7:29AM
DAYS 1-5 (JANUARY 18-22)
The first of 2 storm systems, and by far the weaker of the 2, has let us off easy as much of the snow associated with it has dried up, and only patchy inconsequential snow will be around this morning with many places seeing nothing at all. However it is still a passing low and we do get a brief shot of milder air today before colder air returns tonight and Saturday and sets the stage for the clearly stronger second storm coming through the region from Saturday evening to Sunday evening, about a 24-hour event. This will be a cold storm in that cold air will dominate at the surface. The question remains how much warm air gets in aloft and as a result where do the lines between snow, sleet, and freezing rain set up. While our fairly reliable European model came in a little warmer looking which would mean more sleet further north, and our somewhat reliable NAM model came in colder meaning less sleet pushing as far north, as far as guidance influence goes I am not going to change anything from yesterday’s forecast. Experience leads me to want to lean slightly to the colder solution as yesterday’s preliminary numbers were kind of a “split the difference” first guess. So the adjustment made today will be very minor to my snow/sleet accumulation numbers, and I will tweak further on the next update, if necessary, as it will be done well before the precipitation arrives. Another aspect of this storm I did not mention previously but need to now is that we will see minor to moderate coastal flooding during the late morning / midday high tide Sunday, which is astronomically high at this time. A more offshore wind will lessen the flooding issue for the late night high tide with the exception of north-facing shores in Cape Cod Bay which will see some minor to moderate flooding at that time. What hasn’t changed at all is the brutal cold that follows the storm Sunday night and MLK Jr Day on Monday, which will ease up slightly Tuesday as high pressure moves overhead. The other big question, for sky watchers, becomes whether or not we will see at least some partial clearing Sunday night, allowing us to get at least some view of a total lunar eclipse that starts later in the 9PM hour and peaks shortly after midnight. There is a fair chance that we may get to see at least some of the event.
Forecast details…
TODAY: Mostly cloudy to partly sunny. Patchy light snow/mix early to mid morning. Highs 33-40. Wind S up to 10 MPH.
TONIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 15-22. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
SATURDAY: Sunshine followed by increasing cloudiness. Highs 22-29. Wind N up to 10 MPH.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Overcast with snow arriving west to east, becoming heavy at times by late evening and overnight, mixing with or turning to sleet and freezing rain South Coast and slowly advancing northward in the pre-dawn. Lows 18-25 but temperatures rise slowly especially near the South Coast overnight. Wind E to NE increasing to 10-20 MPH, higher gusts especially coast.
SUNDAY: Overcast with mostly snow that may mix with sleet southern NH and northern MA, snow mixing with or turning to sleet Boston to Worcester corridor, and sleet and freezing rain to the south with plain rain possible immediate South Coast and especially Cape Cod and the Islands. Precipitation tapering off from west to east by late-day with breaking clouds. Total snow/sleet accumulation expected ranging from up to 1 inch Nantucket to 1-3 inches MV and Cape Cod, 3-6 inches South Coast to Plymouth MA, 6-10 inches Providence RI and eastern CT area up through Boston area and I-95 belt, 10-16 inches I-495 belt into central MA northward into southern NH. Highs 22-29 northern areas, 30-37 southern areas with mildest Cape Cod and Islands, occurring by late morning, then temperatures falling in all areas during the afternoon. Wind NE 15-25 MPH with higher gusts, especially coast, during the morning, then N to NW 15-35 MPH afternoon.
MONDAY (MLK JR DAY): Sun and passing clouds. Windy. Lows from the lower to middle 0s. Highs from the upper 0s to middle 10s.
TUESDAY: Sunshine and high clouds. Lows in the 0s. Highs in the 20s.
DAYS 6-10 (JANUARY 23-27)
High pressure moves offshore and a front moves through from west to east January 23 with rain/snow showers with milder air in the region. Colder air returns for the remainder of the period with mainly dry weather January 24-25 as low pressure passes offshore, then another low pressure area may bring some snow and snow showers during the January 26-27 weekend.
DAYS 11-15 (JANUARY 28-FEBRUARY 1)
A lobe of the Polar Vortex will bring below to much below normal temperatures and small systems rounding its base can bring occasional episodes of light snow or snow showers during this period.