Dreaming of a white Christmas? Check the chart
By Blaine Friedlander
Last year's Christmas was anything but "white" in the Northeast. Green was the rule in most areas. "'White' Christmases are not a sure thing in the Northeast every year," said Keith Eggleston, senior climatologist at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University, explaining that most of the region saw little or no snow on the ground for last year's holiday.
The center has released this year's statistical probabilities chart for a white Christmas for major metropolitan areas and other selected cities in the Northeast. It is not a forecast.
Last year the Erie, Pa., area was the only area to see any major amount of snow, when it recorded 4 inches on the ground Christmas morning. Eggleston said that snow was fresh from a Christmas Eve and early Christmas morning snowfall.
Caribou, Maine, which traditionally is the Northeast's place to be Christmas morning for snow, had about an inch on the ground that day last year. Other usually snowy places like Concord, N.H., and Portland, Maine, saw no snow on the ground on last year's holiday morning. Burlington, Vt., picked up a trace. Syracuse, N.Y., recorded an inch on the ground but received more snow Christmas Day.
In 1995 central, upstate New York and New England had a white Christmas. Two years ago, Concord, N.H., and Syracuse, N.Y., saw 10 inches of snow on the ground on the holiday morning, while Portland, Maine, recorded 13 inches, and Burlington, Vt., had 15 inches.
This year Caribou's chances of a white Christmas look bright. Between Dec. 1 and Dec. 11, 1997, Caribou has received 18.9 inches of snow, which is slightly more than usual, according to Eggleston. "Caribou, Maine, is the closest thing we have to a sure thing for a white Christmas in the Northeast," he said.
Probabilities of a white Christmas
City Probabilties of 1 inch Amount of snow Record snow Year or more of snow on the ground depth on on the ground Christmas Christmas Christmas morning morning 1996 Caribou, Maine 97 1 33 1978 Concord, N.H. 87 0 26 1970 Portland, Maine 83 0 39 1970 Burlington, Vt. 77 Trace 32 1970 Syracuse, N.Y. 70 1 17 1929 Binghamton, N.Y. 67 Trace 14 1969 Albany, N.Y. 63 0 19 1966 Rochester, N.Y. 60 Trace 13 1944 Hartford, Conn. 57 0 10 1995 Buffalo, N.Y. 57 Trace 18 1960 Ithaca, N.Y. 57 Trace 13 1969 Erie, Pa. 57 4 23 1989 Cleveland 50 1 13 1995 Williamsport, Pa. 43 Trace 10 1960 Harrisburg, Pa. 40 0 10 1961 Providence, R.I. 37 0 6 1963 Beckley, W.Va. 36 0 13 1963 Pittsburgh 33 0 7 1963 Bridgeport, Conn. 30 0 8 1966 Charleston, W.Va. 30 0 5 1966 Boston 23 0 11 1995 Newark, N.J. 23 0 8 1966 Baltimore 13 0 8 1966 New York City 13 0 8 1947 Washington, D.C. 13 0 7 1966 Wilmington, Del. 10 0 12 1966 Philadelphia 10 0 12 1966 Atlantic City, N.J. 7 0 6 1966 Richmond, Va. 7 0 4 1966
EDITORS: Please call the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell, (607) 255-1751, for detailed information about your town, even if it is not listed on the accompanying chart.
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