Keweenaw may have one of snowiest seasons on record
- (Map courtesy of National Weather Service)
- In the Copper Country, young people usher in the new year with runs down Swedetown Hill. (Paula Porter/For the Daily Mining Gazette)

(Map courtesy of National Weather Service)
HOUGHTON — If current trends continue, the 2025-26 winter season in the Keweenaw region could surpass last year’s total snowfall of 315.25 inches, the fourth-snowiest winter on record.
As of Friday, the snowfall total for the 2025-2026 season so far was at 105.25 inches, according to Visit Keweenaw. The Keweenaw County Road Commission recorded total snowfall for December was 72.75 inches, compared with 53.5 inches in December 2024, about 20 inches ahead of the previous year.
Whether this winter will surpass last year’s snowfall total is still up in the air, according to Meteorologist Taylor Prislovsky, with the National Weather Service in Marquette.
“It seems like we could trend that way, at least toward an above-normal snowfall year,” Prislovsky said, but noted it’s too far out to determine whether what the winter’s total may be.
Based on what he has read and what he has seen from the Climate Prediction Center, it does look like above-normal precipitation amounts are predicted, with slightly below-normal temperatures, Prislovsky reported.

In the Copper Country, young people usher in the new year with runs down Swedetown Hill. (Paula Porter/For the Daily Mining Gazette)
Since coming to the Upper Peninsula in 2019, Prislovsky said he has seen inconsistencies regarding winter behavior.
“I’ve seen a few where we got hit really hard early on, and then nothing happened,” he said, “or nothing happens until February, then we really get hit hard for the rest of the winter.”
With just having wrapped up the first one-third of the current winter, it is difficult to predict if this year will beat last winter, particularly with January, February and March to get through yet.
“It certainly seems like we’re technically on track, but considering how winters are up here, I just don’t know,” Prislovsky stated.
While last year was the fourth-snowiest winter, many local residents residents still recall the winter of 1978-1979, which was the snowiest in recorded history, with 355.90 inches.





