Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Drought' has New Yorkers asking: 'Where's the snow?'

EUR -
AED 3.821609
AFN 73.043711
ALL 98.561994
AMD 415.734952
ANG 1.874008
AOA 948.892795
ARS 1067.239304
AUD 1.668181
AWG 1.872815
AZN 1.757682
BAM 1.956454
BBD 2.099482
BDT 124.256752
BGN 1.957817
BHD 0.392426
BIF 3074.798113
BMD 1.040453
BND 1.412959
BOB 7.185402
BRL 6.442694
BSD 1.039838
BTN 88.511732
BWP 14.441688
BYN 3.402905
BYR 20392.87375
BZD 2.092379
CAD 1.496535
CDF 2986.099191
CHF 0.93648
CLF 0.037319
CLP 1029.739995
CNY 7.591767
CNH 7.598484
COP 4556.381863
CRC 527.971385
CUC 1.040453
CUP 27.571998
CVE 110.297624
CZK 25.115501
DJF 185.171889
DKK 7.460816
DOP 63.34117
DZD 140.687327
EGP 52.961546
ERN 15.606791
ETB 132.39725
FJD 2.412966
FKP 0.82402
GBP 0.828196
GEL 2.923108
GGP 0.82402
GHS 15.285109
GIP 0.82402
GMD 74.912518
GNF 8986.65805
GTQ 8.0096
GYD 217.552711
HKD 8.081868
HNL 26.41983
HRK 7.46307
HTG 135.964135
HUF 410.690109
IDR 16866.571316
ILS 3.790359
IMP 0.82402
INR 88.614737
IQD 1362.155262
IRR 43790.051599
ISK 145.091415
JEP 0.82402
JMD 162.007918
JOD 0.737991
JPY 163.632522
KES 134.384575
KGS 90.519253
KHR 4179.356665
KMF 484.981066
KPW 936.406886
KRW 1516.386879
KWD 0.320615
KYD 0.866581
KZT 538.684863
LAK 22740.381777
LBP 93117.221839
LKR 306.450641
LRD 189.251433
LSL 19.334876
LTL 3.072187
LVL 0.629359
LYD 5.10451
MAD 10.485801
MDL 19.185228
MGA 4904.592084
MKD 61.579021
MMK 3379.349922
MNT 3535.458283
MOP 8.3185
MRU 41.508277
MUR 48.974372
MVR 16.027812
MWK 1803.102637
MXN 20.964801
MYR 4.668508
MZN 66.48881
NAD 19.335062
NGN 1610.226956
NIO 38.262788
NOK 11.815418
NPR 141.618971
NZD 1.843304
OMR 0.40057
PAB 1.039848
PEN 3.871945
PGK 4.220248
PHP 60.807174
PKR 289.478921
PLN 4.256856
PYG 8109.710445
QAR 3.781864
RON 4.974508
RSD 116.972699
RUB 104.513453
RWF 1450.570871
SAR 3.90625
SBD 8.722693
SCR 14.683216
SDG 625.834202
SEK 11.538871
SGD 1.414875
SHP 0.82402
SLE 23.721196
SLL 21817.776932
SOS 594.292914
SRD 36.476165
STD 21535.271101
SVC 9.098691
SYP 2614.168982
SZL 19.343279
THB 35.541837
TJS 11.375802
TMT 3.651989
TND 3.315608
TOP 2.436845
TRY 36.690385
TTD 7.066294
TWD 34.011368
TZS 2517.895925
UAH 43.598696
UGX 3806.235546
USD 1.040453
UYU 46.28369
UZS 13423.970506
VES 53.661818
VND 26469.117766
VUV 123.524633
WST 2.87455
XAF 656.17
XAG 0.035166
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.811876
XDR 0.797259
XOF 656.151075
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.503326
ZAR 19.427453
ZMK 9365.323193
ZMW 28.777618
ZWL 335.025359
  • RBGPF

    -0.7000

    59.8

    -1.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    7.25

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.1521

    23.75

    -0.64%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    11.72

    +0.6%

  • RIO

    -0.0900

    59.14

    -0.15%

  • NGG

    -0.1590

    58.861

    -0.27%

  • CMSD

    -0.1200

    23.43

    -0.51%

  • RELX

    0.2600

    45.85

    +0.57%

  • AZN

    -0.3850

    66.245

    -0.58%

  • GSK

    -0.1400

    33.92

    -0.41%

  • BCE

    0.0650

    22.905

    +0.28%

  • VOD

    0.0610

    8.431

    +0.72%

  • BP

    0.0450

    28.795

    +0.16%

  • JRI

    0.1030

    12.203

    +0.84%

  • BTI

    0.0150

    36.235

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    122.75

    +0.42%

'Drought' has New Yorkers asking: 'Where's the snow?'
'Drought' has New Yorkers asking: 'Where's the snow?' / Photo: TIMOTHY A. CLARY - AFP

'Drought' has New Yorkers asking: 'Where's the snow?'

The idea of New York in wintertime conjures up images of Manhattan's Times Square and Central Park shrouded in snow. Not this year.

Text size:

The city is forecast Sunday to surpass a 50-year record for the latest first snowfall of the season.

It is also close to recording its highest number of consecutive days without any measurable flakes.

The snowless streak has New Yorkers puzzled, some questioning their love-hate relationship with the white stuff.

"It's really sad," said retired teacher Anne Hansen. "Basically, we don't like to see the snow. But now we're sorely missing it," she told AFP.

The Big Apple usually gets its first dusting around mid-December. Last season it arrived on Christmas Eve.

A heavy load often results in "snow days," beloved by children and office workers who gets days off school and work.

Kids grab their sleds and head to the nearest grassy slope. Adults cross-country ski around the main parks.

"You stay home, you drink hot cocoa; it's beautiful and the dog loves it," filmmaker Renata Romain told AFP.

Joy turns to despair fairly quickly though, as the snow turns yellowy-brown, trash piles up on the sidewalk and trips to the launderette become hazardous.

"The snow is pretty to look at the first day, but afterwards it's dirty and I don't like it. It's slushy. It's nasty," added Romain.

Meteorologists define snowfall in NYC as snow that measures at least 0.1 inches in Central Park. Some flakes fell last Wednesday but not enough to count.

The longest residents have had to wait for measurable snow is January 29, a record set in 1973, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).

No snow Sunday will mean the longest wait since records began in 1869.

New York is also approaching its longest streak of consecutive days without snow. The current record is 332, which ended on December 15, 2020.

Sunday would be day 326. Accuweather has called the period a "snow drought."

"It's very unusual," NWS meteorologist Nelson Vaz told AFP, saying the global La Nina weather pattern was responsible for keeping colder fronts further north and west.

Up to 40 inches (one meter) of snow fell in Buffalo, New York state, near the Canadian border, in December, killing at least 39 people.

But a few hundred miles southeast, in NYC and surrounding Atlantic coastal areas, the precipitation has meant lots of rain amid mild temperatures.

Only 1932 had a warmer first 25 days of January in New York than 2023, according to Weather.com.

Scientists say climate change is causing winters to be warmer and shorter.

"It's disconcerting," Hansen said of recent balmy days that have felt more like fall.

New York has never gone a whole cold season without measurable snow.

And with February usually its snowiest month, a white blanket could soon envelope the Big Apple yet.

"That's what makes New York, New York, right?" said Romain.

F.Carpenteri--NZN