Alaska News

It was a record-warm May for much of Alaska, but Interior gets chilly again

Some Alaskans may have been experiencing "weather whiplash" as June arrived Monday.

Despite record-breaking high temperatures across much of the state in May, parts of Interior Alaska received warning of below-freezing temperatures Monday morning, which even included an inch of snow falling in the communities of Salcha and Delta Junction.

But many parts of the state -- including Delta Junction -- just recorded their warmest May on record. That also included the Interior community of Eagle, which saw a high of 91 degrees on May 23, marking the earliest point on record a temperature of 90 degrees or warmer was recorded anywhere in the state.

Interior Alaska wasn't the only region to see record-breaking temperatures. The Southeast Alaska communities of Juneau and Haines also recorded record temps.

Even the northern communities of Kotzebue and Bettles had their warmest May. The nation's northernmost community, Barrow, tied its record with the help of a 47-degree high May 21. The weather service noted that Barrow normally expects highs around 28 degrees in the middle of May.

Fairbanks recorded its second-warmest May, while Anchorage had its fifth-warmest.

Rebecca Duell, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Anchorage, said a persistent high-pressure system "parked" itself over much of Alaska last month, causing the warmer weather to linger. High-pressure systems are common in spring, she said, but the above-average temperatures fit the overall trend of warmer weather in Alaska this year.

ADVERTISEMENT

She said over the next few days a weather system will be moving out of the Gulf of Alaska and over the mainland, bringing cool, wet conditions to portions of the state, including Southcentral.

Scattered showers and cooler temperatures, in the 50s and 60s, are expected to move into the Anchorage area Monday night and persist off and on through the week.

Suzanna Caldwell

Suzanna Caldwell is a former reporter for Alaska Dispatch News and Alaska Dispatch. She left the ADN in 2017.

ADVERTISEMENT