White Christmas (snow)

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White Christmas
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White Christmas

A white Christmas, to most people in the Northern Hemisphere, refers to snowy weather on Christmas Day, a phenomenon which is far more common in some countries than in others. For example, in many parts of the USA, snow is seldom experienced at Christmas except in the mountains; but most parts of Canada except for the British Columbia coast and southern interior valleys, southern Alberta, southern Ontario and parts of the Maritimes stand an excellent chance of experiencing a white Christmas. The same goes for the countries in northern Europe, such as ones in Scandinavia, the Baltic States, northern Russia, Belarus. Due to oceanic climate and such, the further west a country is in Europe, the lower the probability that it will have a white Christmas (e.g., in southern France it is very rare, while in Bucharest, Romania, which is at a similar latitude, a white Christmas is much more likely).

Some of the least-likely white Christmases that have happened include the 2004 Christmas Eve Snowstorm, which brought the first white Christmas in 50 years to New Orleans and caused the first ever white Christmas to Houston, Texas. The 2004 storm also brought the first measurable snow of any kind since 1895 to Brownsville, Texas, and its twin city of Matamoros, Mexico. The Florida winter storm of 1989 also occurred immediately before Christmas.

[edit] White Christmases in Canada

The Meteorological Service of Canada compiled a list of the probability of a White Christmas in selected Canadian cities:

City Probability
Vancouver 11%
Calgary 59%
Edmonton 88%
Saskatoon 98%
Regina 91%
Winnipeg 98%
Windsor 41%
Toronto 57%
Ottawa 83%
Montreal 80%
Quebec City 100%
Halifax 59%
St. John's 65%
Whitehorse 100%
Yellowknife 100%

Reference: http://www.msc-smc.ec.gc.ca/media/xmas/prob_e.html

[edit] White Christmases in the United States

According to the National Climatic Data Center, basing numbers upon 1961-1990 data and stations with at least 25 years of data, the probability of a White Christmas (one inch of snow on the ground) at selected cities is as follows:

City Probability
Anchorage, Alaska 90%
Annette Island, Alaska (Aleutian Islands) 17%
Fairbanks, Alaska 100%
Phoenix, Arizona 0%
Little Rock, Arkansas 3%
Los Angeles, California 0%
San Francisco, California 0%
Denver, Colorado 50%
Hartford, Connecticut 57%
Wilmington, Delaware 13%
Washington, DC 13%
Savannah, Georgia 3%
Boise, Idaho 30%
Chicago, Illinois 40%
Indianapolis, Indiana 30%
Des Moines, Iowa 50%
Topeka, Kansas 23%
Louisville, Kentucky 13%
Portland, Maine 83%
Boston, Massachusetts 23%
Detroit, Michigan 50%
Marquette, Michigan (Upper Peninsula) 100%
Minneapolis, Minnesota 73%
St. Louis, Missouri 23%
Helena, Montana 67%
Omaha, Nebraska 44%
Reno, Nevada 20%
Concord, New Hampshire 87%
Newark, New Jersey 23%
Albuquerque, New Mexico 3%
Massena, New York 77%
New York, New York 10%
Charlotte, North Carolina 0%
Fargo, North Dakota 83%
Cleveland, Ohio 50%
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 3%
Portland, Oregon 0%
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 10%
Providence, Rhode Island 37%
Charleston, South Carolina 3%
Rapid City, South Dakota 47%
Nashville, Tennessee 13%
Amarillo, Texas 7%
Dallas, Texas 0%
Salt Lake City, Utah 53%
Richmond, Virginia 7%
Seattle, Washington 7%
Spokane, Washington 70%
Charleston, West Virginia 30%
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 60%
Casper, Wyoming 47%

Reference: http://ols.nndc.noaa.gov/plolstore/plsql/olstore.prodspecific?prodnum=C00493-PUB-A0001

[edit] External links

Are you dreaming of a white Christmas?

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