Reasonable worst-case puts of a lot of places near the mythical 30" mark. And to think this does not include some snow before/after this 24hr period
Posts by Rob Van Kleeck
WPC 50th Percentiles are hovering around 2ft for my area and points south, banding structures hold the key for totals on either side of that.
Impressive Baroclinic leaf look starting to take shape ahead of the main trough. Also some convective elements in there as the trough goes beyond neutral tilt. This may go down as one of the most memorable storms I've been a part of.
Big jump in Great Lakes ice cover with this recent arctic air! Doesn't modify arctic air headed for New England as much when they are iced up. Better baroclinic zones on the coast maybe?
Can see this clearly at 850mb:
Appears as if some lower level FGEN is on its way to eastern and central MA after the earlier bursts with higher level advection. Hopefully the most intense rates of the storm!
Coastal transfer well underway
Impressive snow rates given we're still in the single digits here! About an hour ahead of schedule. Will we cross the 2ft mark?
Looks like a great storm for Metrowest! Good middle ground between high ratios in the north with higher QPF in the south. Combine that with nearby coastal fronts on the ENE wind and CAMs consistently have metro Boston in the crosshairs. Hoping to cross the 18" mark! Maybe some thunder?
Interesting dichotomy with the physics-based and AI suites on the EPS. That shortwave over the great lakes makes me lean into OTS, almost like a kicker shortwave
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This is why you can't afford RAM anymore
12z HREF Mean 24hr Snowfall ending Sat Morning for the Northeastern US
Measuring snow board and stakes are ready here in northern
Dutchess County! Hoping the banding sets up similarly to what the HREF ensembles are hinting, but I've been let down before with the banding heading north to the Capital District with robust WAA.
Unlike some other cold season wind events in recent memory, this one is during the daytime which, in tandem with heavy showers, may help to transfer low level winds to the surface.
This morning's HREF is coming in a bit more robust with the approaching trough and resulting LLJ/wind gusts tomorrow for eastern New England, looks like some upgrades to warnings may be warranted. Looks like +/- a few hours from noon is the time for peak gusts.
Screenshot of ASOS temperatures/winds just after noon 11/10
34F at KMPO and the mid 50s next door in the Tri-State area, winter is coming!
Hiding the replies calling out this engagement bait instead of owning up to a misunderstanding. Interesting look
Can this happen in January?
Good insolation and time of day makes me think of a dust devil as the boundary layer deepens and mixes down some drier air (RH on a steady decline there). Maybe the camera shows it?
A statement I must make:
As an aside, I just wanted to extend my sympathies to those affected by the federal layoffs yesterday. You and your work are valuable and needed; do not let the anti-intellectualism storming the nation now temper your fire to push the science and drive meaningful change. The fight continues.
Exciting prospects for a major east coast snowstorm next week on the overnight guidance. Good agreement between each ensemble suite - especially for a ~6 day leadtime - and these higher ceiling storms often materialize around then. But that doesn't guarantee anything, fingers crossed!
Fri night might get close if the airport can decouple. Easier said then done though
Lafayette, Louisiana got more snow today than many northern cities have seen *ALL SEASON*
It's been 3 years since Boston had a snowstorm this large
Impressive concentric banding already underway in PA and MD
Core is dark red, broader definition light shaded
Unfortunately seems like one of those cases where the magnitude of the low-level temp gradient will make the jump from near-no snow to warning level over a short distance.
Metrowest in the crosshairs, hoping for a near-benchmark pendulum swing tomorrow!
Since I did not upload the GIF correctly... here is the loop
[2/2] This also may introduce more phasing between northern and southern stream impulses around the mean longwave trough later in the week. Notice how less stretched the trough/vorticity is already. Hoping this leads to a solid Miller A given the extreme continental>oceanic temperature gradient.
Latest six runs of the EPS 500mb Geopotential height and cyclonic vorticity averages fixed at 12z Tues Jan 21. Domain is all of North America
[1/2] The latest few cycles of the EPS have dramatically backed away from a cutoff southern stream in the Gulf of California next week at relatively short lead times (~130 hours). This is good news for wildfire relief efforts as it may reduce the severity of PGFs across the Transverse Ranges.
Big increase in east coast snow prospects on this morning's GFS ensemble. Many members and large MSLP spread near the benchmark with explosive deepening. Remains to be seen if this is an outlier run cycle, but this signal under 140 hours is exciting.