What he said,
In 2006, the most snow to ever fall on Albuquerque happened, over 28 inches, this is judge whether records and they started keeping when the Spaniards came in over 400 years ago. In 2007, we again set records in the mountains of northern New Mexico, to the point of the snowfall is crushing buildings. Prior to 2006 that Southwest was in a drought that has lasted eight years, lakes were drying up, water table was going down, and no rain was falling. The past two years has completely reversed that trend, to the point that we are well ahead of our annual rainfall amount this year.
I am not claiming that what happens in my backyard is the same as what happens all over the world. But judging by what I'm seeing the majority of the world is having colder winters and shorter growing seasons. A friend of mine in the Pacific Northwest is complaining bitterly about the late start to the growing season in the late frosts. Almost the entire apple crop was lost this year, and the late rains flooded so many fields that many of the farmers simply will not get a crop at all.
Perhaps it would be best, to give our region are areas where we live, and simply say hotter or to say colder.
The list that I personally know about,
the Pacific Northwest, cold and wet
Utah, cold and wet
Colorado, cold and wet
Arizona New Mexico, colder and very wet
Texas and Oklahoma, about the same for temperature, but very wet
These are the places I've seen personally,
from hearsay evidence,
Central North Atlantic, warmer longer growing season
Australia, cooler wetter
Antarctic continent, colder ice cap growing
the Middle East, cooler and wetter
This is all empirical the only thing I can really vouch for his where I've been personally. In all the places I have been in our cooler and wetter.
Just a thought,
Kevin
We're talking about global temperatures, not local. If you want to talk local Idaho had a very cold winter lat year. Are you unaware of the overall stability and even decline in global temps worldwide? Egg on the face of the GAW high priests it seems.