xml:space="preserve">
xml:space="preserve">
Advertisement
Advertisement

After a mild winter and early spring, is a hot summer on the way?

Kevin Cross of Abingdon and Kelly Brookshire of Rosedale sunbathe at Miami Beach Park.
Kevin Cross of Abingdon and Kelly Brookshire of Rosedale sunbathe at Miami Beach Park. (Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun)

I saw a tweet recently noting that based on this week’s temperatures,

summer highs

should be about 133 degrees. Just a joke (I hope), but seriously, some readers have asked: Are mild winters correlated with hot summers?

Advertisement

Yes and no.

Baltimore summers average 74.9 degrees. Of Baltimore’s 10 mildest winters,

Advertisement
Advertisement
above-average summer heat
Advertisement

followed eight of them (nine if you count 1880, which was 0.1 degrees above average). Here are the average temperatures for those summers (find the winter averages

)

  • 1932 – 76.8 degrees
  • 1890 – 75.2 degrees
  • 1949 – 78.4 degrees
  • 1880 – 75 degrees
  • 1950 – 75.9 degrees 
  • 1933 – 76.7 degrees
  • 1937 – 74.7 degrees
  • 1998 – 77.3 degrees 
  • 2002 – 76.9 degrees
  • 1913 -- 75.8 degrees
  • As a reminder, the winter of 2011-2012 would rank No. 7 among mildest winters. Could summer 2012 reinforce the pattern?

    Maybe; maybe not. Average temperatures aren't as warm for summers following winters light on snow. Seven of them are more than 0.1 degrees above average, with three of those 1 degree or more above normal. Here are those summer averages:

    Advertisement
  • 1950 – 75 degrees
  • 1973 – 75.4 degrees
  • 2002 – 76.9 degrees
  • 1998 – 74.7 degrees
  • 1919 – 75.3 degrees
  • 1959 – 75.9 degrees
  • 1992 – 73.3 degrees
  • 1932 – 76.8 degrees
  • 1981 – 75.3 degrees
  • 1990 – 75.4 degrees
  • Perhaps it's safe to say a cooler-than-normal summer is unlikely.

    Recommended on Baltimore Sun

    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement
    Advertisement