If you're curious, below are the NWS winter (December-February) outlooks.
The NWS also publishes several other temperature and precipitation outlooks from short to long term which you can see here: https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/. All of these maps are compared to climatological norms. So above average temperature in the winter doesn't mean it's hot, just not as cold as normal. Likewise, below average precipitation doesn't mean no rain (it could), just not as much as normal. Normal is currently based on averages from 1981-2010 (updated once per decade). We'll get an update to this at the end of next year which will be interesting to see.
One thing about the winter forecast maps, or any long term forecast for the most part, is they don't have any skill. That's not saying they're no good, but that they're really just an educated guess. Forecast skill is a measure of how well a forecast does compared to some reference, typically climatology (the past). Long term forecasts typically don't do any better than what climatology says. So if you were to compare a long term forecast to what normally happens for that time of year the forecast will be no better than if you guessed using history as a guide. I could make a forecast for next July right now and say it was going to be like most Julys are and chances are I'd be pretty close, compared to a forecast that says it will be above/below average temp or precip. Because of this some forecasters don't think they shouldn't be published, but people are curious and as long as you understand how they're made there's no harm.
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