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Panorama of The Grand Tetons From the top of Table Mountain, Wyoming © Alan Holyoak, 2011
Showing posts with label Warm winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warm winter. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2012

I heard a motorcycle engine whine this afternoon


OK, so what's the big deal about that!?  I mean, people on motorcycles is not that unusual...is it?  Well, you need to know a few of facts:

  1. I live in Idaho
  2. This is February - the heart of Winter
  3. My town is 1 mile above sea level
  4. The motorcycle-riding season around here usually runs between April and October (if you are lucky)
Anyway, I was walking across campus this afternoon on my way back from the gym, and I heard a motorcycle engine whine.  What the devil!?  This is FEBRUARY for crying out loud!!

Normally by this time of year we have streets that are usually snow-covered and/or ice-glazed.  Walking can normally be a dangerous activity due to snow covered sidewalks and icy roads.  I have ridden motorcycles for a few years of my life, and unless you have some sort of death wish you would NEVER take a bike out on icy roads like that.  This year, however, our roads, except in a few isolated areas in the neighborhoods, are bare and dry!  This is an incredibly strange winter!

This is a look at our extended forecast, courtesy of Weather.com.  If you notice, every day in the extended forecast has high temperatures above freezing.  The average high temperature for us for the month of February is 33oF.  Remember, that's an average for the entire month, and we are still at only Feb 2nd and we are already seeing daily high temperatures up to 3, 4, 5, 6oF warmer than our monthly average.


The fact that at least someone was out on their motorcycle today attests to the strangeness of our weather this winter.  If it were me and I still had a bike, it would still be winterized and stored until warmer weather shows up, but there are people out there zipping around - albeit freezing their seat covers off, but out on their motorcycles none-the-less.

How much stranger is this winter likely to get!?  Life is an adventure - bring it on!

(Originally posted 2-2-2012)

This winter has been warmer than usual! And I'm not just saying that!


I got up this morning, January 21st, 2012, looked outside, and saw RAIN!

This is what our windows looked like this morning...rain-streaked:


That's not all that strange for a lot of places...except that I live in Rexburg, Idaho, a place not known for rainy winter days.  Here, it snows!

But you wouldn't know it looking outside lately.  And if you look closely you can see patches here and there where the grass is actually greening up a bit!


If you are like me you have wondered about this winter.  It's felt downright weird!  At least it's felt warmer than usual to me.

Normally by this time of year we have mounds of snow all over the place - by our driveways, along the roads, and in huge piles in parking lots.  In fact, most years the city has to truck the stuff out and dump it someplace, but not this year.  To me it feels like March instead of the middle of January!

As I was pondering on this I found myself wondering if it really is warmer than usual this winter, or if it just feels that way because there's no snow on the ground?

Hm...how can I get to the bottom of this thorny question?  Ah!  Data and statistics...of course!  (Being a scientist, I love data and statistics.)

A question like this is, as I teach my science foundations students, an objective one (i.e., one that can be answered conclusively once we get the right kind of data).  Luckily someone has already collected all of the data I need.  Thanks National Weather Service (NWS)!

Without dragging you through all of the statistical hullabaloo, here's how I answered my question.

I went to Weather.com (which, I understand gets its data from the NWS) and pulled up Rexburg, Idaho.  I went to the monthly data and looked at monthly historical averages.  The historical average daily high temperature for Rexburg in both December and January is 29oF, and the historical average low temperature for both months is 13oF (that's statistically handy!).

I then jotted down the observed daily high and observed daily low temps from 12/21/11 through 1/20/12 and used Excel (Microsoft Office) to calculate the observed average daily high temp and the observed average daily  low temp, and the standard deviations for each (FYI, the standard deviation shows how much variability there is in a set of data).

Here's how the data stacked up:

The historical average high temp was 29oF and the observed average daily high temp was 33.2oF.  The historical average low temp was 13oF, and the observed average daily low temp was 15.4oF.

(The raw data are included at the end of this posting for your viewing pleasure :-D)

OK, the average high and the average low were both higher than their corresponding historical averages, but were they different enough to say that there is a significant difference?  This is where statistics helps out.

Luckily there is a statistical test that lets us compare the average of a set of observations (i.e., our sample mean) to a known average (our historical mean).  It's called a Z-test.

To make a long statistical story short and non-statistical, the bottom line is that the results of the Z-test showed that we can be 99% confident in saying that the observed daily high temps in Rexburg, Idaho, are significantly higher than the historical average.

On the other hand, the Z-test for low temps showed that there is not a significant difference between the observed and historical average daily low temps.

What does this mean?
  1. It means that our high temperatures so far this winter have been significantly warmer than our historical average high temperatures.  So if it's felt warmer out there to you than normal there's a good reason for that.
  2. As far as low temps go, though, if you are out and about in the early morning and it's felt "bugger cold" to you, that's because our low temps are not significantly different than our historical winter low temps.
The moral of the story is this: Enjoy the warmer than average days while they last...because you never know when the weather is going to change!  After all, all it would probably take to cover us in a mass of frigid Arctic air is for the jet stream to dip just a LITTLE farther south than where it's been hanging out.

So for now, ENJOY!

(Data used in this analysis, courtesy of Weather.com)


Temps at Rexburg, Idaho, 12/21/11 - 1/20/12
Daily HiDaily Low
21-Dec2814
22-Dec20-1
23-Dec22-4
24-Dec24-1
25-Dec314
26-Dec306
27-Dec3418
28-Dec4128
29-Dec4938
30-Dec5134
31-Dec3315
1-Jan3317
2-Jan3916
3-Jan3820
4-Jan4317
5-Jan3718
6-Jan3022
7-Jan3219
8-Jan2718
9-Jan3512
10-Jan3117
11-Jan253
12-Jan24-1
13-Jan305
14-Jan3811
15-Jan4424
16-Jan2412
17-Jan248
18-Jan3421
19-Jan3633
20-Jan4134
Mean33.16115.387
Std Dev7.78911.023
Z-score2.9741.205


(Originally posted 1-12-2012)