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Southern Norway has had a relatively snow-poor fall so far, and that doesn’t seem to change at first.
On November 11 of last year, Nettavisen reported large amounts of snow that created traffic challenges.
One of Nettavisen’s security chiefs was saved by his son’s efforts with the snow shovel, as can be seen in the image on the top of the box. A year later, the situation is quite different, and it does not seem to change with the first one either.
– Just put the snow plow in the garage, says service meteorologist Martin Granerød to Nettavisen.
Østafjell temperatures will be relatively high in the future:
– It will be smooth and good for the next ten days. We won’t see snow, at least not in the lowlands. You have to climb a good distance up the mountain to get snow. In the next few days, the snow line will be about 1200-1300 meters, so for most cabin courses it will also be more degrees, he continues.
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The rest of the country will also not have much snow in the future, predicts the meteorologist:
– It is the low pressure activity in the North Sea and the Atlantic Ocean that provides a smooth flow of air from the southern latitudes, which in turn means that we have a temperate climate throughout the country. I just don’t dare say when his chief guard will pick up his snow shovel again, it’s too early, Granerød smiles.
The capital and Eastern Norway have already had a short-term snowfall on October 20, but it has been milder again since then.
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Figures from the Meteorological Institute’s climate watch show that the first fall snowfall in Blindern in Oslo occurs on average on November 14. The first recorded since 1990 is October 16 (1992 and 1993), while the most recent is December 27 (2000).
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