Wednesday’s average high temperature over the Lower 48 was forecast to soar to a balmy 59 degrees – “the near warmest February day during the last three decades”, said Ryan Maue, a meteorologist for WeatherBell Analytics.

A stunning 2,805 record high temperatures have occurred across the nation this month compared with just 27 record lows.

AD

The warmest air with respect to normal has focused on the Midwest and, in some areas, it’s unlike anything they’ve ever witnessed.

AD

Flower stems are sprouting in Chicago, and the Great Lakes are practically ice-free. In an area normally thick with ice, “a boat was seen skimming over the calm waters of Lake Michigan on Monday afternoon,” CBS Chicago reported.

Chicago set record highs on four straight days between Friday and Monday, complementing a dizzying number of other warm weather milestones. Before Sunday, when it was 70, it had reached 70 only three other times in records dating to 1871. Then it hit 70 again Monday. And it could hit 70 once more Wednesday.

In other words, half of Chicago’s February 70-degree days in recorded history are likely to occur in this one astonishingly warm week.

“The NORMAL high in Chicago does not reach 70 degrees until May 15th, which underscores how unusual this warmth truly is,” explained WGN’s weather blog.

AD

AD

Other Midwestern cities are also basking in the unusual and record-setting warmth.

After setting several daily record highs between Friday and Tuesday, Milwaukee, Madison, and Green Bay all established all-time February record highs on Wednesday afternoon:

Milwaukee hit 71, breaking the record of 68 from Feb. 11, 1999

Madison hit 68, breaking the record of 64 on Feb. 25, 2000.

Green Bay hit 65 , breaking the record of 61 from Feb. 26, 2000.

Wednesday’s record warmth put an exclamation mark on the springlike stretch that began late last week. Here are some more of the notable records that were set:

On Thursday and Friday, the core of the warm air shifts from the Midwest towards the Ohio Valley and East Coast. Scores of record highs are likely to fall from Tallahassee to Buffalo.

Lack of snow and ice

Snow and ice levels are near historic lows thanks to the warm weather.

AD

Snow covered a mere 16.5 percent of the Lower 48 states Tuesday morning, the second lowest amount since the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration began keeping records in 2004. Only last year’s 16.1 percent, on this date, was lower.

On average, a third of the nation has snow cover on this date. And in the snowy winters of 2010 and 2013, snow blanketed about half the nation.

AD

This year, few locations outside Maine, northern North Dakota, the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and the Mountain West have appreciable snow cover.

On Wednesday, Chicago will log its 67th straight calendar day without receiving one inch of snow, its longest such snow drought on record.

Meanwhile, the Great Lakes have precious little ice. As of Feb. 20, ice covered just 8.1 percent of the Great Lakes compared with normal coverage of around 42 percent.

Winter to storm back

Wednesday will be the last unusually mild day in the Midwest, until next week at least, as a potent storm winds up over the Plains on Thursday and then races through southeast Minnesota into the Great Lakes by Saturday.

The storm will bring accumulating snow from eastern Wyoming through northwest Wisconsin, where the Weather Service has posted winter storm watches. Depending on the storm’s exact track, it could dump up to a foot around Minneapolis.