
(WWJ) -- It could be a long, cold winter in Michigan.
The Old Farmers' Almanac is out today and has a winter warning: Prepare for a “Season of Shivers.”
According to the latest edition of the almanac, this winter will be punctuated by positively bone-chilling, below-average temperatures across most of the U.S.
“This coming winter could well be one of the longest and coldest that we’ve seen in years,” says Farmer's Almanac editor, Janice Stillman.
In some ares of the county, the winter weather will also bring lots of snow, including areas of New England, as well as throughout the Ohio Valley, in northern portions of the Deep South, and in southeast New Mexico.
According to the forecast, The Great Lakes, Midwest, and Ohio Valley will have more than their fair share of cold and flaky weather in January.

Eastern Montana southward through the western halves of the Dakotas and into northeastern Colorado will have abundant snowfall throughout the winter, with several storms predicted.
Meanwhile, most western areas will remain relatively dry, however -- with the exception of the Pacific Coast and portions of the Southwest -- that region will still experience the frigid cold predicted for much of the rest of the country.
For 230 years, the Old Farmers' Almanac has been helping readers to prepare for winter’s worst, with 80%–accurate weather forecasts.
For more information on the Farmers’ Almanac and the 2021-22 winter forecast, visit their website.