DAYS 1-5 (JANUARY 25-29)
Today will feature fair and cold weather as a weak area of high pressure dominates the region. A mid level disturbance and warm front will cross the region tonight, bringing some cloudiness, which will persist into Sunday morning especially to the south. This signals a warm up, in relative terms, for Sunday and Monday, when temperatures get back to seasonal for 2 days. Low pressure passing by to the north may help trigger a few snow flurries as its trough swings through on Sunday afternoon. With a tighter pressure gradient between Canadian low pressure and high pressure to the south, you’ll notice the wind becoming more of a factor again as we move through the “milder” days. Then a stronger low center moving through eastern Canada on Tuesday will really pack the gradient tightly and make Tuesday a windier day. In addition, a sharp cold front trailing this low will swing southward through the region and trigger snow showers or snow squalls. It’s too early to say if these will be scattered or in the form of a line, but if the latter is the case, a quite widespread burst of visibility-reducing snow could occur. Monitoring trend on this. Colder air arrives behind that front, regardless, and a clipper low pressure system comes racing along out of Canada on Wednesday to give the region a period of unsettled weather. The track of that clipper will determine the details. A track further north would result in a few snow/mix showers, while a track further south would bring a general light to borderline moderate snowfall. In-between scenarios are also possible, and the low’s track can be pinned down and fine-tuned in the days ahead, so don’t read too much into run-to-run details if you follow models. About 24 to 30 hours ahead with the help of high resolution short range guidance we can detail it much better.
TODAY: Sunshine, filtered at times by high clouds during the afternoon. Highs 25-32. Wind W to SW up to 10 MPH.
TONIGHT: Variably cloudy. Lows 18-25. Wind SW up to 15 MPH.
SUNDAY: Limited sun morning, especially I-90 belt to South Coast, then more sun but passing clouds that can produce a brief snow flurry. Highs 32-39. Wind SW to W up to 15 MPH with higher gusts.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 18-25. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
MONDAY: Partly cloudy to mostly sunny. Highs 31-38. Wind W 10-20 MPH, higher gusts.
MONDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear to partly cloudy. Lows 19-26. Wind W 5-15 MPH, higher gusts.
TUESDAY: Partly cloudy. Chance of a snow shower or squall. Highs 33-40. Wind W 10-20 MPH, higher gusts, shifting to N by late.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear evening. Clouding up overnight. Lows 15-22. Wind N 10-20 MPH, diminishing.
WEDNESDAY: Mostly cloudy. Chance of snow or snow showers except possibly rain/snow showers South Coast. Highs 28-35. Wind variable 5-15 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (JANUARY 30 – FEBRUARY 3)
Fair, cold weather January 30-31. A window of opportunity exists for unsettled weather during the first few days of February – details TBD – with a slight temperature moderation.
DAYS 11-15 (FEBRUARY 4-8)
A fair weather start, and another window of opportunity for storminess follows. Temperatures variable / no extremes indicated.