Boston Area Forecast

TONIGHT: Partly to mostly cloudy. Low 20-25. Wind west under 10 mph. Watch for black ice!

MONDAY: Cloudy. High 34-39. Wind light variable.

MONDAY NIGHT: Cloudy. Snow after midnight. Low 25-30. Wind south under 10 mph.

TUESDAY: Cloudy with snow in the morning – total accumulation 1 to 3 inches. Clearing afternoon. High 30-35. Wind south up to 10 mph morning, northwest increasing to 15-25 mph afternoon.

WEDNESDAY: Mostly sunny. Low 10. High 25.

THURSDAY: Partly sunny. Low 10. High 25.

FRIDAY: Mostly sunny. Low 15. High 30.

Looking Back, Looking Ahead

1250pm

I’m sure most of you would rather forget the 5 weeks we just had. I assure you, I am not one of them. While certainly not the snowiest period of weather we’ve ever had, it was right up there with some of the big ones. So instead of getting into numbers and facts right now, I’ll post some links on those things soon, so you can check them out if you would like to!

My previous blog touched on today’s weather, and we are now enjoying a mostly sunny and relatively mild day, but the enjoyment is being tempered by a gusty wind if you are outside. Also, as mentioned before, there are some really icy areas where packed snow partially melted, collected rain yesterday, then froze early this morning. I was able to stand almost at the top of my driveway and just slide down to the bottom. I have a bit of a chip-out project ahead of me this afternoon – and I’m out of ice melt. Ugh. 😛

Last night, many of you in eastern MA and southeastern NH saw lightning & heard thunder as a clash between warmer air to the south and cold air lingering to the north set off some thunderstorms, near the center of low pressure which cut right across eastern MA during the evening. Vivid lightning was seen, and made even brighter by the snowcover. Locally, a lightning bolt struck in my neighborhood, bringing the fire department to a nearby street. It looks like any damage done was due to a power surge. Some downpours accompanied these storms, but for the most part in this area, we escaped really heavy rainfall, which would have made the roof collapse threat even worse, as a heavy snowpack remained on many roofs.

Looking ahead, the week will start on the mild side Monday, with a few rain showers possible. But a cold front crossing the region will return cold air to the region by Monday night, and a storm moving northeastward along this boundary will bring a 12-hour snow threat to the region from about 11pm Monday to 11am Tuesday (except rain or snow over far southeastern areas). I’ll be looking more closely at this snow threat and posting forecast amounts later. There is the potential for a few inches in some areas with this system. Dry & cold weather is expected Wednesday-Friday. Some of  you may remember talk of a storm threat around Thursday, and that storm will certainly exist, but at this time it appears it may track over the ocean well east of here, and not score a hit.

There continue to be signs of a large scale pattern change starting about the middle of the month. A more zonal (west to east) flow in the upper level winds would mean somewhat milder and much less stormy weather. I’m not 100% convinced this is about to occur, but I’m leaning in that direction.

An evening blog will include a detailed Boston area forecast for the week ahead! Have a Super Sunday everyone!

Super Sunday

340am

Hi all! Another quick update early this Sunday morning.

Focusing on today’s weather:

Up-sides: Sunny, mild (high temps in the middle 40s).

Down-sides: Windy (west wind gusting as high as 35 mph), icy ground where hard-packed snow on some walkways and driveways was smoothed out by the mild rain of Saturday evening.

A new blog in a few hours will detail past weather including the pattern we have been in, the storm that just went by, including thunderstorms last night, another cold week ahead, and a probable pattern change starting at mid month!

Shifting…

200am

Brief update. Saturday’s storm is going to take a slightly further westward track, allowing milder air to dominate and meaning much of the precipitation in the Boston area will fall as rain. There is still a change to snow likely toward storm’s end but accumulations should be limited to a couple inches or less later at night to early Sunday morning.

More later this morning…

Bowling Alley

1150pm

New England continues to be the pins in Mother Nature’s bowling alley. As the region continues to slowly recover from the lastest 1-2 punch, another disturbance is taking aim on us. Though it does not look like a major storm,  there is the potential for some plowable snow to fall again on Saturday. I expect a developing and slowly organizing low pressure area to move from the Mid Atlantic Coast to just southeast of Cape Cod during Saturday & Saturday evening, then away from New England at night. This time, the air ahead of the storm will be a little less cold than it has been in many of our setups. This probably means that some mix/rain will occur especially early in the storm from the Boston area to Cape Cod, with the Cape having the best chance of straight rain. Snow should fall to the north and west of Boston though it could briefly mix with rain, freezing rain, or sleet there. As the storm goes on, colder air will work in from the north and northwest, changing it to snow from northwest to southeast. And a lingering trough behind the departing low may keep the snow going a little longer into Saturday night over portions of central, east central, and northeastern MA and nearby southern NH. Snowfall amounts should run from around 1 inch over Cape Cod (occurring late in the storm), 1-3 inches over the remainder of southeastern and coastal MA & much of RI, 3-5 inches over the balance of eastern and central MA & southern NH. Isolated 6 to 7 inch amounts are possible in some areas of central to northeastern MA and southern NH, depending on the coverage and intensity of snow behind the departing storm at night.

Superbowl Sunday is expected to be tranquil and not too cold, as there is no batch of Arctic air ready to pounce this time. Some low level moisture lingering may mean that clouds may be stubborn to depart.

Looking into next week, there are storm threats Monday into Tuesday, & again around Thursday. At this time, I’m not going to get into details about these threats, other than to say that I believe anything that falls Monday may include mixed precipitation, anything that falls Tuesday would probably be snow, and odds favor snow with the system around Thursday. Some of the longer range guidance show this system having the potential to be a rapidly-intensifying one, but it’s so far away that there is no way to tell the degree of impact it will have in this area.

A quick forecast for the Boston area…

OVERNIGHT: Clear. Low ranging from near 0 in deeper valleys to around 15 in the urban centers. Wind light variable.

FRIDAY: Sunshine, but high clouds showing up in the southwestern sky by late in the afternoon.   High 30-35. Wind west 5-15 mph.

FRIDAY NIGHT: Increasing clouds. Low 20-25. Wind west 5-10 mph.

SATURDAY: Cloudy in the morning. Light rain/mix coast, mix/snow inland afternoon. High 33-38. Wind west up to 10 mph early, light variable midday, east up to 10 mph by late in the day.

SATURDAY NIGHT: Mix to snow coast with 1 to 3 inches of snow expected. Snow inland with 3 to 5 inches of snow expected and a few locally heavier amounts possible. Low 20-25. Wind northeast to north increasing to 10-20 mph.

SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy. High 32-37. Wind northwest 5-15 mph.

MONDAY: PM rain showers. Low 28. High 40.

TUESDAY: Snow showers. Low 22. High 30.

WEDNESDAY: Partly cloudy. Low 10. High 25.

THURSDAY: Chance of snow. Low 15. High 25.

2-day Intermission, then guess what?

135am

We have now exited the grip of the 2-part storm, but its influence will linger today in the form of icy ground leftover from a freeze after a mix of snow, sleet, & freezing rain (except some plain rain near the coast thanks to a period of above-freezing temperatures Wednesday morning & midday). During Wednesday evening, a final disturbance moved through southeastern New England, kicking off some snow showers and even a thunderstorm that included pea-sized hail (not the same thing as sleet) and graupel (which looks like small snowballs) just south of Boston.

Despite the icy ground, you can try to enjoy a 2-day break in storminess Thursday & Friday, which will be bright & chilly days.

“But wait, there’s more!” The active weather pattern is not done, and the next in the seemingly endless storm parade will be due to arrive on Saturday. Current info suggests that this storm will take a track just southeast of Cape Cod, in a favorable area for significant snow for the Boston area. Timing: Saturday afternoon & evening (about 8 to 10 hours). How much? A moderate snowfall seems likely. This includes most of northeastern, central, and western MA, northern CT & RI, and southern NH. Rain anywhere? Most likely Cape Cod & Islands. Fine-tuning will take place as we get closer to this event, which should be long gone in time to see fair weather for Super Bowl Sunday.

Yet another storm may threaten the area early next week…

In-Between: What Happened? What’s Coming?

840pm

Good evening everybody!

Part 1 of the storm is winding down, and has gone pretty much as expected, with a general 4 to 8 inches of fluffy snow over the majority of MA, northern CT & RI,  & southern NH. Slightly higher amounts (8 to 10 inches) fell in the Springfield MA area. Amounts of mostly under 4 inches were reported in far southeastern MA, southern CT, & southern RI.

Tonight, between the first & second parts of this double-barrel storm, there is some scattered light snow falling, but a bubble of slightly warmer air a few thousand feet off the ground will slide across the region, and may change the light snow to light freezing drizzle for a few hours. This could create a slight glazing on any cleared surfaces, but should not have a major impact.

Part 2 of the winter weather event gets underway by midnight to the west, and by 2 or 3am closer to Boston, as snow moves rapidly in from west to east, the short-lived warm bubble aloft having departed. Yesterday, I was calling for a widespread 6-12 inches of snow/sleet from part 2, with less to the south of the Mass Pike due to more mixing. The general idea is the same, but I am going to tweak the amounts and detail them a bit more, as it’s more apparent where the sleet & freezing rain will be. By 6am Wednesday, expect steady, moderate to at times heavy snow over most of MA & southern NH except sleet & freezing rain over southern CT, southern RI, and southeastern MA. Temperatures may go above freezing over parts of the Cape and Islands by then, for plain rain. As the morning goes on, the line of snow to sleet will progress northward toward the Mass Pike, probably reaching Boston westward along the Pike by 9am, then sliding further north toward Route 2 toward noon. This will be due to warmer air working in above the very cold air still stuck at the surface. There should not be much progress northward from here, and this should hold in place for a few hours in the afternoon.

Temperatures at the surface will remain below freezing in pretty much all areas except the immediate coast from Boston south through Plymouth County, and over much of Cape Cod and the Islands, and over southern RI & coastal CT. These areas will most likely see a period of rain (not freezing while it falls). A band of freezing rain should be occurring just inland of the Plymouth County Coast westward across interior southeastern MA up to about the Mass Pike, and extending west southwest across northern RI & northern and central CT and adjacent far south central MA. Precipitation should be mainly in the form of sleet during the early to mid afternoon north of the Mass Pike to about Route 2, except snow along Route 2 outside 495. Mainly snow is expected toward the MA/NH border, though some sleet will mix in at times here. Snow should dominate in southern NH except the immediate shore which may mix with sleet & freezing rain.

It should be noted that the area that sees the belt of freezing rain may see up to 1/2 inch of ice buildup. This is the region where power outages are most likely.

Precipitation should start to diminish from west to east from late afternoon through evening, and should be pretty much done with by midnight. Colder air working back in will change most sleet/ice/rain areas back to lighter snow, lastly on the Cape, during the last several hours of the storm.

Accumulations expected from part 2… Slushy inch at the end on Cape Cod and the Islands, 1-3 inches Cape Cod Canal to southern and coastal Plymouth County, east central and southern RI, coastal southern CT. 2-4 inches most of CT, northern RI, and most of southeastern MA to the region just south of Boston, mainly south of the Mass Pike, where freezing rain is most likely after the snow falls, 4 to 8 inches from the Mass Pike northward through Route 2. 6-12 inches where it remains mostly snow toward the MA/NH border into southern NH.

An blog update will follow later, after new guidance comes out, updating this storm if necessary, and also looking ahead to the rest of the week…