Today’s Northeast weather discussion.
The surface/radar charts, show weak high-pressure overhead, with a few showers over northeast New England from the storm off the Coast. We can also see that developing storm in the West.
We’re going
to have a warm front lifting through, other than a few showers, many of us
should stay mainly dry into Wednesday. We’re going to see mild air move back in
ahead of the storm to the West.
We have high
latitude blocking over eastern Canada and Greenland. This is going to allow the
storm in the Plains, to move toward the Great Lakes, where it will deepen, and
then it will be forced to move south and east toward the Middle Atlantic for
later Wednesday and Friday. Friday into Saturday this looks to become a Nor’easter
as in moves north and east around the block. Cold air will wrap in behind the
low pressure, bringing colder temperatures into the region for Wednesday night into
Friday.
This is going to bring much needed rain to the region. Later Wednesday rain will likely break out over western areas, this rain will work its way east during the Wednesday night and Thursday. As I said yesterday, a general 0.50 to 1.25 of an inch is likely with higher amounts possible.
Cold air wrapping in behind the storm will change rain over a mix/snow in the Appalachians and higher elevations of Northeast Pennsylvania and New York State on Thursday. The change over to higher elevation snow will start in western and northern New England Thursday night into Friday. As the Nor’easter develops, it is going to drag in even colder air, this will likely lead to moderate to perhaps heavy snow in the higher elevations across the Poconos, Catskills, the hills south of the Mohawk Valley as well as part of the Tug Hill and Adirondacks, northwest CT western MA, and Greens in Vermont along with the higher elevations of New Hampshire and Maine. It’s too early for specifics but these areas have a chance of seeing 2-5 inches, with the higher peeks seeing perhaps 12 inches, maybe with locally higher amounts possible. But who sees what will depend on how cold it gets and the exact track of the storm. As air cools it will be possible for a mix and maybe some flakes in the lower elevations and valleys.
The cold air
is going to hang around for the weekend, with the cold air moving over Lake
Erie and Lake Ontario, lake effect snow is likely to set up, east and south
east of the big Lakes. The temperature profile doesn’t look robust enough for a
significant event, but limited lake effect should bring at least a few inches
for those downwind of the lakes in the typical snowbelts.
Thursday
thru Sunday is going to be breezy. With the cold air, rain/snow showers will be
possible over the Weekend.
Next week is
looking chilly and blustery.
🤞🤞 for that snow!!
ReplyDeleteYou should see some snow..... but it will depend on the track and how cold it gets.
DeleteYou could see. 2 to 3 or 4 inches..have to see how things trend
ReplyDeleteHooray snow! As a winter sports enthusiast, this is the dawning of The Holy Season!
ReplyDeleteHopefully we have a better winter than the last few have been
DeleteThis would be the earliest that we would see snow in years.It has been below normal during the day and cold
ReplyDeleteenough to freeze the cats water bowl solid.I couldn’t find the 2nd part of the winter outlook and I was checking to see if the cold air was going to stay around through CHRISTmas or beyond.We are in the valley so I don’t think we will see much snow.
The blog archive on the top of the left hand side of the page..... It's in the November section
DeleteYeah I'm not great at navigating this site. I was looking for the Winter outlook too.
ReplyDeleteThe blog archive on the top of the left hand side of the page..... Part two is in the November section, part one is in the October section
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