73 F. high temperature yesterday in the Twin Cities.
58 F. average high on October 17.
72 F. high in the Twin Cities on October 17, 2016.

October 18, 1950: Record high temperatures are set across the area as highs reached the mid to upper 80s. Minneapolis and Farmington saw highs of 87 degrees Fahrenheit, while Albert Lea reached 86 degrees.
October 18, 1916: A blizzard impacts Minnesota. A sharp temperature drop begins as well; Hallock drops from the 60s to 2 above by the 20th.

About As Good As It Gets in Late October!

Hi, I’m Paul, your weather emcee and Master of the Obvious. You do realize we could be tromping around in thigh-high snow today, right? Blizzards, ice storms and subzero wind chills are all possible by the third week of October, so any day like today is a minor meteorological miracle – an atmospheric reprieve – another day the air won’t hurt your face!

This is as good as it gets in late October, when large north-south contrasts in temperature can whip up fierce, full-latitude storms packing gale force winds. Low 70s and blue sky will feel like a revelation later today; about 15F warmer than average. A lukewarm breeze lingers into Saturday, when a strong southerly fetch of moisture may fuel a few showers and T-showers. Sunday looks drier and cooler; by early next week there will be no doubt in your mind it’s late October.

Bitter air never comes south all at once, it arrives in waves. Long-range models suggest the first widespread freeze of the season by the last weekend of October. GFS guidance shows 40s to near 50F on Halloween with showers.

Soak up this amazing warmth!


Minor Reality Check Ahead. Nothing shriek-worthy (yet), but by next week there will be no doubt in your mind that it’s late October. Yep, you could see this coming. Twin Cities ECMWF numbers: WeatherBell.


2 Weeks Out: Zonal, But Trending Colder. It’s time, long nights and fresh snow are brewing up chilly air across Alaska and western Canada, and this surge of numb will draw closer as we push into early November. Temperatures may rebound a bit for Minnesota around Halloween (50s?) before trending colder after November 1 or so.


November Coin Flip. Right now NOAA’s CFS2 (Climate Forecast System) model predicts a warmer than average November for much of Canada and the northern USA; a cold bias for the Gulf Coast. Place your bets. Map: WeatherBell.



Firefighters Gaining Ground Against California’s Deadliest Ever Blazes. HuffPost has an update and a measure of good news: “Firefighters began gaining ground on wildfires that killed at least 40 people in the past week, the deadliest blazes in California’s history, as winds eased and searchers combed charred ruins for more victims with hundreds still missing. Two of the three most destructive Northern California fires were more than half contained early on Monday, and some residents who fled the flames in hard-hit Sonoma County could be allowed to return home later in the day, officials said. More than 5,700 structures were destroyed by more than a dozen wildfires that ignited a week ago and consumed an area larger than New York City. Entire neighborhoods in the city of Santa Rosa were reduced to ashes. “Overall, things are feeling optimistic. We’re very cautious about that,” said Brad Gouvea, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection incident commander...”


Wildfires Kill At Least 39 in Portugal and Spain. Reuters has details on some truly apocalyptic blazes: “At least 36 people died in wildfires raging through parched farmlands and forests in Portugal and another three in neighboring northwestern Spain on Sunday and Monday. Firefighters were battling 50 blazes in Portugal and a similar number in Spain. Portugal’s government asked for international help and declared a state of emergency in territory north of the Tagus river – about half of its landmass. Flames ripped across Iberian countryside left tinder-dry by an unusually hot summer and early autumn, fanned by strong winds as remnants of ex-Hurricane Ophelia brushed coastal areas. Television footage showed abandoned villages with many houses in embers and charred vehicles left on the roads...”


It’s Time to Ditch the Concept of 100-Year Floods. An article at FiveThirtyEight is a worthy read: “…That’s no surprise to experts, who say the concept of the “100-year flood” is one of the most misunderstood terms in disaster preparedness. In the wake of catastrophic flooding on the Texas coast, the media has been working hard to explain the term, turning out dozens of articles explaining that a “100-year flood” is not a flood that you should expect to happen only once every 100 years. Instead, it refers to a flood that has a 1 percent chance of happening in any given year. Over the course of a 30-year mortgage, a house in a 100-year floodplain has a 26 percent chance of being inundated at least once.1 Stories that emphasize this fact are “doing the Lord’s work,” said Wesley Highfield, professor of marine sciences at Texas A&M University at Galveston. But there are still more holy offices to perform…”

File photo: Reuters, TPX Images.


People Love to Live in Places That Are At Risk for Disaster, “And This Is What Happens”. A combination of factors in play. Here’s an excerpt from The Washington Post: “…It’s just part of the facts of a highly developed society, is that you have a lot of people and a lot of assets in the face of floods and hurricane and fires,” Brown (D) said at the Wednesday briefing. “And this is what happens.” That might have sounded detached and cerebral while in the middle of a crisis, but it’s what everyone in the emergency management business knows to be true. As a people, we are consistently stepping into the path of destruction. “Natural” disasters have a heavily engineered element. Recent months have delivered a steady pounding of misery, as flooding drowned Houston, hurricanes chewed through Florida, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, and wildfires killed dozens of people in California. If it feels like these things are getting worse, experts say that’s because, in some cases, they are...”

Map credit: USDA, Silvis Lab, NOAA – Washington Post.


California’s Fires Aren’t “Natural” – Humans Made Them Worse At Every Step. Additional perspective via Vox: “…The study projected that by 2050, 645,000 houses in California will be built in ‘very high’ wildfire severity zones. “We are definitely seeing [construction in fire-prone regions] happen more and more: 95 percent of the population of the state lives on 6 percent of the land,” said Lynne Tolmachoff, a spokesperson for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. Californians are drawn to views of mountains, forests, and grasslands and are building ever closer to these features that often have a propensity to burn. And places like Napa and Sonoma counties, picturesque regions that are now charred, have some of the fastest-growing property values and highest-priced homes in the United States. This proximity is part of what’s driving the death toll...”

Map credit: A map showing population density growth projections (left) and a map showing fire hazards.” Mann et al. | Land Use Policy


Northern California is Facing Catastrophic Wildfires More Typically Seen in the South. Experts Aren’t Sure Why. A story at The Los Angeles Times caught my eye; here’s a clip: “...Until last week, 13 of the 20 most destructive — and 16 of the 20 deadliest — wildfires in modern state history occurred in Southern California. Two years ago, the Valley fire in Lake, Napa and Sonoma counties made the list when it claimed four lives and destroyed 1,955 structures. “It seems like every summer now we’re seeing some big, horrific event like this. Why?” Moritz said. “How much of this is climate change? Was some of this left over from five years of drought?” he said. “How much of this is because we’ve built increasing numbers of homes and communities in relatively fire-prone landscapes?” The last is unquestionably a factor...”


For Clean Energy Jobs, Sky’s the Limit. The Star Tribune reports: “…Osborn’s job, wind technician, is the fastest growing occupation in the nation. As utilities rapidly increase the amount of power they get from wind farms, workers willing and able to climb hundreds of feet to keep turbines running smoothly are in high demand. Students in wind power training programs in Minnesota are getting jobs as soon as they graduate or even before. “I do what pays the bills, and I looked at what was happening and will be happening for the next 30 years, and wind maintenance seemed win-win,” said Osborn, who works for Vestas, a global wind energy giant. As wind and solar energy have grown, they’ve created a tide of jobs nationwide in fields from construction to manufacturing. Renewable energy jobs, most of which are in wind and solar, grew by 16 percent to around 6,200 in Minnesota from 2015 to 2016, according to a recent study by Clean Energy Economy Minnesota, an industry-led nonprofit…”

Conservative Think Tank: Plan to Help Coal, Nuclear Power “Arbitrary”. TheHill has the story: “…Perry’s proposal aims to prop up coal and nuclear plants by mandating higher payments for the electricity they generate, arguing the two power sources are able to store so much of their fuel on site that they help support the reliability and resilience of the electric grid. But Philip Rossetti, an AAF data analyst, said the plan “does not promote a policy that would necessarily achieve” a more stable electricity system, and instead would “arbitrarily value nuclear and coal power above their market rates.” “The only effect of the [proposal] is to set an arbitrary target of on-site fuel requirements that values coal or nuclear power, regardless of if those sources are able to provide resiliency and reliability at least cost,” Rossetti’s analysis says. AAF’s disapproval of Perry’s plan comes as others raise questions and doubts about the proposal…”


After Hurricane Power Outages, Looking to Alaska’s Microgrids for a Better Way. NPR reports: “…More places are exploring creating microgrids after a spate of hurricanes and other storms knocked out power to millions in recent years. In Puerto Rico, especially, advocates say this could help key institutions like hospitals and military bases keep the lights on when the larger grid goes down. They might want to look north — far north — for guidance. “Alaskans have been doing this for 50 years,” says Ian Baring-Gould, of the National Renewable Energy Lab in Boulder, Colorado. He says the state’s remote communities have “an amazing wealth of expertise in that area.” Of course, not all of Alaska’s microgrids run on renewable energy…”


Tech Addiction is More of a Problem Than People Realize. Arianna Huffington explains in a story at thriveglobal.com: “We are at an inflection point in our relationship with technology. Technology allows us to do amazing things that have immeasurably improved our lives. But at the same time, it’s accelerated the pace of our lives beyond our ability to keep up. And it’s getting worse. We’re being controlled by something we should be controlling. And it’s consuming our attention and crippling our ability to focus, think, be present, and truly connect with ourselves and the world around us. The numbers only confirm what we all know to be true — we’re addicted. A 2015 Bank of America report found that over 70 percent of Americans sleep next to or with their phone. This addiction comes at a cost. A Pew study from the same year found that 89 percent of phone owners said they’d used their phones in their last social gathering, and 82 percent felt that when they do this it damages the interaction...” (File image: LinkedIn).


Star Collision Scatters Gold and Platinum. CNN reports it was an astronomical gong show. “For the first time, two neutron stars in a nearby galaxy have been observed engaging in a spiral death dance around one another until they collided. What resulted from that collision is being called an “unprecedented” discovery that is ushering in a new era of astronomy, scientists announced Monday. “We can now fill in a few more tiles in the jigsaw puzzle that is the story of our universe,” said Laura Cadonati, deputy spokeswoman for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration and professor in the school of physics at Georgia Tech. The collision created the first observed instance of a single source emitting ripples in space-time, known as gravitational waves, as well as light, which was released in the form of a two-second gamma ray burst. The collision also created heavy elements such as gold, platinum and lead, scattering them across the universe in a kilonova — similar to a supernova — after the initial fireball...”


U.S. Vs. Japan: Giant Robots Are About to Face Off, Fighting For Their Country. Looks like all those Saturday morning cartoons about transformers are coming true. CNBC.com reports: “…It will battle one of Suidobashi’s Kurata robots that, according to PC Mag, weighs 6.5 tons and is about 13 feet tall. When responding to MegaBots’ initial challenge two years ago, Suidobashi CEO and founder, Kogoro Kurata had said his team couldn’t let another country win because giant robots were part of Japanese culture. MegaBots co-founder, Brinkley Warren, told CNBC in 2015 that the fight could potentially pave the way for a fighting robot league and a billion-dollar sport. Prospective fighting robot fans can watch the battle on MegaBots’ Twitch channel on Tuesday, Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. PT...”


Headwaters of the Mississippi. Odds are you knew this already, but just in case Atlas Obscura provides a reminder: “Everything has to start somewhere, and the Mississippi River starts in Itasca State Park in Minnesota. The official beginning of the mighty river is on one side of a small rock dam where water from Lake Itasca begins to flow, soon to be joined by water from many other tributaries on its journey to the gulf. At the watershed, the river is tranquil and shallow; it’s a great spot for wading. A large post has been installed next to the headwaters since the 1930s, officially proclaiming the park’s status as the source of the great river and listing its distance to the gulf as 2,552 miles...”

Image credit: R. Stemple.




TODAY: Partly sunny, breezy and mild. Winds: W 10-20. High: 71

WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy, a bit cooler. Low: 43

THURSDAY: Sunny. Just try and stay inside. Winds: S 5-10. High: near 70

FRIDAY: Shorts in late October? Lukewarm sunshine. Winds: S 10-20. Wake-up: 55. High: 75

SATURDAY: Sunny start, few PM T-showers possible. Winds: SW 7-12. Wake-up: 60. High: near 70

SUNDAY: Sunnier, drier, cooler day of weekend. Winds: SW 5-10. Wake-up: 48. High: 62

MONDAY: Mostly cloudy, feels like fall again. Winds: NW 10-20. Wake-up: 47. High: 57

TUESDAY: Partly sunny and brisk. Winds: NW 10-15. Wake-up: 42. High: 51


Climate Stories…


Hurricane Ophelia Sheds Light on Another Climate Change Concern. An article at HuffPost explains: “…Before being downgraded to a post-tropical cyclone, Ophelia was a Category 3 hurricane on Saturday and Sunday. It went farther east than any other previously recorded Category 3 hurricane in the Atlantic Basin and broke a record set in 1980. “As sea surface temperatures continue to warm, the region of the Atlantic Ocean that can support the genesis and strengthening of tropical storms and hurricanes is expanding eastward,” said Michael Mann, a distinguished professor of atmospheric science and the director of the Earth System Science Center at Penn State University. Hurricanes are not only reaching much farther to the east, but they’re forming farther east as well, Mann noted. Hurricane Irma, which devastated parts of the Caribbean and the southeastern United States last month, was the strongest hurricane to ever form as far east in the Atlantic as it did, he said…”


More Hurricanes to Hit Western Europe Due to Global Warming. Here’s an abstract of a 2013 paper at Geophysical Research Letters: “We use a very high resolution global climate model (~25 km grid size) with prescribed sea surface temperatures to show that greenhouse warming enhances the occurrence of hurricane-force (> 32.6 m s–1) storms over western Europe during early autumn (August–October), the majority of which originate as a tropical cyclone. The rise in Atlantic tropical sea surface temperatures extends eastward the breeding ground of tropical cyclones, yielding more frequent and intense hurricanes following pathways directed toward Europe. En route they transform into extratropical depressions and reintensify after merging with the midlatitude baroclinic unstable flow. Our model simulations clearly show that future tropical cyclones are more prone to hit western Europe, and do so earlier in the season, thereby increasing the frequency and impact of hurricane force winds…”



Stanford Climate Scientist Addresses Misconceptions About Climate Change. People can adapt to the averages; it’s the extremes that tend to wreak havoc. Here’s an excerpt of a story from Stanford News that made me do a double-take: “…”People tend to ask, ‘When will the average conditions cross a threshold that results in climate change?’ But that’s not really relevant. People and ecosystems can adapt to the average conditions, but where things fall apart is in the extremes. We experience damages from climate mainly at the extremes, and it’s the extremes that can result in disasters. “Farmers might have enough rain on average to grow corn in Illinois. But in a drought, as in 2012, yields get whacked. Corn yields decline rapidly when temperatures rise above 29 C (84 F). If temperatures are above that 29 C threshold once every 200 years, it may not be a big problem. But if it is every five years, farmers start seeing impacts on yield and, if the high temperatures occur too frequently, on the viability of corn farming in that area. “We’re already seeing evidence of climate-change impacts in the increased frequency of extreme events...”

Photo credit: “Poorly developed cornstalks show the effects of prolonged hot, dry weather. Extreme temperatures year after year have an impact on the viability of corn farming in an area, Stanford scientist Chris Field says.” Earl D. Walker / Shutterstock