Feeling like there's no escape from the gloomy days this January?
You're not imagining things. Weather watchers in the Twin Cities say that Jan. 20-25 has been the gloomiest stretch for that period since they began tracking solar radiation in 1963 at the University of Minnesota's St. Paul campus observatory.
The blame for all this dreariness goes to the January thaw — higher-than-normal temperatures that are melting the snow on the ground and filling the air with moisture, creating fog, said Pete Boulay, climatologist at the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.
Add a bunch of cloudy days and a stagnant weather mass, and no wonder you want to climb under the quilt and nap. The lesson is be careful what you wish for.
"The colder it is, the more sun you would see," Boulay said.
The stretch between Jan. 20-25 was the third warmest for that period since 1939, Boulay said.
The moderate weather might have had some dancing in the street, but the fog may keep them from seeing anyone else.
Temperatures this time of year normally hit a high of 24 degrees and low of 7, according to the National Weather Service in Chanhassen.