Typically a grey and wet month, November turned out to be white and snowy in Southeast New Brunswick.
Environment Canada says temperatures were almost three degrees below normal in Greater Moncton with bitterly cold wind chills by mid-month.
Meteorologist Jill Mapea says a lot of rain fell early in November which later turned to snow as it got colder.
“You were above normal, up to 200 percent above normal… so basically two times as much as normal for precipitation.”
With so much snow falling and little of it melting, Mapea says Greater Moncton had about four times as much snow on the ground at the end of November compared to average.
Mapea says the recent parade of storms appears to be over but we will be settling into a cold, dry pattern for at least the next ten days.