Seasonal & Holidays
Polar Vortex Is Strengthening: What It Means For NJ Winter Temps, Snow
The frigid start to the New Year is not expected to serve as a harbinger of what's to come for most of the country through March.
The frigid start to the New Year is not expected to serve as a harbinger of what’s to come for most of the country through March, according to a new winter forecast.
The warmer temperatures are expected to grow into the early part of 2026 in the South and East as the stratospheric polar vortex strengthens at the beginning of the year, according to The Weather Channel’s outlook.
It may sound counterintuitive, but the stronger a polar vortex is, the less impactful it is, according to The Weather Channel. A stratospheric polar vortex, which is higher up in the atmosphere and usually stable, differs from the better-known tropospheric polar vortex, which is lower down in the atmosphere and typically brings severe cold snaps to mid-latitude states.
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The ongoing flip to cooler, wetter weather in the North and Northwest is also likely to continue, the forecast said. Bouts of wetter, colder weather in other parts of the country aren’t out of the question.
The private weather service’s January to March outlook for New Jersey calls for:
Find out what's happening in Across New Jerseyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
- January: Above average temperatures
- February: Well above average temperatures
- March: Closer to normal, but still above average temperatures
Highlights of The Weather Channel’s outlook include:
- January will likely continue the late-December pattern with above-average warmth across the southern two-thirds of the country.
- February could see the warmest weather relative to average along the East Coast.
- Without the polar vortex in play, conditions are expected to resemble La Niña: warmer than average in the south and cooler in the north.
- The northern U.S. will likely see wetter-than-average conditions, while the southern U.S. is more likely to be drier.
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