The NOAA's winter forecast has arrived, and thanks to a well-known Pacific Ocean phenomenon, parts of the country can expect to be doused in plenty of chilly precipitation. "A strong El Nino is in place and should exert a strong influence over our weather this winter," Mike Halpert, the deputy director of the NOAA's Climate Prediction Center, says on the agency's site, adding that other climate patterns out of the Arctic and Pacific Northwest will also play a part. Here are some predictions countrywide:
- Most of the Southern US will sit through a cool, wet winter thanks to El Nino, said to be the strongest it's been in 50 years. For areas suffering through drought (hello, California), that rain and snow will be welcomed, but that doesn't mean the Golden State is in the clear. "One season of above-average rain and snow is unlikely to remove four years of drought," Halpert notes, per USA Today. "California would need close to twice its normal rainfall to get out of drought, and that's unlikely."