temperature departures

1993 vs. 2022

Precipitation data updated on June 30. This is the final update to this post.

The spring and early summer of 1993 was memorably wet for some of us who have called Seattle home for many years. That was the one year where I belonged in a van pool to go to and from work. each day. One dreary morning following a series of similar days in June or July, several people in the van were complaining about the weather. I can’t recall if I was one of them or just in my mind agreeing with that sentiment. I do remember a fellow vanpooler and native of Seattle chastising the complainers and suggesting this weather was normal for Seattle and telling us if we didn’t care for it, we should move. I had mixed feelings but did not completely disagree with her.  Nevertheless, that was my 10th summer in the city, and I hadn’t recalled any of the others being so miserable weatherwise.

We appear to be experiencing a similar wet and cool spring and early summer in 2022. It has brought up memories of that gray early summer of 1993. I was just speaking to a neighbor yesterday about the very thing though she hadn’t lived in Seattle in 1993. What triggered my discussion was looking at the daily rain total from the day before and seeing we had set a record for that June day. The previous record was in place since 1993.

So how does this wet spring and early summer compare to a similar period from 1993? In all honesty, I didn’t know if 1993 was our wettest spring since 1984, my first year in Seattle, let alone for the recorded history of spring weather at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (KSEA) going back to the 1940s. But it was, for me, a memorable wet period, as is this spring, so let’s compare.

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Precipitation

Figure 1 shows the cumulative precipitation traces for calendar periods starting on October 1 of one year through September 30 of the following year recorded at SeaTac airport. This period is often considered the water year on the U.S. west coast due to our seasonal weather patterns of a strong wet season usually followed by a strong dry season. The midpoint of this multi-calendar year span is April 1 which roughly represents the transition period from wet-to-dry seasons.

 

Click to enlarge.

Figure 1. Cumulative precipitation traces for water years 1948-49 through 2021-22 at Seatlle-Tacoma International Airport (KSEA).

 

I’ve highlighted two specific annual traces: the 1992-93 and the 2021-22 water years. The first obvious thing one notices is that since October 1 of last year, this has been one of Seattle’s wettest periods. It is in the top five wettest water years so far. Ironically, two of the other 74 traces in the top five category are also recent water years, 2015-16 (#3) and 2016-17 (#1).

A second obvious feature is that in the first six months of water years 1992-93 and 2021-22 leading up to April, it has been far wetter this water year (2021-22) than 1992-93. On April 1, SeaTac Airport had already seen 35.8 inches of rain during the previous six months. On April 1, 1993, SeaTac Airport had seen 21.35 inches of rain in the previous six months. This is a difference of 14.45 inches, or more than two average November’s worth of rain. Memory plays tricks on us, but I’d argue that up to June 10, this water year has been much drearier than 1993.

There are two boxes on Figure 1. These boxes encapsulate the period between April1 – June 10 for each trace being compared, 1993 (red) and 2022 (blue). The total amount of precipitation for each period is similar, 8.94 inches and 8.83 inches respectively. The typical Seattle summer dry spell in 1993 began on or around July 30. It remains to be seen when this will occur in 2022.


Figure 2 shows the same data as Figure 1, cumulative precipitation at SeaTac for the years 1948-2022 except the it shows precipitation for the months of April through August. The values have been zeroed to March 31 for comparison purposes. Plotting this shows just how wet this spring has been. Aside from 1948, 1993 and 2022 have been two of the wettest springs recorded at SeaTac Airport. The spring of 1993 ended up being the second wettest spring recorded to-date at SeaTac. The spring of 2022 ended up being the fifth wettest.

Click to enlarge.

Figure 2. Cumulative precipitation since April 1 at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (KSEA) for the years 1948 through 2022.


Figure 3 is a dot plot which ranks the precipitation periods from April 1 to Jun 17 and is analogous to Figure 2 showing the values for all traces between 1948 to 2022. In mid-June, the springs of 1993 and 2022 were virtually tied for 2nd place. But the latter half of June 2022 was relatively dry and the final tallly of April-June precipitation for 2022 dropped the year to fifth place on Figure 3. June 1993 ended up having .68” inches more of precipitation than June 2022.

Five of the top ten wettest years for this April-Jun period have occurred since 2010. At mid-month it was six. The 2017 period dropped to #12 on the list by the end of the month.

Figure 3. Ranking of spring-summer precipitation at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (KSEA).


Figure 4 shows the same data displayed in Figure 3 but lays the data out in chronological order to see if any trends over time are evident. Any trending appears to be mild, but there appears to be a slight increase in spring and early summer precipitation in recent years.

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Figure 4. Cumulative spring-summer precipitation trends, April 1 through June 30, KSEA.


Temperatures

This spring has been much cooler than normal since April. How do the temperatures of Spring 2022 compare to Spring 1993?

Taking a look back at April through June daily average temperature departures from normal (30Y average for 1961-90) shows that spring and early summer was normal to slightly warmer than normal. The average April daily temperature was about 1˚F warmer than 30Y normals. The average May daily temperature was about 4˚F warmer than long-term normals. And the average June daily temperature was just about normal.

Contrast this with this spring and early summer (to-date). This year at SeaTac airport, the average daily temperature in April was -4˚F, the average May daily temperature was -4.6˚F, and the average June daily temperature (to June 17) is -2.4˚F. These are averages across an entire month. Of course there were nice days during these periods, even some warm one, but in general it has been a very cool spring and early summer. These differences are shown in Table 1.

Table 1. Monthly Average Temperature Deviation from 30-Year Normals

 

Figure 5 shows the daily temperature departures for the period from April 1 to June 30 for 1993. A 7-day average line plot is included.

Figure 6 shows the same data for this year through the most recent data point.

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Figure 5. Daily temperature departures for April through June 30, 1993.

 

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Figure 6. Daily temperature departures for April through June 18, 2022.

Looking back, spring and early summer of both 1993 and 2022 were wet and gloomy. Some people like the rain and clouds. Come spring and summer I’m ready for light, increased sun, sunrises and sunsets, and warmer temperatures to separate from our normal 6 month wet and cool winterspring climate.

But this spring and early summer has been much cooler than those of 1993. However, the current spring / early summer did get a boost of warmth in the last two weeks of June.

It’s also been notably darker in terms of solar radiation compared to recent years (I don’t have similar data for 1993).

Based on this, barring any sudden change in weather for the last two weeks of June, I’d have to say this year takes the cake for weather gloominess.

 

Rearview Mirror: November 2021

The November 2021 Temperature Departure chart is shown in Figure 1.

In general we’ve had a somewhat cooler than normal autumn, but November was slightly warmer than normal, with a monthly temperature average of 47.9˚F, about 1.4F above normal. Several strong atmospheric storms hitting the Puget Sound region from the tropics to the southwest passed through the city mid-month and towards the end. These storms brought warm, tropic air with them with plenty of moisture. These multi-day temperature spikes can be seen in Figure 1.

Figure 1. Daily temperature departs from 30Y climatic normals through November 30.

Click image to enlarge.

Normally, I’d add a chart showing new monthly precipitation totals, but I’ve reported these in several previous blog posts over the past few days. There’s no sense repeating that information here. Click to Prev button at the bottom of this post to navigate to those posts if you’re interested.


DATA SOURCE
NOAA / National Weather Service Local Climate: https://www.weather.gov/wrh/climate?wfo=sew