Unusually warm Midwest
winter makes for some strange sights
By Tara Burghart
Associated Press
CHICAGO — Crocuses are
pushing out of the ground in New
Jersey. Ice fishing tournaments in Minnesota are being canceled for lack of
ice. And golfers are hitting the links in Chicago
in January.
Much of the Midwest and the East Coast are
going through a remarkably warm winter, with temperatures running 10 and 20
degrees higher than normal in many places.
"I'm not complaining. I can take this," said Rudolph Williams, a
doorman in New York City
who normally wears a hat this time of year but stood outside in 50-degree
weather with his shaved head uncovered. "The Earth is recalibrating
itself: Last year, we had a cold winter, and it's balancing itself out now. In
January, it feels like the middle of April."
New York City
saw a November and December without snow for the first time since 1877. And New Jersey had its
warmest December since records started being kept 111 years ago.
Maria Freitas said that not only are crocus bulbs
blooming in her Rahway, N.J., backyard, but the asparagus is three
inches high.
"They think it's spring. They're so
confused," she said.
Meteorologists say the warm spell is due to a combination of factors: El
Nino, a cyclical warming trend now under way in the Pacific Ocean, can lead to
milder weather, particularly in the Northeast; and the jet stream, the
high-altitude air current that works like a barricade to hold back warm
Southern air, is running much farther north than usual over the East Coast.
The weather is prone to short-term fluctuations, and forecasters said the
mild winter does not necessarily mean global warming is upon us. In fact, the
Plains have been hit by back-to-back blizzards in the past two weeks.
"No cause for alarm. Enjoy it while you have it," said Mike Halpert, head of forecast operations at the National
Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction
Center.
Whatever the explanation, Amanda Dickens was enjoying the weather Wednesday
at Baltimore's Inner Harbor
as she ate lunch outside with her husband and 3-year-old son. Temperatures
there were expected to reach 60 degrees.
At the Marovitz Golf Course in Chicago
near Lake Michigan, 30 people teed off between
9 a.m. and noon, when there are usually no golfers at all this time of year.
Leonard Berg, the course's superintendent for maintenance, gestured to the
fairways with pride: "Normally this time of year there would be a brown
singe to it. Look at that nice emerald green."
At New York's Brooklyn Botanic Garden,
the "everblooming" cherry trees are
flowering more fully than usual, producing thousands of blooms instead of
hundreds.
But the mild weather is also hurting some businesses and events.
In Minnesota, where a water skier in a
wetsuit was recently seen on the Mississippi River near St. Paul, ice fishing tournaments have been
canceled. The U.S. Pond Hockey Championships — scheduled for Jan. 19-21 in Minneapolis — have only a
50-50 chance of being held.
And organizers of the St. Paul Winter Carnival, scheduled to begin late this
month, said the ice is not thick enough to harvest into 1,400 blocks for the
ice maze. They may have to switch to plastic blocks.
"It would give the effect, but it's not exactly Minnesota winter," said Mary Huss, a spokeswoman for the event.
In Ohio, Dan Motz
said sales for his firewood business in a Cincinnati
suburb are down about 25 percent.
In Maryland,
buds are appearing on apple and peach trees, raising the prospect of a poor
spring crop if a sudden cold snap kills the blossoms. A gradual cooldown would minimize any damage.
In New Jersey, the Mountain Creek ski
resort in Vernon
is struggling to open more trails. There haven't been many nights cold enough
to make snow.
"We're keeping our fingers crossed that the cold weather will get here
soon," resort spokeswoman Shannon McSweeney
said. "Either that, or sending trucks out to Colorado to steal some of their snow."
———
Associated Press writers Archie Ingersoll in
Minneapolis, Chris Williams in Minneapolis, Ben Greeve
in Baltimore, Michael Felberbaum in Richmond, Va.,
Wayne Parry in Kenilworth, N.J., Terry Kinney in Cincinnati, Nahal Toosi in New York and
Laurel Jorgensen in Chicago also contributed to this report.