Under sunny skies and warm temperatures that melted what snow was on the ground Saturday in southern Maine, motorists drove with their windows down. Car washes everywhere were slammed. Visitors strolled in parks. Motorcycles and bicycles were out in force as if it were May.
The National Weather Service office in Gray reported that the temperature climbed to 54 degrees at the Portland International Jetport – exactly 20 degrees above the historical average for Feb. 10.
Saturday’s weather broke the Feb. 10 high-temperature record of 52 degrees in 1955. Warm weather also broke records in Augusta and Concord, New Hampshire.
Augusta’s high on Saturday was 52 degrees, beating the old record of 50 degrees in 2023, and in Concord, the high rose to 60 degrees, breaking the old record of 1955, weather service meteorologist Greg Cornwell said.
Rhonda and John Cook took time to have fun in the sun on an extremely warm February afternoon.
He was eating an ice cream cone, she an ice cream sandwich, at Lib’s Dairy Treats on Auburn Street in Portland. Lib’s was open for a special “pop-up” day. The couple, who live in Buxton, brought their children and 2-year-old grandson for ice cream.
“It feels great to have a warm day in the middle of the winter,” Rhonda Cook said, standing in the sun. Normally at this time of year, “we’d be home, hunkered down. My husband saw this place was going to be open today, so we made a special trip. We went to Fort Williams, then came here.”
Their visit to Fort Williams “was beautiful,” John Cook said, adding that he didn’t even need a jacket. The park was busy, he said. Their daughter-in-law, Lexi Cook, who lives in New Hampshire, said she was loving the weather. “I just want to move up to Maine,” she said.
The ice cream stand’s parking lot was full of vehicles, with a line of customers at the window.
Among those were Gloria Nappi, of Portland, and her daughter, Joanna Huntington, of Windham, eager for a hot fudge sundae.
“I’m spending the day with my mother on this beautiful day,” Huntington said, both women smiling. “We just went to Harmon’s and had a burger outside.” There were a lot of people outside dining by their cars, she said.
Lib’s owner Tim Pawloski said March 9 will be the stand’s opening day.
“Usually we do two (days) in January and two in February,” he said as one of his workers handed over a vanilla cone covered with sprinkles. It’s unusual, he said, to see so many people in line for ice cream for a winter pop-up day. “This is pretty much what we do on a sunny July day.”
Several customers said they weren’t overly concerned with the role of climate change in the warm February weather – they were just enjoying the warmth.
“It’s Maine,” said Victor Rios, of Portland, who was tailgating with his daughter. “I grew up here. In Maine, there will be a day or two of warm weather in winter. Then in April, a snowstorm will hit,” he said. He looked down at his daughter eating ice cream. “She loves it.”
Extreme weather made more frequent and ferocious by climate change has walloped Maine in the last year – most recently in the form of two storms that hit the coast on Jan. 10 and 13, and the Dec. 18 storm that wreaked at least $20 million in damage to 10 Maine counties.
Over the last century, Maine sea levels have been rising at a rate of about a half-foot a century. The pace has sped up as the world burns more fossil fuels, producing heat-trapping emissions that warm both air and sea. About half of our sea rise over the last century has occurred since the early 1990s.
Maine sea levels are projected to rise between 1.1 and 3.2 feet by 2050 and 3 and 9.3 feet by 2100, depending on how successful and quick we are at curbing global emissions rates, according to the scientists who advise the Maine Climate Council.
On Saturday, Courtney Dube, of Portland, was with her young daughter at a playground on Stevens Avenue.
“Do we love the weather today?” Dube asked her daughter, who nodded enthusiastically.
While her younger daughter was at the playground, another daughter was skiing. Dube was told that the skiing conditions were great but acknowledged that Saturday’s weather was unusual. “We do miss snow because we like snow activities,” she said. “But we’re embracing this warm day.”
Because of climate change, Maine’s winters are becoming warmer and shorter, and the state continues to warm faster than the global average, according to the state climate change plan.
In fact, Maine winters are warming faster than any other season, state data shows. River and lake ice are thinner, making ice fishing and other activities more dangerous. Less snow and more winter rain caused by warmer temperatures are making snowmobiling and skiing seasons shorter. As the state continues to warm, climate change will affect the ecosystems and way of life in all regions.
In Sidney on Saturday, where the temperature rose to nearly 50 degrees, the second day of the Maine Pond Hockey Classic was held on Messalonskee Lake, tournament director Patrick Guerette said.
With many teams in different age groups, the hockey classic benefits the Alfond Youth and Community Center in Waterville. More hockey on the lake is scheduled for Sunday, the last day of the annual event, Guerette said. Temperatures in Sidney are expected to dip to freezing early Sunday, then enter the mid-40s later that day.
For much of coastal and interior Maine, Sunday won’t be as warm as Saturday, according to Cornwell of the weather service, but temperatures will be above normal, in the 40s for much of Maine.
Traditional winter weather could return late Monday into Tuesday, when temperatures are expected to get into the 30s, with snow arriving. The forecast calls for 4 to 6 inches of snow by the end of Tuesday.
Staff Writer Penelope Overton contributed to this report.
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