Pacific Invasion: A shot at 50 Saturday

You'll get another chance to hang those holiday lights this weekend.

Dreams of a White Christmas may be fleeting for many Minnesotans this year. A massive December thaw is less that 48 hours away. If the forecast models are right, there's a 50-50 shot at a few hyperactive bank thermometers near you blinking 50-degree mark sometime Saturday afternoon.

Old Man Winter is about to go on an extended December holiday.

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The mechanism for our now imminent December thaw? A massive change in the upper air pattern that is sending a series of storms barreling into the West Coast, and a gush of unseasonably mild near record Pacific air eastward into the Plains.

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Watch as wind turn south and blow from snow free lands behind departing high pressure over the Midwest by Thursday.

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NOAA

Temperatures may brush past the thawing point as soon as Wednesday, but the invading Pacific air mass kicks into high gear Thursday afternoon. By this weekend, freezing may be a memory, and any snow on the landscape isn't long for much of Minnesota.

The European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts model is the most aggressive with the weekend warm up, pushing the thaw into Monday.

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Weatherspark

White Christmas on life support?

Historically the chances of a white Christmas in the Twin Cities run at about 75 percent. About three of every four  years feature at least one inch of snow cover. This year, I'd chance of a white Christmas in the Twin Cities at 50-50 -- and dropping fast.

A white Christmas up north in Hibbing and Ely has historically been close to 90 to 100 percent probable.

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Minnesota DNR

Here's more on the historical chances for a white Christmas form the Minnesota Climate Working Group.

Will we have a white Christmas? It's an age-old question that occurs to almost everyone this time of year. The chances of having a white Christmas vary even here in Minnesota. Having a white Christmas is loosely defined as having 1 inch of snow on the ground on Christmas Day. The snow depth at most sites is measured once a day, usually in the morning. The best chances of having a white Christmas is almost guaranteed in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area and a good part of the Arrowhead. The chances decrease to the south and west and the best chance for a "brown" Christmas is in far southwest Minnesota where chances are a little better than 60%. Northern Minnesota is one of the few non-alpine climates in the US where a white Christmas is almost a sure bet (U.S. White Christmas Probabilities).

In 115 years of snow depth measurements in Twin Cities, a white Christmas happens about 72% of the time. From 1899 to 2013 there have been 32 years with either a "zero" or a "trace." The last time the Twin Cities has seen a brown Christmas was 2011.

Last year about 3 inches of fresh snow fell Christmas Day, and a 6" snow depth decorated the landscape. Santa rode the Polar Vortex to navigate a temperature of -13 Christmas morning.

This year, Santa may need the sleigh with the Rollerblades.