Sara Pudlick of Andover is feeling miserable. She and her husband, Jake, went on a delayed honeymoon to Hawaii in late February and returned to a snowstorm, which has since been followed with more snow and more cold weather.
"It's like we never went to Hawaii — I am sad and upset," said Pudlick, 27, a lifelong Minnesotan who works as an administrative assistant for a financial services firm. "I have always hated the winter and this one is the worst I can remember."
With temperatures over the next few days running 25 degrees below normal (it's not going to get higher than the teens), and 12 inches of snow already having fallen in March (7 inches above normal so far), Pudlick is not the only Minnesotan feeling the angst.
Dr. Chuck Schulz, head of psychiatry at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine, says he has detected a darkening mood among his outpatient clients, which he attributes to the lousy weather and lack of bright sunlight.
"I am not sure I am seeing major depression," he said. "I think they are just not feeling that enthusiasm."
No wonder, given that lack of sunlight can lead to seasonal affective disorder.
"We've had more cloud cover because of the stormy systems that have moved through, and we've had a lot of periods of mostly cloudy conditions since the beginning of February," says Tony Zaleski, a meteorologist with the Twin Cities office of the National Weather Service.
"People might be feeling angry and despondent," he said, "because last year we had a much warmer March than normal with little to no snow, and this year, the polar opposite, with people getting blindsided with much colder temperatures and much more snowfall in the Twin Cities."