December 8, 2016
- November was drier than normal for most of the region, with wetter spots in central and southern Wyoming, southern Utah, and eastern Colorado. Statewide, Wyoming was in the 32nd percentile for precipitation, Colorado was in the 39th percentile, while Utah was in the 52nd percentile.
- November continued what has been an extremely warm fall season, with most of the region coming in at 4-8°F above normal for the month. Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming each had their 3rd-warmest November on record.
- Since early November, there has been some additional degradation of drought conditions in eastern Colorado and southern and eastern Wyoming. Colorado has D1 or D2 conditions over 38% of the state, compared to 15% in Utah and 14% in Wyoming.
- The pattern change in mid-November finally opened the door to more storms and a big boost in snowpack conditions. As of December 8, most basins across the region have 55-80% of median SWE. Central and southern Utah and northeastern Wyoming have near- or above-normal SWE.
- Weak La Niña conditions are just hanging on in the tropical Pacific. The ENSO forecast models are now tipped towards a return to ENSO-neutral conditions by late winter. NOAA CPC seasonal forecasts show a wet tilt in the odds for Wyoming over the next three months.