Saturday, March 22, 2025

March 22nd, 2025.

 

My weekend post on the coming weeks weather. 

 


Today is milder with breezy northwest winds, 10-20mph with gusts to 25-35mph. We have a trough swinging through today. This will bring scattered rain showers to the region, then as cooler air filters in the rain will change over to some snow across parts of New York State and Northern into Central New England, especially in the higher elevations. Any accumulation will be light. We also have an area of low pressure in the Upper Plains, that will head toward the Upper Great Lakes. This will push through the Northeast on Monday.

Tomorrow will feature sunny skies, with cooler temperatures with the breeze continuing.  The before mentioned system will be approaching Sunday night. The air looks to be cold enough for precipitation to start out as some snow across New York State into New England. But as the warm front lifts through this snow will change over to rain over New York State Monday morning and then during the afternoon for New England. The system will bring more in the way of widespread rain showers, general amounts look to be 0.10 to 0.25 inches but there could be locally higher amounts.  The higher elevations of upstate New York and northern into central New England could see 1-2 inches of snow with locally slightly higher amounts possible. The Tug Hill could see an additional 1-3 inches of lake enhanced snow as well. Most of the coming week will feature slightly below average to below average temperatures.

Tuesday into Wednesday a system will be moving across the Ohio Valley this will be dropping south and east into the Middle Atlantic. The system looks to be weak, but rain showers are possible across Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware into New Jersey, north of there, rain/snow showers will be much more isolated. There could be accumulating snow for parts of the Appalachians and the Laurel Highlands. Rain/snow showers will extend into Thursday.

 


At the same time our next cross-country system will be entering the Pacific Northwest Tuesday and Wednesday.  This will likely lead to low pressure developing in the Plains. This would mean the chance for a severe weather outbreak across parts of the Plains and Southeast. This storm looks to track farther south than the last two. So, this could have a bigger rain impact on southern parts of the region than we’ve see the last couple of weeks. Northern parts of the region would be dealing with the rain/mix/snow mess like we’ve been seeing.

This active weather pattern looks to continue into the first half of April, but by the 2nd week of April, I do think we’re going to stay progressively warmer, along with greater chances for severe weather.

For those of you wondering; I've cut back on posting on the daily weather; I'm just not getting enough views to take all the time it takes to do the forecasting. How the site goes will depend on how many views and followers I get. So we will see how it goes. I want to say thank you for the few who do follow what I write, and I'm sorry to have to cut back, but if there isn't enough interest, I just can't take the time to do all of this. I had said I wanted to do a Youtube channel... but before I can do that I need a lot more than 30-70 views a day! 

 

14 comments:

  1. Thank you. Really enjoy your forecasts.

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  2. Always love reading your posts! Thank you -Dave a

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  3. We appreciate your work Rebecca. Noone gets our weather all the way through Rensselaer county like you do

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  4. I would miss you. You have been a part of my day for many years. Thank you for all your efforts.

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  5. Thank you for all you do. :-)

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  6. Thank you for your devotion, it has been & is appreciated very much.

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