SEATTLE -- A weather pattern partly linked with El Nino has turned winter upside-down across the U.S. during a week of heavy holiday travel, bringing springlike warmth to the Northeast, a risk of tornadoes in the South and so much snow across the West that even skiing slopes have been overwhelmed.
In a reversal of a typical Christmas, forecasters expect New York to be in the mid-60s on the holiday -- several degrees higher than Los Angeles.
Southeast Missouri also will enjoy above-average temperatures. The National Weather service predicts Cape Girardeau will have a 40 percent chance of showers and will be mostly cloudy with a high temperature of 57 degrees Christmas Day. On Christmas Eve, the service is predicting sunny skies with a high of 63 degrees and light breezes.
The recorded all-time high temperature for the Paducah, Kentucky; Evansville, Indiana; and Cape Girardeau area on Christmas Day was 69 degrees in 1982, the weather service reported. The record low was in 2004, at minus-8 degrees. In 2004 that day, the area had the most snowfall, 9 inches.
"Most Christmas mornings, we wake up to temperatures in the 20s and 30s, accounting for 64 percent of all years on record," the National Weather Service in Paducah stated during a Christmas climate report.
Mild conditions have helped golf courses in New England do brisk business, but the pattern comes at a steep cost for ski resorts that have closed and for backcountry skiers who confront avalanche risks. And many Americans complain it just doesn't feel like the holidays without a chill in the air.
"It's been a great snow season so far from the Rockies to the higher elevations in the Cascades and the northern Sierras, and it's been the total opposite on the East Coast," said Bob Oravec, lead forecaster with the National Weather Service.
Big parts of the county are basking in above-average temperatures, especially east of the Mississippi and across the Northern Plains. Record warmth was expected Christmas Eve along the East Coast, Oravec said.
He laid the credit -- or blame -- with a strong El Nino pattern, the warming of surface waters in the Pacific Ocean near the equator. That's helped drive warm air west to east across the Lower 48 and kept colder air from the Arctic at bay, he said.
In the Pacific Northwest and California, the effects of El Nino haven't really hit yet. They're typically seen in January through March, and heavy rains and snows in the region are probably not linked to the phenomenon, Washington state climatologist Nick Bond said.
Winter in the Pacific Northwest still is predicted to be drier than normal, so the series of storms that dumped feet of snow in the Cascades this month and piled the snowpack back above normal were helpful, he said. Come summer, farmers and salmon alike will rely on that melting snow.
In Washington, authorities have closed the state's main east-west route, Interstate 90, over the Cascade Mountains several times this week because of heavy snows and avalanche dangers. Officials closed a sledding hill near Snoqualmie Pass on Tuesday because the storm kept the state Transportation Department from plowing the parking lot. On Sunday, a heavy storm closed Oregon's Mount Ashland Ski Area when it knocked out power.
California is in its driest four-year span on record, and experts anticipate a fifth year of drought. Weather forecasters say a strong El Nino weather system could drench the state, but one good, wet winter won't be enough to rehydrate the parched land. A fresh round of chilly rain was expected to hit San Francisco late this week. The same system was expected to drop some 4 feet of snow in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
While ski resorts celebrated a deluge that threatened to drop almost 2 feet of snow in parts of Colorado's mountains, forecasters warned of avalanche risks.
An avalanche near the Montana-Wyoming state line Sunday buried three snowmobilers, killing a 33-year-old North Dakota man. Another avalanche partially buried a ski patrol employee at the Snowbasin resort, about 45 miles north of Salt Lake City, and two snowboarders were caught in a backcountry slide southwest of Breckenridge Ski Area on Saturday. They escaped serious injury.
"We're giving our generally weak snowpack a very large and rapid load, and it's unlikely to be able to hold up," said Brian Lazar, deputy director of the Colorado Avalanche Information Center. Warnings and advisories were posted for much of Colorado's high country, with an emphasis on the risk of large, dangerous slides in steep terrain.
Meanwhile, the National Weather Service said the most recent storm had raised the level of Lake Tahoe by about 2 inches since midnight Monday. Officials calculated that's nearly 64 billion gallons of water.
Elsewhere, severe thunderstorms and possible tornadoes were forecast for today in northern Alabama, northern Mississippi and western Tennessee. Tornadoes are not unheard-of in the region in late December, but the extreme weather, driven by warm temperatures and large amounts of moisture in the atmosphere, was striking, he said.
In addition to El Nino, a weather pattern called the North Atlantic Oscillation also is helping keep cold air bottled up in the Arctic. Combine that with warm temperatures around the planet from man-made global warming, he said, and you have a recipe for intense weather: "There are a couple of natural patterns at work, and then there's this human-caused component too."
With such balmy temperatures in the Northeast, Pine Oaks Golf Club in Easton, Massachusetts, is probably having its busiest December since it was built more than 50 years ago -- a bonus for a club that doesn't count on much winter revenue.
"We've got 65 degrees coming up on Christmas Eve," said Scott Ibbitson, a golf specialist at the course. "It'll be our busiest December day ever."
Not everyone welcomed the warmth.
Astrid Rau, 55, of Perkasie, Pennsylvania, baked 16 kinds of Christmas cookies, but with the temperature expected to reach 72 on Thursday, she had trouble getting in the holiday spirit.
"I associate cold with Christmas," she said. "And if it's warm it just doesn't feel quite right to me."
Southeast Missourian reporter Ben Kleine contributed to this report.
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