It is now officially spring, and a good time to check on how unusual this winter has been.
Meteorologists often do so by reviewing conditions over the water year (October-now), and I will do the same.
First, consider Seattle's accumulated precipitation during the present water year (green line, observed; red line, climatological average).
We have been a bit above normal overall! Wet periods in December and March.
Yakima, on the east, is similar, with a water year total near normal. There is a reason I have been discouraging the drought talk.
Temperature? See below, with blue being observed, tan showing the normal range, and red/light below showing the record highs and lows.
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I know some folks are interested in climate change, so what do the long-term trends for water year temperatures and precipitation look like? (October through February shown below)
Consider the situation for Western Washington from 1896 to the present.
For temperature, this year was warmer than normal but not a record. Over the past 130 years, there has been a slow warming of roughly 1.5 F.
A modest global warming signal.

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