<p>The winter of 2025-2026 (December through February) in the Kansas City area, including Independence, Missouri, turned out <strong>far from incredibly bad</strong>—in fact, it was surprisingly manageable for many folks expecting a brutal season.</p><p>Pre-season forecasts were mixed: some sources like the Farmers' Almanac leaned toward warmer-than-normal temps with lighter snow for our region (Missouri/Plains area), while others predicted colder, snowier conditions under weak La Niña influences. NOAA outlooks suggested a chance of below-normal temps in parts of the Midwest/Plains, but with variability.</p><p>What we actually got? A winter with plenty of mild stretches that kept the worst at bay:</p><p><br></p><ul><li><strong>Temperatures</strong> often ran near or even above average for long periods. Late December 2025 into early 2026 stayed mild, with New Year's feeling more like early spring than deep winter. January and February brought some cold snaps (including a short freeze in late January), but nothing prolonged or extreme like multi-week sub-zero runs. Highs frequently climbed into the 40s and even 50s, making outdoor time tolerable without full arctic gear.</li><li><strong>Snowfall</strong> stayed light overall compared to heavier recent winters—no massive dumps or endless slush piles. A few flurries or short events popped up, but accumulation was minimal in most spots around KC/Independence, avoiding the back-breaking shoveling marathons some years deliver.</li><li>Coldest moments were brief and not record-setting. While there were a couple of chilly spells (like mid-winter dips), the season avoided the "incredibly bad" category—no week-long deep freezes, no ice storms turning everything into a rink, and no relentless gray gloom.</li></ul><p>By mid-February, many were already enjoying milder days with highs pushing back toward seasonal norms or better, and spring vibes starting to creep in. Sure, we had typical winter moments—some wind chills, a bit of ice here and there—but nothing that made this one stand out as punishing.</p><p>Bottom line: Winter 2026 gave us a break. Fewer snow days, more bearable commutes, and less cabin fever than feared. If this is the new "not incredibly bad," I'll take it! ❄️😎</p>