6:32PM
For this blog entry, I’ll keep it simple and short. Whether you love snow or loathe it, you are probably worn out from the insanity of what Nature has thrown at many of us in southern New England since January 24. And yes, it’s only been 2 1/2 weeks, and no, you’re not dreaming. This weather pattern may very well be similar to some of the ones that brought the “great snows” to the natives of the land and the early settlers from across the ocean in the 1600s, and again in the following century, but we can’t be 100% sure because we only have limited hand written accounts by a few people long since departed. We don’t have any satellite data or widespread observational data to examine, only what was written about these events. But another way to describe this pattern is basically the Winter pattern of Labrador, Canada, displaced several hundred miles to the south. We know that such a thing is possible, though rare, in the atmosphere. But here it is.
The only thing really left to say about the just-about-to-end long-duration event is that it performed almost as expected, with the surprises being the South Shore ocean-snow zone setting up early in the event and being heavier than expected. We did expect the ocean-effect bands near the coast, however. But honestly, there will be some amounts above what I was envisioning when I said “8-16 inches with pockets of heavier…” and in places that I thought would be closer to the top of that 8-16 range. Incredible.
So just a quick look at what’s coming up. The same pattern continues. There is no doubt about that. And there are 2 more storm threats, Thursday to early Friday, and sometime over the weekend, likely Sunday. I don’t need to remind you that the further away the event, the less confidence there is forecasting it, so here is my best guess which will be fine-tuned with time. The current system exits by early Tuesday and a break lasts through Wednesday. The next storm, a clipper system, drops into the trough over the Northeast on Thursday and explodes offshore. How close this happens dictates the outcome, and right now it looks like eastern portions of MA and NH stand the greatest chance of heavy snow and strong wind developing on Thursday and ending by early Friday. Very cold air follows this storm, which will include lots of blowing snow where it falls. Another storm threat exists around Sunday, with medium range guidance split between a near miss and a big hit, so we’ll split the difference for now and go for a graze. This threat should be over by Monday, a holiday for some, which will be another very cold day, assuring us that the snow is going nowhere anytime soon.
SOUTHEASTERN NEW ENGLAND FORECAST…
TONIGHT: Cloudy. Periods of snow. Blowing snow. Additional accumulation 1 to 3 inches. Lows from near 10 northwest of Boston to near 20 Cape Cod. Wind NW 10-20 MPH, gusting around 30 MPH.
TUESDAY: Mostly cloudy start with additional snow showers near eastern coastal locations, then clearing. Highs 25-30. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear to partly cloudy. Lows in the 10s. Wind light N.
WEDNESDAY: Partly sunny except more clouds near eastern coastal areas with a risk of snow showers. Highs around 30. Wind N to NE 5-15 MPH.
THURSDAY: Cloudy. Snow develops PM, possibly heavy at night including wind. Low 15. High 30.
FRIDAY: AM snow and wind. PM clearing. Low 10. High 20.
SATURDAY: Sun to clouds. Low -5. High 15.
SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy. Chance of snow and wind. Low 5. High 15.
MONDAY: Partly sunny. Low 0. High 15.