Forecast: Dark (But Relatively Mild)
"The darkness declares the glory of light" wrote poet T. S. Eliot. My personal favorite: "It's often darkest before it goes pitch black." MSP will see 9 hours, 4 minutes of daylight today. That compares with 15 1/2 hours in late June.
Over the years I've fielded more gripes about the darkness than the cold. Compounding our dark moods: November and December are the cloudiest months of the year.<p>According to NOAA, November brought only 10 cloudy days at MSP. Normal is 18. It's not your imagination: the sun WAS more visible. A persistent west wind aloft howling from Seattle tends to be mild and dry of us; most of the moisture squeezed out west of the Rockies. Meaning few storms. Dribs and drabs of rain and snow. Insert yawn here.
A flow from the Pacific vs. the Arctic means a [cough- cough] "mild bias" continues into at least mid-December.
Close encounters of slush are possible; a few inches may fall over the northern third of Minnesota early next week, when metro temperatures may poke up into the 40s once more. Wow.
Clipped Again. Not very exciting from a meteorological standpoint (or from the vantage point of anyone who craves snow), but our weather is dominated by a series of clippers into next week - each fast-moving low pressure system putting down a little snow and rain, followed by relatively brief jabs of chilly air.
Trending Milder Than Average. A Pacific-flavored wind flow keeps us on the mild side of average (whatever "average weather" is in Minnesota) with more 30s and 40s, even another run at 50s on Wednesday. Any accumulating snow will be limited to the northern third of Minnesota and Wisconsin, with the best chance of a few inches Sunday into Tuesday.
Mid-December: Coldest Air Stays North. A (supernaturally) persistent west to east (zonal) flow across the USA keeps the most bitter Canadian/Siberian air bottled up north of Minnesota for the next 2 weeks - a few spasms of cold, but no prolonged polar punches in sight just yet.