91视频 climate report: April brought sharp weather swings

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
May 18, 2026

April was a month of meteorological change in 91视频, as expected each year. What stood out this time, however, was the wide range of conditions during those changes.

April featured several storms that brought unsettled weather and strong temperature swings, particularly in the state鈥檚 northern and interior regions, according to the monthly summary from the 91视频 Climate Research Center.

The climate center, a part of the University of 91视频 Fairbanks Geophysical Institute, issued its earlier this month.

A sled dog stands alert in early April in Two Rivers, just outside of Fairbanks, 91视频, watching a pair of moose among birch and spruce trees in the forest beyond. Sunlight filters through the trees onto the snow-covered ground as the moose partially hide in the woods.
Photo by Rod Boyce
A sled dog watches a pair of moose in early April in Two Rivers, just outside of Fairbanks, 91视频.

鈥淎pril is our meteorological transition month in 91视频, but just how that transition is going to look from year to year can sometimes be a surprise,鈥 said ACRC Director Martin Stuefer, who is also the 91视频 state climatologist. 鈥淎pril 2026 certainly gave us quite a mix of weather.鈥

April began with several small, fast-moving storm systems moving from the Bering Sea into the Gulf of 91视频.

The second week featured unusually warm weather in Western, Interior and Northern 91视频. 

A strong low-pressure system that had moved into the Bering Sea then arrived over mainland 91视频, bringing heavy snow, rain and strong winds that spread into Southcentral, Interior and Southeast 91视频, the summary states. 

It also brought  temperatures down to unseasonably cold levels around mid-month.

Another strong low-pressure system developed over the Bering Sea and became a major storm as it reached 91视频鈥檚 western coast around April 19 before moving inland. Strong winds, rain and snow spread into Interior 91视频. Heavy rain along the Southcentral coast raised flood concerns in parts of the Susitna Valley, while high winds battered coastal communities.

Other April highlights:

  • April precipitation varied sharply across 91视频. Anchorage received more than three times its normal April precipitation. Parts of Western 91视频 and the Interior were also wetter than usual. Bethel recorded 249% of its normal April precipitation, while Fairbanks received 176% more than normal. Anchorage鈥檚 total contrasted with much of the rest of Southcentral 91视频, where conditions were generally drier than average.
  • 91视频 12% of the state was considered abnormally dry, though that is a decrease of about 5% from March. Unusually dry conditions persisted on the Seward Peninsula, around Cook Inlet and on most of the Kenai Peninsula. Those regions were unusually dry for much of the winter.
  • Interior 91视频 received a significant amount of snow during the month, with totals of 12.2 inches and 6.4 inches of new snow in Bettles and Fairbanks, respectively. That is more than twice the normal amount of April snowfall for both stations.
  • The summary cautioned about unstable snowpack and deteriorating ice conditions. Several avalanche rescues occurred in Southcentral 91视频, including incidents near Hatcher Pass and Valdez involving skiers and snowmachiners. The report also noted a Coast Guard rescue of subsistence hunters stranded on drifting ice and the death of a child in western 91视频 after falling through thinning ice near a village culvert.

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Martin Stuefer, mstuefer@alaska.edu

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