Over 10 inches of snow and wind chills in the 20s were recorded at the summits of the Big Island in Hawaii on Monday. Wyoming, by contrast, received next to nothing.
âThat Hawaii storm is pretty cool,â said Cowboy State Daily meteorologist Don Day. âThere were parts of Hawaii that were under Winter Storm Warnings, but Wyoming wasnât.â
Itâs been an unseasonably warm, dry winter for most of Wyoming up to this point, while the extreme opposite has been true elsewhere. Thatâs all about to change, according to Day.Â
After several weeks of a jet stream logjam, Wyomingâs weather is in the process of rebooting. With that logjam now cleared, Wyomingâs weather is beginning to shift.Â
The transition will take some time, but signs point to a steady move toward colder, snowier conditions. By mid-January, the winter weâve been waiting for could finally arrive.
âIt's like hitting âControl-Alt-Deleteâ with a Windows computer,â he said. âIt has to go through the shutdown, reboot, and start everything up again. You donât get immediate gratification, and thatâs what weâre going through with this weather pattern change.â

New Year, New Pattern
Decemberâs weather was dominated by a stubborn high-pressure ridge that hovered over the Aleutian Islands in the northern Pacific for several weeks.
Day described it as a âlogjamâ that blocked Arctic air from descending into the Rocky Mountains and funneled it elsewhere, leading to record-breaking cold temperatures and a deluge of snow in the eastern U.S.
Until that block broke, Wyoming wasnât going to get a lot of winter weather. Thankfully, thatâs whatâs happened.
âThe super-strong high-pressure ridge that wouldn't go away is gone,â Day said. âWe're still going to have some of the remnants of it over the next couple of days, but a pretty strong cold front coming through Thursday and Friday is the first signal that the block is going away and will initiate some changes.â
Those changes will be evident in places that have been yearning for winter this season. Day said the incoming cold front will be carrying enough moisture to cover eastern Wyoming with snow.
âSheridan, Gillette, and Casper are going to get a little snow on Thursday and Friday,â he said. âSundance and the Black Hills will be especially favored. Laramie and Cheyenne will get a little bit. Itâs pretty wimpy as a winter storm, but itâs more than weâve seen in weeks.â
By the weekend, daytime highs will be in the high 30s to low 40s. Thatâs slightly warmer than average, something Day said will probably persist going into next week.
âOver the weekend and probably through Wednesday, we're going to hit a four to five day stretches where itâs not going to be really warm, but it's not going to be really cold either,â he said. âTo go back to the analogy, this is when the computer will fully boot up, and youâll be able to put in your password by Thursday or Friday.â
Ridge Rigidity
The uncertainty in the short-term forecast is a temporary high-pressure ridge thatâs going to give Day and other meteorologists âa lot of sleepless nights.â The question isnât when, itâs where.
âIf the ridge retrogrades, goes off the coast of California, and builds up into Alaska, that is a cold signal that allows the very cold Canadian air to head south,â he said. âWe start to get colder, and winter finally gets going.â
The alternative is that the high-pressure ridge retrogrades and stalls off the California coast. In that scenario, it will act like the December logjam, funneling the cold Canadian air past Wyoming and into the Dakotas and the Great Lakes region.
That scenario would be a repeat of what happened in December, which would be far from ideal. Itâs too early to say, but Day said the current trajectory looks favorable for Wyoming.
âA lot of our forecast tools suggest that the ridge is going to go retrograde, build and gain strength over the Gulf of Alaska, and allow the jet stream to start making further advances out of Canada and into the western United States,â he said. âWhere that ridge sets up is going to dictate how the rest of January goes for Wyoming.â

Rubber Hits The Road
Even in the worst-case scenario, where another block sets up in mid-January that blocks more winter weather from reaching Wyoming, itâs not the end of the road. Day will be âon pins and needlesâ watching what happens, but heâs not giving up the game yet.
âTo use a sports analogy, it's not even halftime yet,â he said. âThere's a lot of winter potential left for the season. This ridge could mean a very unsettled, much colder second half of January, or it could direct all that weather east of us.â
Meanwhile, the snowpacks in western Wyoming are still doing very well. The warm Pacific air thatâs kept most of Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah so dry has been a windfall of snow in the mountains of western Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho.
Day said this is where ârubber hits the roadâ when it comes to Wyomingâs winter weather. Even the short-range forecast is looking more promising than it did in December.
âThere will definitely be more winter, especially east of the Continental Divide, on Thursday and Friday than weâve seen up to this point,â he said. âWeâre still nearly 10 days out from this ridge developing, so we have some time to figure things out.â
The important thing is that Wyoming has effectively âControl-Alt-Deletedâ its December dryness. Thereâs uncertainty in the forecast, but everythingâs looking cooler going forward.
âWe need things to shift and get a lot happening here,â he said. âBut to get a lot happening here, we've got to go through this process. You do not get immediate weather gratification, but in terms of the weather pattern rebooting itself, weâre entering a new period that's going to be different than what weâve been through over the last six weeks.â
âWe need things to shift and get a lot happening here,â he said. âBut to get a lot happening here, we've got to go through this process. You do not get immediate weather gratification, but in terms of the weather pattern rebooting itself, weâre entering a new period that's going to be different than what weâve been through over the last six weeks.â
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.





