Indiana experienced near-normal temperatures for March as the state averaged 40.9◦F, despite the record warmth at the beginning of the month (Figure 1). Weather stations in central, southern, and eastern Indiana experienced record-breaking high temperatures during the first week of March (Figure 2). Cold weather returned during the third week, with several daily low maximum and minimum temperature records broken or tied (Figure 3). Southern Indiana saw dormancy break for many woody perennials, which become susceptible to any cold snaps we encounter moving forward.
The big story for the month was flooding rain, and severe weather. The state averaged 168 percent of normal precipitation for the month, with locally higher percentages in central and southern Indiana (Figure 1). Dearborn County measured 9.38 inches of precipitation in March and had a single-day maximum of 2.85 inches on March 24. River flood warnings hung around for a large portion of the month as stormwater runoff overwhelmed streams and rivers. Localized flooding was also reported in spots.
On March 31st, a cold front associated with a strong low-pressure system caused a severe weather outbreak across the Midwest (Figure 4). As of April 5, there were 22 confirmed tornadoes in Indiana (NWS Indianapolis & NWS Northern Indiana have websites dedicated to the event). EF-3 tornadoes occurred in Grant, Sullivan, Johnson, Owen, and Monroe Counties in Indiana with significant damage. Tragically, five people died in the storms, along with 11 others sustaining injuries. The Indiana State Climate Office would like to express condolences to the families and communities impacted by these events.
Turning attention to the Climate Prediction Center outlooks, mid-April has higher chances of above-normal temperatures and below-normal precipitation (Figure 5 a and b). This could be the pattern shift that is needed to help us dry out enough to begin fieldwork across the state.