2 feet of snow all along the Eastern Seaboard.

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