504  
CXAK57 PAJK 160741  
CLAAJK  
 
CLIMATE REPORT  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JUNEAU AK  
1012 PM AKST MON JAN 15 2024  
   
...............................
 
 
   
..THE SITKA CLIMATE SUMMARY FOR THE YEAR OF 2023
 
 
CLIMATE NORMAL PERIOD: 1991 TO 2020  
CLIMATE RECORD PERIOD: 1944 TO 2024  
 
WEATHER OBSERVED NORMAL DEPART LAST YEAR'S  
VALUE DATE(S) VALUE FROM VALUE DATE(S)  
NORMAL    
............................................................
 
 
TEMPERATURE (F)  
RECORD  
HIGH 99 03/10/1987  
LOW 02/17/1948  
02/16/1948  
HIGHEST 82 05/18 76 06/16  
LOWEST 18 02/28 12 01/05  
AVG. MAXIMUM 52.1 50.0 2.1  
AVG. MINIMUM 43.2 40.9 2.3  
MEAN 47.7 45.4 2.3 46.8  
DAYS MAX >= 90 0 0.0 0.0 0  
DAYS MAX <= 32 3 8.5 -5.5 12  
DAYS MIN <= 32 44 69.6 -25.6 55  
DAYS MIN <= 0 0 0.0 0.0 0  
 
PRECIPITATION (INCHES)  
RECORD  
MAXIMUM 104.19 2023  
MINIMUM 86.55 2021  
TOTALS 104.19 84.47 19.72 101.83  
DAILY AVG. 0.29 0.23 0.06  
DAYS >= .01 252 235.1 16.9 205  
DAYS >= .10 179 163.0 16.0 138  
DAYS >= .50 66 57.2 8.8 55  
DAYS >= 1.00 23 18.4 4.6 26  
GREATEST  
24 HR. TOTAL 4.53  
STORM TOTAL 4.42  
(MM/DD(HH))  
 
DEGREE DAYS  
HEATING TOTAL 6208 7124 -916 6543  
SINCE 7/1 2392 3038 -646  
COOLING TOTAL 4 1 3 0  
SINCE 1/1 4 1 3  
 
FREEZE DATES  
EARLIEST 10/08  
LATEST 03/14    
............................................................
 
 
WIND (MPH)  
AVERAGE WIND SPEED 8.1  
HIGHEST WIND SPEED/DIRECTION 47/150 DATE 01/20  
HIGHEST GUST SPEED/DIRECTION 63/180 DATE 12/12  
 
WEATHER CONDITIONS. NUMBER OF DAYS WITH  
THUNDERSTORM 0 MIXED PRECIP 4  
HEAVY RAIN 29 RAIN 119  
LIGHT RAIN 273 FREEZING RAIN 0  
LT FREEZING RAIN 0 HAIL 2  
HEAVY SNOW 4 SNOW 8  
LIGHT SNOW 41 SLEET 17  
FOG 223 FOG W/VIS <= 1/4 MILE 7  
HAZE 107  
 
- INDICATES NEGATIVE NUMBERS.  
R INDICATES RECORD WAS SET OR TIED.  
MM INDICATES DATA IS MISSING.  
T INDICATES TRACE AMOUNT.  
 

 
 
WHILE PRECIPITATION WAS GENERALLY ABOVE NORMAL FOR SOUTHEAST ALASKA,  
THE BIGGER STORY WAS THE WARMER THAN NORMAL CONDITIONS THAT ALL  
LOCATIONS EXPERIENCED. BUT IN AN AGE OF A WARMING GLOBAL CLIMATE,  
THIS SHOULD NOT BE TOO SURPRISING.  
 
SITKA EXPERIENCED ITS 2ND WARMEST YEAR ON RECORD, JUNEAU ITS 6TH  
WARMEST, KETCHIKAN ITS 13TH WARMEST, AND YAKUTAT ITS 13TH WARMEST  
YEAR. TO PUT THIS INTO PERSPECTIVE, THE SHORTEST OF THESE RECORDS IS  
SITKA AND IT GOES BACK TO 1944. THE LONGEST RECORD, YAKUTAT, GOES  
BACK TO 1910. THERE WERE SOME NOTABLE COLD SPELLS ACROSS ALL OF  
SOUTHEAST ALASKA; THE LAST WEEK OF FEBRUARY THROUGH THE SECOND WEEK  
OF MARCH AND THEN AGAIN AT THE END OF OCTOBER. HOWEVER, WHEN LOOKING  
AT THE DAILY TEMPERATURE RANGES FOR EACH OF THE 4 CLIMATE SITES  
PLOTTED AGAINST THE NORMAL DAILY HIGHS AND LOWS, TWO THINGS BECOME  
OBVIOUS. FIRST OF ALL, OVERNIGHT LOWS DID NOT GET DOWN TO OR BELOW  
NORMAL NEARLY AS OFTEN AS DAYTIME HIGHS ROSE TO ABOVE NORMAL VLAUES.  
SECONDLY, THE DEGREE TO WHICH DAILY HIGHS WERE HIGHER THAN NORMAL  
WAS SIGNIFICANTLY GREATER THAN THE DEGREE TO WHICH OVERNIGHT LOWS  
WERE LOWER THAN NORMAL, MEANING THAT THE AVERAGE DAILY TEMPERATURES  
WERE SKEWED WARMER THAN NORMAL. ALSO NOT SURPRISINGLY, DAILY HIGH  
TEMPERATURE RECORDS WERE SET 21 TIMES THROUGH THE YEAR WITH AT LEAST  
ONE EVENT AT EACH OF THE CLIMATE SITES. CONVERSELY, ONLY 2 RECORD  
LOW TEMPERATURES WERE RECORDED DURING THE YEAR; ONCE AT JUNEAU AND  
ONCE AT SITKA. INTERESTINGLY, AS THE LA NINA WINTER OF 2022-2023  
ENDED, MANY WERE EXPECTING TO SEE BELOW NORMAL TEMPERATURES FOR THE  
SEASON. IN FACT, ONLY KETCHIKAN CLOSED OUT THE WINTER WITH BELOW  
NORMAL TEMPERATURES. THIS WAS DUE IN LARGE PART TO A VERY WARM  
JANUARY ACROSS SOUTHEAST ALASKA.  
 
THE BEGINNING OF SPRING FEATURED HEAVY SNOW ON THE 1ST OF MARCH AND  
THEN AGAIN AT THE MIDDLE OF THE MONTH, BUT VERY LITTLE AFTER THAT  
TIME. PRECIPITATION TOTALS FOR THE MONTH WERE, HOWEVER, BELOW NORMAL  
AND THE EXCESS SNOW WAS A RESULT OF COLDER THAN NORMAL TEMPERATURES.  
 
TEMPERATURES FINALLY TRENDED ABOVE NORMAL BY MAY AND WHAT FOLLOWED  
WAS SOME EXCELLENT SUMMER IN SPITE OF PRECIPITATION REMAINING ABOVE  
NORMAL THROUGH JUNE. THE SUMMER ENDED IN AUGUST WITH A GLACIALLY  
DAMMED LAKE RELEASE AT SUICIDE BASIN. THIS RELEASE PRODUCED AN ALL  
TIME RECORD FLOODING EVENT ON THE MENDENHALL RIVER. TWO HOMES WERE  
COMPLETELY DESTROYED WHEN THEY FELL INTO THE RIVER DUE TO RIVERBANK  
EROSION AND SEVERAL OTHER STRUCTURES WERE CONDEMNED DUE TO THE RIVER  
UNDERCUTTING THEIR FOUNDATIONS. THE FAST FLOWING FLOOD WATERS  
ALTERED THE PATH OF THE RIVERBED, DRAMATICALLY SO IN SOME LOCATIONS.  
 
FALL BEGAN WITH MUCH ABOVE NORMAL PRECIPITATION FROM SEVERAL  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVERS THAT IMPACTED THE REGION. MODERATE FLOODING  
OCCURED ON JORDAN CREEK NEAR THE JUNEAU AIRPORT AND SITKA CAME CLOSE  
TO RECORDING A NEW PRECIPITATION RECORD FOR THE MONTH. A VERY STRONG  
AUTUMN STORM AFFECTED ALL OF SOUTHEAST ALASKA IN THE DAYS BEFORE  
THANKSGVING. HIGH WINDS OCCURED ACROSS ALL OF SOUTHEAST ALAKSA WITH  
SNOW OVER THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE PANHANDLE AND RAIN TO THE SOUTH.  
THE COMBINATION OF WIND AND SNOW PRODUCED BLIZZARD CONDITIONS IN THE  
JUNEAU AREA. THE STRONG WINDS AND HEAVY RAIN ALSO RESULTED IN  
TRAGEDY WHEN A DEADLY LANDSLIDE STRUCK THE COMMUNITY OF WRANGELL IN  
A SCENARIO ALL TOO SIMILAR TO THE FATAL LANDSLIDE THAT OCCURED IN  
HAINES IN 2020.  
 
BY THE BEGINNING OF THE WINTER AND THE END OF 2023, A STRONG EL NINO  
HAD DEVELOPED AND THIS WAS REFLECTED IN MONTHLY AVERAGE TEMPERATURES  
FROM 4 TO 6 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL AT THE PRIMARY CLIMATE SITES. NOT  
SURPRISINGLY, EVEN THOUGH PRECIPITATION WAS ONCE AGAIN ABOVE NORMAL,  
SNOW TOTALS WERE BELOW NORMAL.  
 
FRITSCH  
 

 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.

The Nexlab AK Page Main Text Page