The winner of Michigan's snowfall total this past winter had 312 inches of snow. You might also consider that location the loser, depending on your love for snow.

Houghton, in the Keweenaw Peninsula, recorded the most snow of any official reporting site, with 312 inches.

The map above shows the total winter snowfall. A few quirky conditions emerge from looking at the data. Flint had its highest snow total ever recorded for a winter.

Just north of Flint, the Bay City region tallied 10 inches below the long-term average. At the same time, parts of the Upper Peninsula actually had lower than average seasonal snowfall.

Snowfall departure from the long term average.

Here's a rundown of some seasonal snowfall totals:

Houghton - 312"

Munising - 213"

Marquette - 175"

Ironwood - 172"

Mancelona - 171"

Maple City - 171"

Gaylord - 166"

Petoskey - 142"

Sault Ste. Marie - 138"

Traverse City - 123"

Muskegon - 105"

Holland - 101"

Lapeer - 90"

U-M, Ann Arbor - 86"

Flint - 85"

Battle Creek - 85"

Alpena - 83"

Grand Rapids - 78"

Kalamazoo - 68"

Detroit - 61"

Jackson - 60"

Lansing - 53"

Saginaw - 41"

Midland - 36"

Bay City - 30.5"

It's another winter with varying degrees of severity at Michigan locations. The Marquette area had a winter ranked as extremely severe due to the length of the snow and cold season. Detroit also had a winter that ranked as severe. In the middle, the Bay City/Saginaw/Midland area had just an average winter.