Thu, Apr 27, 2023
Summer/Fall 2023 Mesonet OK-First Classes Summer/Fall 2023 Mesonet OK-First classes for public safety officials are now open for enrollment! We will be offering a mix… Read More »
Tue, Jan 03, 2023
December Caps 2022 Rain Record December provided a fitting end to Oklahoma’s tumultuous 2022 weather story. This final chapter came complete with a half-dozen tornadoes,… Read More »
Tue, Nov 01, 2022
October Drought Relief Mixed Drought held on through October in Oklahoma for the fifteenth consecutive month, its roots dating back to August 2021 and… Read More »
Tue, Oct 11, 2022
Winter/Spring 2023 Mesonet OK-First Classes Winter/Spring 2023 Mesonet OK-First classes for public safety officials are now open for enrollment! We will be offering a mix… Read More »
Mon, Oct 03, 2022
September Continues Dry Dusty Weather Drought surged across Oklahoma as the driest September since 1956 took its toll on the state’s landscape. The amount of… Read More »
Wed, Aug 17, 2022
Fall 2022 OK-FIRE Classes Free training workshops will be offered this fall for both new and experienced users of OK-FIRE, the statewide weather-based decision support system… Read More »
Mon, Aug 01, 2022
July Heat Punishes Oklahoma The seemingly impenetrable heat wave and dry spell that had punished Oklahoma since early June continued through nearly all of… Read More »
Fri, Jul 01, 2022
June Teases Several Seasons June managed to pack pieces of three seasons into a single month. The first 10 days were quite springlike, with… Read More »
Wed, Jun 01, 2022
May Rains Dent Drought May’s reputation as Oklahoma’s most prolific severe weather month was confirmed within the first week with as many as… Read More »
Mon, May 02, 2022
April Winds Highest in Mesonet Era Opinions on Oklahoma’s weather are often more variable than the weather itself. Some Oklahomans will look back on April… Read More »
Wed, Apr 13, 2022
Summer/Fall 2022 Mesonet OK-First Classes Summer/Fall 2022 Mesonet OK-First classes for public safety officials are now open for enrollment! We will be offering a mix… Read More »
Fri, Apr 01, 2022
Variety Describes March Weather March’s weather ran the gamut of nearly all the hazards Oklahoma has to offer, befitting a seasonal transition month in… Read More »
Tue, Mar 01, 2022
Wintry Weather Rules February Three impactful winter storms struck Oklahoma during February, snarling traffic on state highways, bringing down power lines, and forcing… Read More »
Tue, Feb 01, 2022
Winter Arrives In January Winter arrived with conviction at the dawn of the new year in Oklahoma and delivered a startling counterpunch to the… Read More »
Tue, Jan 04, 2022
December Shatters Temperature Record In what could best be described as a climatological anomaly on steroids, Oklahoma soared to its warmest December on… Read More »
Wed, Dec 01, 2021
November Caps Off Warm, Dry Fall An extended pattern of warm, dry weather exacerbated drought conditions during November. Drought impacts, including fire danger and soil… Read More »
Thu, Nov 18, 2021
Spring 2022 Mesonet OK-First Classes Spring 2022 OK-First classes for public safety officials are now open for enrollment! We will be offering a mix of… Read More »
Mon, Nov 01, 2021
October Sets Tornado Record Oklahomans are growing accustomed to Mother Nature’s October weather shenanigans following a snowstorm of up to 13 inches in… Read More »
Tue, Oct 05, 2021
Fall 2021 OK-FIRE Classes Free training workshops will be offered this fall for both new and experienced users of OK-FIRE, the statewide weather-based decision… Read More »
Fri, Oct 01, 2021
Drought Makes September Push The 17th warmest and driest September in Oklahoma since records began in 1895 allowed drought to flourish during the month.… Read More »
Tue, Jan 04, 2022
In what could best be described as a climatological anomaly on steroids, Oklahoma soared to its warmest December on record, besting the previous mark by more than 5 degrees. It was a remarkable display of muscle by Mother Nature that saw the statewide average temperature finish more than 10 degrees above normal as measured by the Oklahoma Mesonet. For some perspective, the next nine warmest Decembers all reside within 2 degrees of each other. No other calendar month in Oklahoma has such a large spread between the top two marks. May has the next largest difference at 1.2 degrees. December 2021 also became the fourth warmest climatological winter month since statewide records began in 1895, just a few tenths of a degree behind the top spot in February 1954. The cool season heat wave was a culmination of warmer and drier than normal weather that began in earnest in mid-August and continued largely uninterrupted right up until the ball dropped on 2022. An arctic cold front arrived just before midnight on New Year’s Eve and brought an abrupt end to the spring-like temperatures with snow, ice, freezing rain, and bitterly cold air.
A profound lack of precipitation combined with the unusual warmth to propel drought forward in both coverage and intensity at speeds often reserved for the summer months. According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, drought increased from 61% of the state at the end of November to 90% at the end of December. The amount of severe and extreme drought increased from 16% to over 72% during the month. The Drought Monitor’s intensity scale slides from moderate-severe-extreme-exceptional, with exceptional being the worst classification. The addition of strong winds to the equation resulted in numerous days with dangerous wildfire conditions. Widespread non-thunderstorm wind gusts of 60-80 mph across western Oklahoma on Dec. 15 fanned flames into the western sides of Guymon, forcing evacuations. Dust storms closed roads in the Panhandle due to poor visibility, producing images right out of the Dust Bowl era.
The statewide average temperature finished at 50.4 degrees, 10.3 degrees above normal and easily surpassed the previous top mark of 45.1 degrees from both 1931 and 1965. Many individual locations across the state set similar temperature records. Oklahoma City’s 50.7 degrees topped its previous record of 48.7 degrees in 1965, and Tulsa’s 52.2 degrees eclipsed 1931’s 47.3 degrees. Oklahoma City and Tulsa’s records date back to 1890 and 1905, respectively. The Mesonet recorded highs of at least 70 degrees on 25 separate days in December, and at least 80 degrees on 13 days. The month’s highest reading of 89 degrees at Grandfield on the 24th is the highest December temperature recorded by the Mesonet since its temperature records began in 1997, and ninth highest compared to longer running cooperative network data that extends back to the early 1870s. Tops is the 92 degrees reported by Ardmore back on Dec. 30, 1951. The coldest reading of December 2021 was 3 degrees at Camargo on the 19th. The warm December vaulted 2021 up to a final ranking of 19th warmest at 61 degrees, 0.6 degrees above normal. 2021’s highest temperature was 107 degrees at Eva on June 23, and the lowest of minus 22 degrees was reported at Kenton on Feb. 15.
The month’s statewide average precipitation total ended at 0.95 inches, 1.16 inches below normal and ranked as the 34th driest December on record. That statistic is bolstered by decent moisture across far eastern Oklahoma, but most of the western two-thirds of the state experienced an alarming lack of precipitation. Nineteen of the Mesonet’s 120 sites recorded no precipitation for the month, and an additional 33 received a quarter-inch or less. The Panhandle suffered its driest December on record with no precipitation for the month, west central had its third driest at 0.01 inches on average, and north central’s 0.06 inches ranked as their fifth driest. Many locations in Oklahoma had not received more than a tenth of an inch of rain in a single day for more than two months. Some sites in the Panhandle had gone without measurable moisture since Oct. 10. The Mesonet site at Cookson led the state with 4.26 inches, while 11 other sites across eastern Oklahoma enjoyed more than 3 inches. 2021 finished as the 63rd driest year on record with a statewide average of 33.63 inches, 2.73 inches below normal. Kenton’s 12.9 inches was the Mesonet’s lowest total during 2021, while the site at Mt. Herman won the top prize with 61.13 inches.
Chances for significant drought relief appear slim according to the Climate Prediction Center’s January precipitation outlook, which indicates increased odds of below normal precipitation across the western two-thirds of the state. Their temperature outlook for January shows increased odds of above normal temperatures in far southwestern Oklahoma and the western Panhandle. CPC’s January drought outlook calls for the existing drought in Oklahoma to either persist or intensify through January. No further spread is expected, however.