March was cold and snowy in much of the East, warm in the south-central U.S.
Weather-wise, 2018 started out with a bang and continues to be anything but ordinary.
![NOAA's GOES East satellite captured this nor'easter over the U.S. East Coast March 13, 2018. It was the third nor’easter to hit the region in 10 days. A fourth nor’easter hit the same region March 21. Some parts of the Mid-Atlantic, including Washington, D.C., saw their biggest snowfall this winter, even as the fourth storm arrived a day after the spring equinox.
(Image credit: NOAA NESDIS) NOAA's GOES East satellite captured this nor'easter over the U.S. East Coast March 13, 2018. It was the third nor’easter to hit the region in 10 days. A fourth nor’easter hit the same region March 21. Some parts of the Mid-Atlantic, including Washington, D.C., saw their biggest snowfall this winter, even as the fourth storm arrived a day after the spring equinox.](/sites/default/files/styles/landscape_width_1275/public/legacy/image/2019/Jun/IMAGE%20-%20Satellite%20-%2003132018-Noreaster%20number%203%20for%20March%202018%20-%20NESDIS%20-%20Viz%20Lab%20-%201125x534%20-%20Landscape.png?itok=F6H6QF8x)
NOAA's GOES East satellite captured this nor'easter over the U.S. East Coast March 13, 2018. It was the third nor’easter to hit the region in 10 days. A fourth nor’easter hit the same region March 21. Some parts of the Mid-Atlantic, including Washington, D.C., saw their biggest snowfall this winter, even as the fourth storm arrived a day after the spring equinox. (Image credit: NOAA NESDIS)