NOAA Predicted a Mild/Drier Winter as Record Snowfall Closes Yosemite Natl. Park For Foreseeable Future
Grant-hungry Climate Cultists can code computer models that auger global conditions years or decades from now, but they can’t predict this. Yosemite got so much snow this winter they closed the park on Feb 25th and for the foreseeable future.
The historic snowfall in the Sierra Nevada from back-to-back winter storms has closed the world-famous park indefinitely while rangers and park staffers work to respond to the epic snowpack.
“In all of my years here, this is the most snow that I’ve ever seen at one time,” said Scott Gediman, a spokesperson for Yosemite and ranger for 27 years. “This is the most any of us have ever seen.”
Snowfall records have been bTheythe Pacific Coast all season (better them than us), but why didn’t they see this coming?
They did see something, but they were wrong. NOAA, so-called scientific experts on such things, made these now-laughable 2022-2023 winter predictions for California, which includes Yosemite. Normal to above average temperatures and normal to below normal precipitation.
California got the opposite in spades: record precipitation and cold weather, including plowable snow (but with no plows) down to Southern California.
If it makes NOAA feel better, The Farmer’s Almanac missed it too. They predicted drier weather with mild temperatures.
Here’s some local news on the closing of Yosemite National Park.