Ticker for December 1, 2003

                
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December 1, 2003 December 1, 2003 December 1, 2003 December 1, 2003


November: Feast or Famine

Another November is in the books, and it was a dry November. The
month will go on record as about an inch below the statewide normal
of 2.83 inches of precipitation. That puts it pretty close to the
middle of the historical population.

How can this be? Well, two factors are at play here. First, the
normals for November are near their highest levels ever, thanks to
the very wet Novembers of the 1980s and 1990s. Second, November is
a very bipolar month in the climate record, much like its autumn
brethren September and October. In other words, November is either
significantly wet, or significantly dry, but hardly ever in between.

In fact, the likelihood of landing within a quarter-inch of the
long-term average for the month is quite low: it happens about once
every nine or ten years in most of Oklahoma's climate divisions.

In fact, landing within an inch (plus or minus!) of the long-term
average is a 50-50 proposition for most of Oklahoma. In fact, out
of the 109 Novembers on record since 1895, here are the number of
times the precipitation landed within a quarter-inch, half-inch or
inch of the long-term average:

Climate Long-term Within Within Within
Division Average Qtr-inch Half-inch an inch

Panhandle 0.88" 27 of 109 44 of 109 93 of 109
N.Central 1.64" 13 of 109 30 of 109 49 of 109
Northeast 1.43" 15 of 109 23 of 109 44 of 109
W.Central 1.43" 14 of 109 28 of 109 64 of 109
Central 2.15" 11 of 109 29 of 109 47 of 109
E.Central 3.18" 13 of 109 26 of 109 41 of 109
Southwest 1.48" 11 of 109 26 of 109 58 of 109
S.Central 2.46" 15 of 109 28 of 109 41 of 109
Southeast 3.98" 14 of 109 17 of 109 31 of 109

Obviously, the occurrences are relatively larger in the western
divisions because the long-term average is so low (for example, a
month with zero precip is within an inch of the panhandle's 0.88"
average).

So, let's look at the same issue, but break it down by percentages.
Here's a table showing how often the November precip lands within
10%, 25% or 50% of the long-term average.

Climate Long-term Within Within Within
Division Average 10 percent 25 percent 50 percent

Panhandle 0.88" 8 of 109 22 of 109 41 of 109
N.Central 1.64" 11 of 109 20 of 109 40 of 109
Northeast 1.43" 17 of 109 30 of 109 55 of 109
W.Central 1.43" 9 of 109 22 of 109 46 of 109
Central 2.15" 8 of 109 32 of 109 48 of 109
E.Central 3.18" 15 of 109 32 of 109 60 of 109
Southwest 1.48" 6 of 109 20 of 109 41 of 109
S.Central 2.46" 15 of 109 31 of 109 52 of 109
Southeast 3.98" 17 of 109 30 of 109 53 of 109

Just for clarity, the criteria for that last column is this: if a
November lands between the long-term average plus or minus HALF (!)
of that long-term average, it counts. In parts of Oklahoma, almost
two-thirds of Novembers are outside this range!

So, a significantly dry (or wet!) November is certainly not uncommon.
What is significant about *this* November is that it follows several
very dry months in a row. The cumulative effect of these low-precip
months is causing significant-to-severe problems for much of the
western half of the state.



December 1 in Mesonet History

Record Value Station Year
Maximum Temperature 86°F HOLL 2012
Minimum Temperature 0°F SEIL 2006
Maximum Rainfall 0.75″ WATO 2015

Mesonet records begin in 1994.

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