Thursday, January 05, 2023

2022 Year End Climate Summary for Northern and Eastern Maine

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PUBLIC INFORMATION STATEMENT
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME
708 PM EST THU JAN 5 2023

...2022 CLIMATE REVIEW FOR NORTHERN AND EASTERN MAINE...

2022 FEATURED ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES AND ABOVE AVERAGE 
PRECIPITATION. IN CARIBOU IT RANKED AT THE 9TH WARMEST YEAR ON 
RECORD. IN HOULTON IT RANKED AT THE 5TH WARMEST.  AT MILLINOCKET IT 
WAS THE 6TH WARMEST, AND AT BANGOR THE 4TH WARMEST ON RECORD.

PRECIPITATION RANGED FROM 100 TO 130 PERCENT OF NORMAL WITH THE 
GREATEST DEPARTURES ACROSS CENTRAL PISCATAQUIS COUNTY AND NORTHWEST 
AROOSTOOK COUNTY. IT RANKED AS THE 11TH WETTEST YEAR ON RECORD AT 
CARIBOU, AND THE 10TH WETTEST AT BANGOR.  IN HOULTON IT RANKED AS 
THE 13TH WETTEST ON RECORD. 

JANUARY: WILL BE REMEMBERED AS A COLD AND SNOWY MONTH.  IT WAS THE 
COLDEST JANUARY SINCE 2009.  THE LOW OF 30 BELOW IN CARIBOU ON THE 
MORNING OF THE 27TH WAS THE LOWEST TEMPERATURE OBSERVED SINCE 2009. 
THE LOWEST TEMPERATURE OBSERVED ACROSS NORTHERN MAINE WAS A LOW OF 
39 BELOW AT MASARDIS ON THE MORNING OF THE 27TH. ASIDE FROM IT BEING 
A COLD MONTH, THE MOST SIGNIFICANT WEATHER EVENT WAS A WINTER STORM 
ON THE 29TH INTO THE EARLY MORNING OF THE 30TH WHICH BROUGHT HEAVY 
SNOW, STRONG WIND, EXTENSIVE BLOWING AND DRIFTING SNOW, AND BLIZZARD 
CONDITIONS AT TIMES ACROSS THE DOWNEAST REGION WITH LOCAL BLIZZARD 
CONDITIONS AS FAR NORTH AS SOUTHEAST AROOSTOOK COUNTY.  

FEBRUARY: FEATURED NEAR NORMAL TEMPERATURES AND ABOVE AVERAGE 
SNOWFALL. A WINTER STORM ON THE 4TH INTO THE 5TH PRODUCED HEAVY 
SNOWFALL ACROSS NORTHERN AREAS, AND PRODUCED AN AMAZING 5.3 INCHES 
OF SLEET AT EASTPORT.  BANGOR SET AN ALL-TIME MONTHLY TEMPERATURE 
RECORD ON THE 23RD WITH A HIGH OF 65F.  THIS BROKE THE PREVIOUS 
RECORD OF 60F, WHICH HAD STOOD SINCE FEBRUARY 21, 1937. AN ALL-TIME 
RECORD WARM LOW TEMPERATURE FOR THE MONTH WAS ALSO ESTABLISHED WITH 
A LOW OF 42F ON THE 17TH, WHICH BROKE THE RECORD OF 41F SET ON 
FEBRUARY 21, 1981. 

MARCH: SIMILAR TO FEBRUARY THERE WERE FREQUENT ALTERNATING SPELLS OF 
BOTH ABOVE AVERAGE AND BELOW AVERAGE TEMPERATURES. FOR THE MONTH AS 
A WHOLE TEMPERATURES WERE A BIT BELOW AVERAGE NORTH AND A LITTLE 
WARMER THAN NORMAL DOWNEAST. SNOWFALL WAS ABOVE AVERAGE NORTH AND 
BELOW AVERAGE IN BANGOR AND DOWNEAST WHERE THERE WERE MORE RAIN 
EVENTS. THE SNOWPACK AT THE END OF THE MONTH RANGED FROM 15 TO 30 
INCHES NORTH WITH 3 FEET ON THE GROUND AT ALLAGASH. MOST OF THE SNOW 
MELTED OUT IN BANGOR AND ALONG THE COAST DURING THE FIRST WEEK TO 10 
DAYS OF THE MONTH. 

APRIL: FINISHED WITH SLIGHTLY ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES, ABOVE 
AVERAGE PRECIPITATION, AND BELOW AVERAGE SNOWFALL. SNOWFALL WAS 
SCANT WITH THE MOST SIGNIFICANT EVENT ON THE 28TH-29TH WITH 2 TO 5 
INCHES ACROSS NORTHERN AREAS WITH A COUPLE OF SPOTS SUCH AS MARS 
HILL AND JEMTLAND WHICH RECEIVED 8 TO 10 INCHES OF SNOW. ICE OUT WAS 
RELATIVELY SMOOTH ON THE NORTHERN RIVERS WITH NO SIGNIFICANT 
FLOODING. 

MAY: FEATURED ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES. PRECIPITATION RANGED FROM 
WELL ABOVE AVERAGE IN THE FAR NORTH TO WELL BELOW AVERAGE DOWNEAST. 
THE HIGH OF 90F IN CARIBOU ON THE 13TH NOT ONLY SMASHED THE PREVIOUS 
DAILY RECORD BY A DOZEN DEGREES, IT WAS THE 2ND EARLIEST 90 DEGREE 
DAY ON RECORD BEHIND ONLY MAY 9, 1979. THE MOST SIGNIFICANT EVENT OF 
THE MONTH WAS HEAVY RAIN ACROSS FAR NORTHERN AREAS LATE IN THE MONTH 
THAT PRODUCED LOCAL THREE-DAY TOTALS OF 4 TO 7 INCHES AND CAUSED 
ROUTE 1 IN CYR PLANTATION TO COLLAPSE DUE TO THE COMBINATION OF 
FLASH FLOODING AND A BEAVER DAM THAT BROKE LOOSE. 

JUNE: WAS COOLER THAN AVERAGE AND FEATURED ABOVE AVERAGE 
PRECIPITATION ACROSS THE NORTH AND DRIER THAN NORMAL ACROSS CENTRAL 
AND DOWNEAST AREAS. THE HIGH ON THE 19TH OF 49F AT CARIBOU WAS 
UNUSUALLY COOL.  THE WARMEST WEATHER WAS LATE IN THE MONTH ON THE 
25TH AND 26TH WITH WIDESPREAD HIGHS IN THE 80S AND LOWER 90S. BY THE 
END OF THE MONTH, MODERATE DROUGHT WAS OBSERVED ACROSS MUCH OF 
HANCOCK COUNTY, SOUTHERN PENOBSCOT COUNTY, AND EXTREME SOUTHERN 
PISCATAQUIS COUNTY. 

JULY: WAS A LITTLE WARMER THAN AVERAGE, AND WETTER THAN AVERAGE 
ACROSS MUCH OF THE REGION. DRIER THAN AVERAGE CONDITIONS WERE 
OBSERVED FROM BANGOR SOUTH TO THE COAST AND IN PARTS OF WASHINGTON 
COUNTY, AND IN PARTS OF NORTHWEST MAINE. MODERATE DROUGHT CONDITIONS 
EXPANDED A BIT FURTHER TO THE NORTH TO INCLUDE CENTRAL PENOBSCOT 
COUNT AS WELL AS CENTRAL PISCATAQUIS COUNTY. THERE WERE NO 90 DEGREE 
DAYS IN CARIBOU OR HOULTON, BUT THREE CONSECUTIVE 90 DEGREE DAYS 
WERE OBSERVED AT BANGOR FROM THE 22ND TO THE 24TH.

AUGUST: FEATURED ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES WITH THE MOST 
SIGNIFICANT DEPARTURES DOWNEAST. PRECIPITATION WAS HIGHLY VARIABLE 
AND DEPENDENT ON THUNDERSTORMS. OVERALL, THE GREATEST TOTALS WERE 
OBSERVED ACROSS CENTRAL AND NORTHERN AREAS WITH LESSER AMOUNTS 
TOWARD THE COAST. DROUGHT CONDITIONS IMPROVED, AND BY THE END OF THE 
MONTH NO PART OF THE REGION WAS IN DROUGHT WITH ONLY ABNORMALLY DRY 
CONDITIONS NOTED ACROSS SOUTHERN PORTIONS OF THE REGION.  

SEPTEMBER: FINISHED WITH NEAR TO SLIGHTLY ABOVE AVERAGE 
TEMPERATURES, AND NEAR TO ABOVE NORMAL RAINFALL, EXCEPT BELOW 
AVERAGE ACROSS THE FAR NORTH.  THE FIRST FROST AND FREEZE OF THE 
SEASON OCCURRED ON THE 19TH WHEN MAINLY OF THE NORTHERN VALLEYS 
DROPPED BELOW FREEZING AND ESTCOURT STATION HAD A LOW OF 24F. 
ANOTHER ROUND OF FROST AND FREEZE WAS OBSERVED ON THE 29TH, THIS 
TIME ALL THE WAY SOUTH TO THE VALLEYS OF DOWNEAST MAINE. 

OCTOBER: ENDED WITH WELL ABOVE AVERAGE TEMPERATURES AND RAINFALL 
THAT VARIED FROM WELL ABOVE AVERAGE TO SLIGHTLY BELOW AVERAGE. THE 
MONTH ENDED AS THE 3RD WARMEST OCTOBER ON RECORD AT BOTH CARIBOU AND 
HOULTON, THE 5TH WARMEST AT MILLINOCKET, AND THE 10TH WARMEST AT 
BANGOR. CARIBOU HAD 21 DAYS WITH A HIGH OF 60F OR WARMER, WHICH WAS 
THE MOST ON RECORD. AREAS THAT DID NOT EXPERIENCE A HARD FREEZE IN 
SEPTEMBER DID DURING THE FIRST WEEK OF OCTOBER. FALL FOLIAGE PEAKED 
DURING THE FIRST WEEK OF THE MONTH IN THE SAINT JOHN VALLEY AND BY 
MID-MONTH ALONG THE COAST.  IN BANGOR, IT ENDED AS THE 3RD WETTEST 
OCTOBER ON RECORD WITH JUST SHY OF 9 INCHES OF RAIN.  NO SNOW WAS 
OBSERVED ACROSS NORTHERN AND EASTERN MAINE, WHICH IS SOMEWHAT 
UNUSUAL FOR NORTHERN AREAS. 

NOVEMBER: BEGAN WITH RECORD WARMTH, AND BACK-TO-BACK HIGHS IN THE 
70S AT CARIBOU FOR THE FIRST TIME ON RECORD. THE LOW TEMPERATURE OF 
59F AT CARIBOU ON THE 6TH ESTABLISHED AN ALL-TIME RECORD WARM LOW 
TEMPERATURE FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH OF NOVEMBER.  FOR THE MONTH AS A 
WHOLE, TEMPERATURES AVERAGED FROM 1.5 TO 4 DEGREES ABOVE AVERAGE. 
PRECIPITATION WAS ABOVE AVERAGE WITH THE EXCEPTION OF SOME SPOTS IN 
HANCOCK AND WASHINGTON COUNTIES WHERE PRECIPITATION WAS BELOW 
AVERAGE. SNOWFALL WAS BELOW AVERAGE DOWNEAST AND BANGOR ONLY 
OBSERVED 1 INCH OF SNOW FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH. SNOWFALL WAS A BIT 
ABOVE AVERAGE ACROSS FAR NORTHERN MAINE WITH 14.3 INCHES AT CARIBOU. 
BY THE END OF THE MONTH THE SNOW DEPTH RANGED FROM 6 TO 10 INCHES 
NORTH OF THE KATAHDIN REGION WITH NO SNOW ON THE GROUND FROM 
MILLINOCKET TO THE COAST.

DECEMBER: WAS MUCH WARMER THAN AVERAGE WITH NEAR TO ABOVE AVERAGE 
PRECIPITATION AND BELOW AVERAGE SNOWFALL.  IT RANKED AS THE 3RD 
WARMEST ON RECORD AT CARIBOU AND HOULTON AND THE 4TH WARMEST ON 
RECORD AT MILLINOCKET AND BANGOR. THE LOW MONTHLY TEMPERATURES IN 
CARIBOU OF ZERO WAS OBSERVED ON THE 28TH AND WAS THE 4TH LATEST 
FIRST ZERO OCCURRENCE. SIGNIFICANT RAINFALL ON THE 3RD AND 7TH 
LIQUIDATED EARLY SNOWPACKS FROM NOVEMBER.  SNOWFALL ACROSS THE 
REGION WAS RELATIVELY LIGHT.  THE MOST SIGNIFICANT EVENT WAS A 
PROLONGED EVENT FROM THE 16TH TO THE 19TH THAT PRODUCED TOTALS 
UPWARDS TO 20 INCHES OVER SOME CENTRAL AND WESTERN AREAS. THE 
MAXIMUM SNOW DEPTH AT CARIBOU WAS 13 INCHES AND AT BANGOR WAS 9 
INCHES, BUT MOST OF IT DID NOT LAST TILL THE END OF THE MONTH DUE TO 
MILD TEMPS AND RAIN. A RAIN AND WIND STORM ON THE 23RD PRODUCED 60 
TO 75 MPH WIND AND DOWNED MANY TREES AND POWERLINES AND KNOCKED OUT 
POWER TO 25 TO 30 PERCENT OF THE REGION.  POWER WAS NOT RESTORED FOR 
NEARLY A WEEK IN MORE REMOTE AREAS DOWNEAST. 

$$

CB/VJN

Winter/Spring Flood Potential Outlook For Northern And Eastern Maine - 01/05/2023

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WINTER/SPRING FLOOD POTENTIAL OUTLOOK
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE CARIBOU ME
824 AM EST THU JAN 5 2023

...SPRING FLOOD POTENTIAL OUTLOOK FOR NORTHERN...CENTRAL...AND 
DOWNEAST MAINE...

THIS IS THE FIRST WINTER/SPRING FLOOD POTENTIAL OUTLOOK FOR 2023,
ISSUED BY THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN CARIBOU, MAINE. THIS 
OUTLOOK IS FOR NORTHERN, CENTRAL, AND DOWNEAST MAINE FOR THE TWO- 
WEEK PERIOD OF JANUARY 5TH TO JANUARY 19TH, 2023. 

THE POTENTIAL FOR OPEN WATER FLOODING OVER THE NEXT TWO WEEKS IS 
NORMAL. THE POTENTIAL FOR ICE JAM FLOODING IS ABOVE NORMAL ACROSS 
THE NORTHERN BASINS. 

...CLIMATOLOGICAL GUIDANCE...
DECEMBER 2022 WAS SIGNIFICANTLY WARMER THAN AVERAGE WITH AT TO 
ABOVE AVERAGE TOTAL PRECIPITATION AND BELOW NORMAL SNOWFALL. THE 
REGION AS A WHOLE AVERAGED ABOUT 5.0 TO 6.5 DEGREES ABOVE THE 
1991-2020 CLIMATE NORMS. CARIBOU MONTHLY AVERAGE TEMPERATURE FOR 
DECEMBER 2022 WAS 26.4F WHICH WAS 3RD WARMEST ON RECORD WITH 
RECORDS DATING BACK TO 1939. IN HOULTON, THE AVERAGE TEMPERATURE 
WAS 27.5F WHICH WAS ALSO 3RD WARMEST ON RECORD WITH THEIR RECORDS 
DATING BACK TO 1948. MILLINOCKET, FEATURED AN AVERAGE MONTHLY 
TEMPERATURE OF 28.5F WHICH WAS THE 4TH WARMEST ON RECORD WITH 
RECORDS DATING BACK TO 1902. LASTLY, BANGOR’S DECEMBER 2022 
AVERAGE MONTHLY TEMPERATURE WAS 30.9F WHICH WAS ALSO 4TH WARMEST 
ON RECORD WITH RECORDS DATING BACK TO 1925. REPEATED WARM SPELLS 
WAS THE OVERALL THEME OF THE MONTH BROKEN ONLY BY RELATIVELY SHORT
PERIODS OF NEAR TO SOMEWHAT BELOW AVERAGE TEMPERATURES. NO 
EXTREMELY WARM DAYS OCCURRED, BUT NORTHERN LOCATIONS HAD SOME DAYS
WHERE HIGH TEMPS REACHED INTO THE 40S WITH CENTRAL AND DOWNEAST 
LOCATIONS OCCASIONALLY REACHING HIGHS INTO THE LOWER TO MID 50S, 
INCLUDING RECORD HIGH TEMPS ON THE LAST TWO DAYS OF THE MONTH. 
THERE WERE FEW ARCTIC AIR MASSES THAT ENTERED THE REGION WITH 
LITTLE ZERO AND SUB-ZERO LOW TEMPERATURES THIS MONTH. IN FACT, THE
LOW MONTHLY TEMPERATURE OF ZERO AT CARIBOU RECORDED ON THE 28TH 
WAS THE 4TH LATEST FIRST ZERO OCCURRENCE THERE.

TOTAL PRECIPITATION FOR THE MONTH RANGED FROM ABOUT 95 TO 125 
PERCENT OF AVERAGE ACROSS THE REGION WITH THE MAJORITY OF IT 
FALLING AS RAINFALL EVEN ACROSS THE NORTH. SIGNIFICANT RAINFALL 
EVENTS ON THE 3RD AND 7TH COMPLETELY LIQUIDATED EARLY SNOWPACKS 
FROM NOVEMBER OVER THIS PORTION OF THE REGION. ANOTHER HEAVY 
RAINFALL EVENT ON THE 23RD RESULTED IN MINOR FLOODING OVER 
SOUTHWEST PORTIONS OF THE EVENT FALLING AFTER AND MELTING MUCH OF 
THE HEAVY SNOWFALL LESS THAN A WEEK PRIOR.

SNOWFALL ACROSS THE REGION WAS RELATIVELY LIGHT, ONLY 50 TO 75 
PERCENT OF AVERAGE DUE TO FEW STORM SYSTEMS THIS MONTH TAKING A 
FAVORABLE TRACK FOR SNOWFALL. BY FAR AND AWAY, THE MOST IMPORTANT 
AND LONG DURATION EVENT BEGAN LATE ON THE 16TH OVER THE SOUTHWEST 
AND FINISHED LATE ON THE 19TH OVER THE NORTHEAST. INLAND FROM THE 
COAST OVER THE SOUTH AND WEST, THIS EVENT FEATURED HEAVY SNOW 
BANDING RESULTING IN SNOW TOTALS UPWARDS TO 20 INCHES OVER SOME 
CENTRAL AND WESTERN LOCATIONS AND ENDED ON THE 18TH. COASTAL 
DOWNEAST LOCATIONS HAD MUCH REDUCED SNOWFALL DUE TO MIXING OR EVEN
PERIODS OF ALL RAIN DURING THIS EVENT. OVER THE NORTHEAST, THE 
EVENT BEGAN ON THE AFTERNOON OF THE 17TH AND CONTINUED INTO THE 
EVENING OF THE 19TH WITH LIGHT STEADY SNOWFALL THAT STILL MANAGED 
TO ACCUMULATE OVER A FOOT AT MOST LOCATIONS. BLOCKING OVER 
NORTHEAST CANADA, WHICH WAS SLOWLY BREAKING DOWN, WAS THE REASON 
FOR THE SLOW NORTHEAST PROGRESSION OF THIS STORM. LOOKING 
AHEAD...THERE ARE CURRENTLY NO INDICATIONS THAT MAJOR ARCTIC AIR 
INTRUSIONS WILL OCCUR IN NEW ENGLAND OVER THE NEXT 10 DAYS OR SO. 
THE NORTH ATLANTIC OSCILLATION (NAO) INDEX IS FORECAST TO REMAIN 
POSITIVE RIGHT INTO THE MIDDLE OF JANUARY. WITH A POSITIVE NAO 
INDEX...THE JET STREAM REMAINS FAIRLY ZONAL WITH FAST MOVING 
WEATHER SYSTEMS RIPPLING ACROSS THE COUNTRY. MOST OF THE ARCTIC 
AIR REMAINS IN CANADA AND IS SHUNTED EASTWARD RATHER THAN HEADING 
SOUTHWARD INTO THE UNITED STATES. THE ONLY EXCEPTION TO THIS IS 
ACROSS NORTHERN MAINE WE CAN BE CLIPPED SEVERAL TIMES BY A BIT OF 
THIS ARCTIC AIR. LATEST LONG RANGE OPERATIONAL RUNS ARE BEGINNING 
TO SUGGEST THIS, HOWEVER TYPICAL WITH LONG RANGE GUIDANCE SO MANY 
THINGS CAN CHANGE UPSTREAM IMPACTING THE RESULTS. THE PACIFIC 
NORTH AMERICA (PNA) PATTERN IS FORECAST TO REMAIN WEAKLY POSITIVE.
A POSITIVE PNA FAVORS AN UPPER LEVEL TROUGH OVER THE EASTERN 
UNITED STATES BUT WITH A WEAKLY POSITIVE PNA...OFTEN THE TROUGHS 
ARE BROAD AND DO NOT SUPPORT RAPID EAST COAST STORM DEVELOPMENT. 
HERE IN EASTERN MAINE WE CAN SEE LAST MINUTE RAPID DEVELOPMENT 
OVER THE EASTERN GULF OF MAINE OR BAY OF FUNDY WHICH CAN PRODUCE 
SNOWFALL FOR OUR AREA BUT AT THIS TIME NOTHING IS EXPECTED.

THE CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER`S OUTLOOK FOR THE MONTH OF JANUARY 
2023 IS CALLING FOR SLIGHTLY INCREASED ODDS OF ABOVE AVERAGE 
TEMPERATURE AND EQUAL ODDS OF BELOW, NEAR, OR ABOVE AVERAGE 
PRECIPITATION FOR OUR REGION. NORMAL JANUARY TEMPS FOR THE 
1991-2020 PERIOD FOR NORTHERN (DOWNEAST) MAINE ARE LOWS OF ZERO TO
5 ABOVE (5 TO 10 ABOVE) AND HIGHS OF LOWER 20S (UPPER 20S TO 
LOWER 30S). NORMAL JANUARY TOTAL PRECIPITATION FOR THE ENTIRE 
REGION IS AROUND 3.00 INCHES WITH NORMAL SNOWFALL RANGING FROM 15 
TO 20 INCHES OVER DOWNEAST AREAS UPWARDS TO 25 TO 30 INCHES ACROSS
FAR NORTHERN AREAS.

...OBSERVED SNOW DEPTH AND WATER EQUIVALENTS...

THE MAINE COOPERATIVE SNOW SURVEY JUST BEGAN THIS WEEK SHOWING A 
RATHER DISMAL SNOWPACK ACROSS EASTERN & NORTHERN MAINE. DUE TO THE
WARM END OF DECEMBER 2022 COMBINED WITH SEVERAL RAIN EVENTS WE 
ENTERED 2023 WITH A WELL BELOW NORMAL SNOWPACK THAT IS MAINLY 
CONFINED TO NORTHERN MAINE INCLUDING THE MOOSEHEAD REGION TO 
BAXTER AREA, NORTHERN WASHINGTON COUNTY AND THE CROWN. GREATER 
BANGOR AREA TO DOWNEAST COAST HAVE NO SNOWPACK EXCEPT WHAT IS 
FALLING THIS MORNING WHICH IS GENERALLY EXPECTED TO BE ONLY 1-2 
INCHES AND MAY LAST FOR A FEW DAYS. IN THE CENTRAL HIGHLANDS AND 
UPPER PENOBSCOT RIVER REGIONS SEE GENERALLY LESS THAN 6 INCHES OF 
SNOW DEPTH WHICH IS BELOW NORMAL FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR. IN 
ADDITION THE SNOW WATER EQUIVALENTS (SWE) ARE RUNNING BELOW NORMAL
GENERALLY LESS THAN 1.5 INCHES BUT ARE WATER LOADED SOME FROM 
RECENT RAINS. ACROSS THE NORTH WOODS INTO THE CROWN WE SEE SNOW 
DEPTHS GENERALLY 6 INCHES OR LESS BUT ACROSS HIGHER TERRAIN WEST 
AND NORTH OF CARIBOU & ASHLAND WE SEE SNOW DEPTHS 6-12 INCHES 
INCLUDING LOCATIONS OUT IN THE HEADWATERS OF THE ST. JOHN RIVER. 
SWE’S ACROSS THE NORTH ARE RUNNING 2-4 INCHES WHICH IS JUST 
SLIGHTLY BELOW NORMAL TO NEAR NORMAL BUT NOT BECAUSE OF THE SNOW 
DEPTH. THE HIGHER SWE’S ACROSS THE NORTH ARE DUE TO SIGNIFICANT 
WATER LOADING FROM THE SEVERAL RAIN EVENTS IN DECEMBER WHERE THE 
SNOWPACK ABSORBED AND CONDENSED.

...SOIL MOISTURE AND WATER SUPPLY CONDITIONS...

LEADING INTO DECEMBER WE HAD SEVERAL RAINS, FOLLOWED BY SEVERAL 
SMALL SNOW EVENTS THAT RESULTED IN A LOT OF DISCHARGED WATER WHEN 
THE WELL ABOVE NORMAL DECEMBER TEMPERATURES ARRIVED. THIS COMBINED
WITH SEVERAL RAIN EVENTS IN DECEMBER RESULTED IN VERY WET 
CONDITIONS WITH MELTING SNOWPACK. NEAR SURFACE SOIL MOISTURE 
ANOMALIES SHOW ALL OF EASTERN & NORTHERN MAINE HAVING ABOVE TO 
WELL ABOVE NORMAL SOIL MOISTURE. THE LATEST PALMER DROUGHT 
SEVERITY INDEX MAP FROM JANUARY 2, 2023 SHOWS THE DOWNEAST 
ABNORMALLY WET, GREATER BANGOR IS EXTREMELY WET AND MUCH OF THE 
REMAINING AREAS ARE SEVERELY TO EXTREMELY WET. THE PALMER INDEX 
LOOKS AT CONDITIONS OVER THE SPAN OF WEEKS TO MONTHS. 

TAKING A LOOK AT GROUNDWATER MONITORING WELLS ACROSS THE REGION 
COURTESY OF THE UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (USGS), WE SEE 
MUCH OF THE GROUNDWATER LEVEL OBSERVING SITES ARE EXTREMELY HIGH 
FOR EARLY JANUARY. USGS MONITORING WELLS IN CLAYTON LAKE, FORT 
KENT, CALAIS AND KENDUSKEAG WERE ALL REPORTING RECORD HIGH JANUARY
LEVELS AS OF JANUARY 3, 2022. RECORDS FOR THESE WELLS GO BACK AS 
FAR AS 44 YEARS AS IS WITH THE FORT KENT SITE. 

LASTLY, GIVEN THE SIGNIFICANT RUNOFF FROM RAINFALL AND SNOWMELT 
WE ARE LOOKING AT RIVER STORAGES. WE FOCUS ON THE OBSERVATIONS WE 
GET FOR THE PENOBSCOT RIVER BASIN. THE PENOBSCOT TOTAL STORAGE AS 
OF JANUARY 2, 2023 WAS 75.5% FULL WHICH IS 34.2% ABOVE THE LONG 
TERM AVERAGE. 

...RIVER AND ICE CONDITIONS...

AS OF JANUARY 5TH EVERY RIVER, STREAM AND CREEK WITH USGS GAGES 
IN EASTERN & NORTHERN MAINE ARE REPORTING GREATER THAN 90TH 
PERCENTILE DAILY DISCHARGE VALUES. THIS MEANS EVERY MEASURED 
WATERWAY IS RUNNING MUCH ABOVE NORMAL. SEVERAL SITES INCLUDING THE
ST. FRANCIS RIVER, ST. JOHN RIVER, MEDUXENKEAG RIVER, EAST BRANCH
OF PENOBSCOT, PENOBSCOT RIVER, PISCATAQUIS RIVER AND KINGSBURY 
STREAM ARE RUNNING AT ALL-TIME HIGH DAILY DISCHARGE FOR THIS DAY. 
OVERALL, THIS MEANS WE HAVE WAY ABOVE NORMAL WATER IN THE RIVERS 
FOR JANUARY. 

INITIALLY WE DEVELOPED ICE ON THE RIVERS DURING THE MONTH OF 
DECEMBER MAINLY ACROSS THE NORTHERN RIVERS AND UPPER REACHES OF 
THE PENOBSCOT. SEVERAL RAINSTORMS AND MELTING SNOW OVER THE PAST 
FEW WEEKS ALLOWED FOR SIGNIFICANT SHIFTING AND BREAK UP OF THE ICE
THAT DEVELOPED. FRAZIL ICE COMPACTED AND THICKENED CREATING SHEET
ICE 3-6 INCHES THICK WITH ISOLATED THICKER ICE. THIS SHIFTED AND 
MOVED AROUND RESULTING IN SIGNIFICANT JUMBLED ICE. THIS WAS 
EVIDENT ON THE PENOBSCOT RIVER ABOVE THE HOWLAND DAM WHICH 
RESULTED IN ICE JAM FLOODING ON DECEMBER 28, 2022. EMERGENCY 
MANAGEMENT AND TOWN OFFICIALS REPORTED THAT EXCESSIVE RUNOFF ON 
MERRILL BROOK & GORDON BROOK ALONG WITH AN ICE JAM APPROXIMATELY 
2-3 MILES LONG ABOVE THE HOWLAND DAM CUT OFF SEVERAL RESIDENTS ON 
GARDNER LANE IN HOWLAND AND THREATENED MATTAMISCONTIS ROAD. WATER 
LEVELS RECEDED BUT THE ICE REMAINED AS OF JANUARY 1, 2023. 

AROUND THE START OF THE NEW YEAR A LARGE PORTION OF JUMBLE ICE 
ABOVE THE CARIBOU DAM DISCHARGED OVER THE DAM AND TRAVELED 
DOWNSTREAM INTO FORT FAIRFIELD COLLIDING WITH AN EXISTING JUMBLE 
JAM THAT EXTENDED 4-5MI UPSTREAM FROM THE NEW BRUNSWICK BORDER. 
THIS RESULTED IN WATER RISES THAT BEGAN TO FLOOD THE GRIMES ROAD /
NORTH CARIBOU ROAD AT THE FORT FAIRFIELD AND CARIBOU TOWNLINE 
WHICH WAS CLOSED. IN ADDITION WE SAW FLOODING OF THE LOW-LYING 
FARM FIELDS ALONG ROUTE 161 BETWEEN FORT FAIRFIELD AND CARIBOU. 
THIS ICE JAM GREW TO BETWEEN 9 AND 12 MILES STRETCHING FROM NEAR 
TINKER DAM IN NEW BRUNSWICK TO RIVER ROAD IN CARIBOU. WELL ABOVE 
NORMAL DISCHARGE CONTINUES TO FLOW DOWN THE LITTLE MADAWASKA RIVER
WHICH ADDS MORE WATER INTO THE AROOSTOOK RIVER. THANKFULLY BY 
JANUARY 4TH THE WATER RECEDED AND THE GRIMES ROAD / NORTH CARIBOU 
ROAD WAS REOPENED. THE ICE JAM REMAINS IN PLACE. 

LASTLY, WE HAVE JUMBLED ICE STRETCHING FROM MADAWASKA DOWNSTREAM 
TO HAMLIN. THERE HAS BEEN SOME ICE SHIFTING THAT HAS TURNED INTO 
AN ICE JAM BUT THANKFULLY NO FLOODING IN THE HAMLIN AREA OR 
UPSTREAM REPORTED. PICTURES VIA SOCIAL MEDIA INDICATE IT'S A JAM 
ABOVE GRAND FALLS STRETCHING BACK SEVERAL MILES ON THE ST. JOHN 
TOWARDS VAN BUREN. USING THE PHOTOGRAPHS THE ICE THICKNESS IS 
ESTIMATED TO BE 3-6 INCHES. 

ELSEWHERE, NO SIGNIFICANT ICING OTHER THAN FRAZIL ICE AND THIN 
BANK ICE IS PRESENT ON PISCATAQUIS, MATTAWAMKEAG AND OTHER 
STRETCHES OF THE PENOBSCOT AND DOWNEAST RIVERS AND STREAMS. 

...IN CONCLUSION...

THE POTENTIAL FOR FLOODING DUE TO ICE JAMS IS ABOVE NORMAL ACROSS
NORTHERN MAINE. ICE JAMS REMAIN IN PLACE ALONG PORTIONS OF THE 
AROOSTOOK, ST. JOHN AND PENOBSCOT RIVERS ALTHOUGH FLOODING HAS AT 
LEAST TEMPORARILY SUBSIDED. WITH HIGH OR RECORD HIGH FLOWS 
CURRENTLY OCCURRING THERE IS A RISK FOR MORE FLOODING IF THE JAMS 
SHIFT. THE RIVERS AND STREAMS WILL ALSO LIKELY BEGIN TO RE-FREEZE 
AT HIGH STAGES WHICH MAY INCREASE THE LIKELIHOOD FOR FREEZE-UP 
JAMS WHEN COLD AIR RETURNS. 

FOR ALL THESE REASONS...THE POTENTIAL FOR FLOODING DUE TO ICE 
JAMS REMAINS ELEVATED ACROSS NORTHERN MAINE.

THE NEXT WINTER/SPRING FLOOD OUTLOOK WILL BE ISSUED ON THURSDAY, 
JANUARY 19TH. 

$$
SINKO