(CBS) Forecasters say it will be unusually warm and feel like spring, or even summer, in much of the United States Thursday.
The nation is coming to the end of the warmest winter since 2000, and fourth-warmest on record.
One New Yorker told CBS News, "I'm almost ready to wear a bathing suit!"
Said another, "It's just great to see the sun, to be outside without jackets and mittens and gloves."
Across much of the country this year, Old Man Winter has been a virtual no-show.
Minneapolis has only seen 22 inches of snow. Last winter, the city
got a whopping 86.
In the Big Apple, crews dumped more than 300,000 tons of salt on city roads in 2011. Today, the stockpile remains mostly intact.
"I've
never seen a winter this warm, actually," said one man. "It's always
been blizzarding or freezing, but this is really strange."
Residents have also been soaking up the sun in Chicago, where the average temperature this year is 6 degrees above normal.
Forecasters
blame the freakishly warm weather on the system known as "La Nina" -- a
cooling of Pacific waters that pushes the jet stream farther north.
"For
this past winter," says Accuweather.com's Justin Povick, "we saw the La
Nina begin to weaken. Therefore, the waters over the Pacific began to
warm up. The northern jet stream was not as potent. ... Therefore, the
temperatures are not as cold over a good chunk of the country."
But
not everyone is enjoying the nicer weather. For instance -- allergy
sufferers struggling with an early pollen season, and maple syrup
producers who rely on frigid temperatures to help get the sap flowing.
One, Paul Boulanger of Turtle Lane Maple Farm in North Andover, Mass.
says, "It's gonna cost our business $10,000."
The biggest
concern for forecasters now is that the early thaw though could trigger
more severe weather systems like last week's deadly tornado outbreak.
Says
Povick, "Warmer temperatures mean more moisture, more moisture means a
better chance for thunderstorms and also the chance for tornadoes ...
Also, heading into the upcoming hurricane season, warm waters are key
ingredients that hurricanes gain their fuel from."
Source : CBSnews
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