DAYS 1-5 (FEBRUARY 28 – MARCH 4)
High pressure slides east of our region today and a milder southern air flow develops in its wake. Had we bare ground, the temperature would likely rise well beyond 50, but a deep snow pack in place, acting as a refrigerant, will modify the air. After we see some fog patches this morning due to the milder, slightly more moist air moving over that snow cover, we’ll see plenty of sunshine, and while it warms, the limitation due to snow cover will hold our high temps back to the middle 40s to lower 50s at warmest. There will even be a bit of a cooling influence from a southerly breeze off the water near the South Coast. The brief mild spell comes to an end in two stages this weekend, the first being with the passage of a cold front tonight. This will produce a few rain showers ahead of it and is an example of a cata-front (precipitation ahead of the boundary) although the vast majority of such activity will occur north of the WHW forecast area – there may be a brief one passing through parts of northern MA and southern NH. A secondary cold front, of arctic origin, and an example of an ana-front (precipitation behind the boundary) will take place on Sunday, and this will be what brings us a period of snow with generally minor accumulation from late morning to late afternoon – northwest to southeast. Very cold air will be with us Sunday night through early Tuesday with dry conditions as we get a visit from the arctic. The active weather pattern rolls on though and the next disturbance approaches later Tuesday with the advance of milder air, and I’m looking at a snow to sleet to rain situation for late Tuesday into a portion of Wednesday, the details of this still having to be worked out.
TODAY: Sunny to partly cloudy. Highs 42-49. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy. An isolated rain shower possible in the evening, mainly north of Route 2. Watch for areas of black ice overnight from re-freezing melt-water. Lows 23-30. Wind NW 5-15 MPH with higher gusts early, diminishing overnight.
SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy. A burst of snow/graupel possible from northwest to southeast late morning to midday followed by steadier light snow with accumulation of a coating to 2 inches, greatest in higher elevations, tapering off from northwest to southeast later in the day. Highs 30-37 in the morning followed by falling temperatures. Wind W 5-15 MPH shifting to NW 10-20 MPH, with higher gusts.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Clearing. Lows 5-12. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
MONDAY: Sunny. Highs 23-30. Wind NW 10-20 MPH, higher gusts, diminishing late.
MONDAY NIGHT: Clear. Lows 5-12. Wind calm.
TUESDAY: Increasing clouds. Snow / sleet / rain late-day from west to east. Highs 33-40, occurring late-day. Wind N to E up to 10 MPH.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Cloudy. Mix to rain likely. Temperatures rise slightly to 35-42. Wind E to variable up to 10 MPH.
WEDNESDAY: Cloudy start with rain ending, including areas of fog. Breaking clouds afternoon. Highs 40-47. Wind variable up to 10 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (MARCH 5-9)
Unsettled stretch of weather with a frontal boundary in the area and waves of low pressure moving along it through mid period, then a drying trend. Temperatures variable, averaging close to normal.
DAYS 11-15 (MARCH 10-14)
Additional periods of unsettled weather. A brief warm up early and/or mid period with the potential for a cold shot late period.