7:16AM
DAYS 1-5 (FEBRUARY 26-MARCH 2)
If you didn’t blow away yesterday and are still here to read this, you made it through the big wind event, or were not around the area for it. Quite the event I won’t dwell on here as we’ve all pretty much read the stories or seen the pictures / video. I even had my own experience with a fairly near-miss with a portion of a tree coming down on the road I was heading toward. We’re actually not quite done with the event, as there will still be some wind gusts today that would be considered quite a windy day, but much weaker than yesterday’s. This continues to be in response to the large pressure gradient between the big high pressure area from central Canada to the upper Midwest and a broad and powerful low pressure area in the Canadian Maritimes. But by late today this gradient finally relaxes enough to put an end to this event, leaving us with a decent cold air mass which will send many temperatures below 10 for the early hours of Wednesday, and set us up with plenty of cold to assure the next system will be a snow-producer. This will be the result of a clipper low pressure area from Canada coming across the Great Lakes and heading just south of New England by early Thursday. This late Wednesday night / Thursday morning snow event will be minor, in terms of snow amounts, but will be timed to cause some issues with the Thursday morning commute. The system will be fighting dry air, and that along with its quick movement and somewhat limited moisture will keep most snow amounts under 4 inches, but 4 will be upper limit of my range as I think it can possibly be reached, especially in southeastern MA where a period of onshore wind during and even after the main precipitation shield passes can add a tad to the totals. Either way, later Thursday, it’s all gone, but we don’t get too much of a breather as the active pattern rolls on, and we’ll have a rain/snow shower threat Friday from a passing disturbance and another low pressure which tracks into the eastern Great Lakes Saturday and spawns a secondary just southwest of New England which then travels over the region, bringing milder air and a mainly rain event.
Forecast details…
TODAY: Sunny. Highs 23-30. Wind W 15-25 MPH with gusts 35-45 MPH.
TONIGHT: Clear. Lows 8-15. Wind W 10-20 MPH with higher gusts evening, diminishing overnight.
WEDNESDAY: Sunshine followed by increasing cloudiness. Highs 25-32. Wind light variable.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Cloudy. Snow arrives west to east late evening and continues overnight. Lows 18-25. Wind light N to NE.
THURSDAY: Mostly cloudy start with lingering snow especially southeastern MA, total accumulation 2-4 inches though may be just 1-2 inches far northeastern MA and southern NH, and best chance of 4-inch amounts in southeastern MA. Becoming partly sunny midday and afternoon but still a passing snow shower possible. Highs 28-35. Wind NE to N 5-15 MPH.
FRIDAY: Variably cloudy. Risk of rain/snow showers. Lows in the 20s. Highs from the middle 30s to lower 40s.
SATURDAY: Early sun then clouding up. PM rain. Lows from the upper 20s to lower 30s. Highs in the 40s.
DAYS 6-10 (MARCH 3-7)
Departing low pressure brings, wind, colder air, and a risk of a few snow showers March 3. Disturbance brings clouds and a risk of a few snow showers March 4. Dry and chilly March 5. Another low pressure area threatens with rain/mix/snow March 6 and/or 7.
DAYS 11-15 (MARCH 8-12)
The weather pattern will continue to allow colder air to dominate and a risk of 1 or 2 mix/snow events during this period.