Juneau saw six hours of freezing rain yesterday morning, with the ASOS instrumentation suggesting that ice accretion may have reached 0.2", and then Haines suffered significant icing today. Hourly data from Haines shows freezing rain for about seven hours, and the ASOS algorithm indicated ice accretion of 0.3". The National Weather Service relayed reports of as much as 0.5" of ice, and they issued an Ice Storm Warning - apparently the first ever to be issued by the Juneau NWS office.
Freezing rain isn't particularly unusual for communities in the northern Southeast, of course, because the ingredients are quite easy to come by: cold low-level air drawn from the frigid interior, and warm air aloft from the Pacific. Haines ASOS data since 1996 indicates that freezing rain is reported at least once in just about every winter, and it's not uncommon to have a half-dozen days or more with freezing rain: for example, the winters of 2018-19, 2022-23, and 2023-24.
However, the data also suggests freezing rain isn't typically prolonged in Haines, as warm Pacific air usually wins out rather quickly. The hourly Haines data indicates that the record for consecutive hours with freezing rain is 9 hours - only a little more than today's event - and that occurred in December 2019. The NWS discussion highlighted the unusual nature of the current storm: "In fact, more freezing rain has been observed during this one event than some of the staff here at the office have seen over the past 18 years."
As is typically the case, the freezing rain eventually changed to plain rain for both Juneau and Haines, as temperatures rose above freezing. This is the normal course of events, as warm air typically erodes and displaces the surface-based cold air, at least in a coastal setting like Southeast Alaska. Here's the NWS graphic for how precipitation type depends on the vertical temperature profile:
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