Quick Update

Full forecast later…sorry for the delay.

THURSDAY: Cloudy. Periods of showers, especially in the afternoon, greatest chance of heavier showers along and east of Route 95. High 55-60. Wind E 5-15 MPH.

THURSDAY NIGHT: Mostly cloudy. Showers likely early, heaviest near the coastline. Patchy fog. One more round of scattered showers from west to east a bit later at night. Low 42-47. Wind variable becoming N to NW 5-15 MPH.

FRIDAY – VETERANS DAY: Sun and passing clouds. High 50-55. Wind NW 15-25 MPH.

SATURDAY: Mostly sunny. Low 32. High 52.

SUNDAY: Partly cloudy. Low 36. High 54.

MONDAY: Partly sunny. Low 41. High 63.

TUESDAY: Variably cloudy. Low 45. High 65.

23 thoughts on “Quick Update”

  1. Thanks TK.

    I will pretty much be awol today as I have to attend an all day seminar!

    zzzzz……zzzzzz…….zzzzzzz Boring complete waste of time!!!

    Hey, they want to pay me for sitting there like a zombie. Fine with me.

    1. hahahaha – I now get to attend seminars via conferencing but miss being there sometimes. See if they can hook you up electronically!!!!

      Meantime, enjoy and hopefully they have a great spread for lunch!!! Oh, did I say that’s the biggest part I miss!!!

  2. What does one do with a lunch break? Why look at the weather of course!

    A little future tease: The 06Z GFS at 360 Hours:

    http://mag.ncep.noaa.gov/NCOMAGWEB/appcontroller?prevPage=Model&MainPage=index&image=&page=Param&cycle=11%2F10%2F2011+06UTC&rname=SFC-LAYER+PARMS&pname=1000_500_thick&pdesc=&model=GFS&area=NAMER&cat=MODEL+GUIDANCE&fcast=360&areaDesc=North+America+-+US+Canada+and+northern+Mexico&prevArea=NAMER&currKey=model&returnToModel=&imageSize=M

    The 12Z GFS is coming out now. I wonder if this feature will even be present on
    the next run?????? Lol

      1. It’s a better sign if the Euro starts shifting the track…

        GFS has been and remains trash at the moment, with very rare exceptions. I’m disappointed in the overall performance of that model during the past few years. 🙁

  3. Will someone tell me if I am reading Old Salty’s link correctly. The cape is in the 0.5-0.75 inch range and all but the extreme northwest of MA is in the 0.25-0.5 inch range?

      1. oh darn and I thought I was starting to figure these things out.

        TK – any “classes” online in the future 🙂 Clearly I am in need of help

          1. Sure I’m in need of help or sure there may be classes coming 🙂 Just kidding !!! and please as I’ve said let me know if I can help in any way – I may not have the knowledge but I follow instructions really well 🙂

  4. It is beginning to look more and more to me that there are too many factors against above normal snowfall this winter:

    1. A “snowy” October
    2. Above normal November temps (due to neutral NAO)
    3. Above normal February/March temps (assuming this verifies)

    Since 1913 when Boston receives 0.1″+ of snow in October, the “average” snowfall comes to 32 inches.

    I predict that Boston will not go below 32F the rest of the month…even into early December.

    1. Above normal temps in Feb & March can be associated with above normal snow. This was talked about by both Joe B. & Joe D. at the SNE Wx Conference. Don’t let the mild 2nd half of winter forecast fool ya. 🙂

  5. Henry Margusity in his discussion was commenting on the NAO saying it looks to stay neutral through the end of the month. If that is the case no chance of a blockbuster snow event.

    1. Actually Jimmy, I have no problem with a mild November. It is good for leaf raking and other final yardwork for the year, at least for me. The big question is…what part of December will the regime change begin?…early, mid, late…not until January? My bet is not until close to mid-December.

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