The Norwalk Hour

Even bears know it’s a mostly mild winter

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“It’s not that it hasn’t been cold,” said Bill Jacquemin, senior meteorolog­ist at the Connecticu­t Weather Center in Danbury. It’s that warmer temperatur­es have quickly reasserted themselves.

Sleet’s late February rattle, the March blizzard, the hard April frost, the woodpile depleted. Live through enough winters here and you know these things.

But there is this to know as well. So far, it’s been so mild a winter that black bears, rather than denning up, have been out and about, looking for food.

“We’ve had reports of bears being hit by cars, bears getting into bird feeders,” said Jenny Dickson, director of the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection’s wildlife division “Unfortunat­ely, there have also been depredatio­ns. They’ve killed livestock.”

In a normal, cold, snowcovere­d landscape, Dickson said, black bears — waking from their winter torpor — save energy by rolling over and going back to sleep. In this year’s tepid weather, however, it’s worth getting up for a stroll.

“They’re looking for an easy meal,” she said.

Gail Ridge, an entomologi­st with the Connecticu­t Agricultur­al Experiment Station in New Haven, said the station is getting reports of springtail­s — aka snow fleas — getting into people’s homes.

“They may be drowning outside,” she said of the wet-ground weather we’ve had. There’s no snow for them to spring in.

There has been snow — in November and early December. We’ve also had frosty mornings — just not many in a row.

“It’s not that it hasn’t been cold,” said Bill Jacquemin, senior meteorolog­ist at the Connecticu­t Weather Center in Danbury. It’s that warmer temperatur­es have quickly reasserted themselves.

“These temperatur­es aren’t all that unusual,” Jacquemin said. “But it’s been persistent.”

To explain why, remember: Local weather is never really local.

“It’s so complex,” Jacquermin said.

Complexity #1: The Polar Oscillatio­n stayed put.

The Polar Oscillatio­n is the huge mass of very cold air that sits over Arctic regions. In past years, that cold air has broken through to the south and flowed into North America, putting much of the US into the deep freeze.

But Paul Pastelok, senior meteorolog­ist with AccuWeathe­r, the regional forecastin­g center in State College,

Penn., said that in the autumn of 2019, meteorolog­ists began seeing a pattern of very strong winds in the stratosphe­re over the Arctic. These winds, he said, have kept the oscillatio­n far to our north.

In past years, there’s also been a flood of cold Siberian air that’s come down from Alaska into the Lower 48. Again, Pastelok said, that cold air stayed Siberian, not Southern New Englandian.

Complexity #2: There’s another temperatur­e pattern, called the Madden Julian Oscillatio­n, that involves tropical waters in the Pacific. It has eight phases. It, too, changes our weather.

“When it’s in Phase 1 or 8, it’s cold here,” said Gary Lessor, director of The Weather Center at Western Connecticu­t State University in Danbury. But, Lessor said, it’s stayed out of those phases. As of now.

“They’re seeing the Madden Julian Oscillatio­n is trying to shift,” Lessor said. “It could mean we’ll get a cold February and March.”

Complexity # 3: The Pacific Ocean has been warm.

When there’s a serious, prolonged warming of the Pacific off the coasts of

 ?? Mark Zaretsky / Hearst Connecticu­t Media / ?? Hundreds of people line Main Street in Essex on a sunny and relatively balmy winter day on Jan. 26 for the annual Essex Ed Groundhog Day Parade.
Mark Zaretsky / Hearst Connecticu­t Media / Hundreds of people line Main Street in Essex on a sunny and relatively balmy winter day on Jan. 26 for the annual Essex Ed Groundhog Day Parade.
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 ?? Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A worker clears a sidewalk in Stamford on Jan. 18 after a winter storm that left slippery conditions and an inch or 2 of snow. It was one of the few snowstorms so far this winter.
Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A worker clears a sidewalk in Stamford on Jan. 18 after a winter storm that left slippery conditions and an inch or 2 of snow. It was one of the few snowstorms so far this winter.
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