7:22AM
DAYS 1-5 (DECEMBER 26-30)
A warm front approaches today with some cloudiness at times, though high pressure to the northeast of the region supplies enough dry air to hold the thickest clouds at bay and allow for some sunshine as well. This warm front will cross the region early Friday and may produce an episode of freezing rain and sleet in northern MA and southern NH, so there could be some locally slippery travel for the Friday morning rush. Behind this it turns a little milder and only a few rain showers are expected behind the warm front and ahead of a cold front, which will pass through Friday evening, followed by an area of high pressure and fair weather for Saturday. And then we get a more important storm system to impact the region later Sunday through Monday. The track of the parent low will be into the Great Lakes, but a bit of a block in the atmosphere will likely force the energy more eastward and a frontal boundary will push into but never really through southern New England, likely becoming a running board for the development of new low pressure, which never really gets going until its offshore, but a system that will largely produce rain may end as some freezing and/or frozen precipitation for parts of the region sometime on Monday, depending on the speed of evolution and exact track, the details of which still need to be ironed out over the next few days.
Forecast details…
TODAY: Partly sunny. Highs 37-44. Wind light variable.
TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy. Lows 25-32. Wind light variable.
FRIDAY: Mostly cloudy. Brief freezing rain/sleet (maybe even snow mix) possible southern NH and northern MA morning. Isolated to scattered rain showers afternoon. Highs 40-47. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
FRIDAY NIGHT: Clearing. Lows 20-27. Wind SW 5-15 MPH shifting to NW.
SATURDAY: Sunny. Highs 42-49. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows 30-37. Wind light variable.
SUNDAY: Increasing clouds. Chance of rain by late-day. Highs 37-44. Wind SE up to 10 MPH.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Overcast. Rain likely. Lows 35-42. Wind SE to E up to 10 MPH.
MONDAY: Overcast. Rain likely, may mix with or turn to ice/snow especially northern areas later in the day. Highs 38-45. Wind E to N 5-15 MPH, higher gusts.
DAYS 6-10 (DECEMBER 31-JANUARY 4)
There is a little lower than average confidence in this forecast, but the current idea is that low pressure departs December 31 leaving colder air and a few snow showers behind, and that the northern and southern jet streams stay separated with another southern jet stream system passing south of the region late January 1 or January 2 and a northern stream system just bringing a few snow showers and additional cold air. This is a slightly different scenario than the one I described on yesterday’s update. Bottom line: It may change again so don’t put too much stock in it at this point.
DAYS 11-15 (JANUARY 5-9)
Overall theme, cold and dry, due to domination by the polar jet stream and suppression of the southern jet stream. Again, not a high confidence outlook.