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  2. Almost looks like more of a west/east warm push instead of N/S. If that’s the case, might have a better chance of staying on the good side.
  3. AI GFS would certainly be something if it verified.
  4. Cmc came further north. AI gfs also.
  5. Cmc and ukie are both south for Monday
  6. I meant this Thurs/Fri. Next week is wide open.
  7. Just saw that myself. This just feels like a slop storm for us.
  8. 55 to -58 would be something to behold. Who could pull off something like that? International Falls?
  9. Ok so I keep hearing an airplane overhead but check Flightradar24 and there is nothing there. Thought was hearing things but Mr. J hears it as well.
  10. I was just looking up some data on late season events and I found this one that I don't believe i've heard talked about here. Obviously it's an anomaly and i'm not using it to prove any points here, but nevertheless, who would have thought you could have piled 21" of snow in Harrisburg, only a few days away from May. The April 27-28, 1928, blizzard was a record-shattering late-season storm that dumped up to 21 inches of snow on Harrisburg, PA, and over 35 inches in surrounding mountainous regions. It paralyzed central Pennsylvania, closing businesses, causing widespread power outages, and breaking trees due to the weight of the snow on foliage. Key Facts About the 1928 Event: Impact on Harrisburg: The city was "buried" under a 21-inch snowfall, described by The Patriot as one of the worst storms in history, bringing life to a complete standstill. Regional Impact: The storm hit the Mid-Atlantic and Appalachian regions, with Pennsylvania being hardest hit, though mountainous West Virginia saw up to 40 inches. Transportation Chaos: The storm stalled travel, including stranding the "Red Arrow" train for three days near Paoli, PA, with passengers forced to burn seat cushions for heat. Meteorological Significance: The storm was a "bomb cyclone" (rapidly dropping pressure) that hit in late April, making it one of the most devastating, late-season, and rare snow events of the 20th century
  11. Central and northern PA at 2'+. Wonder if the Gfs is treating them like it treated us with its early runs for this past weekend. Love to see that come 100 miles south.
  12. So ORH got 16.2? the PNS says 13.7 but that seems way off considering they got 13.9 just on the 23rd alone and 2.3 on 22nd. Thats what the CF6 shows. @ORH_wxman
  13. Getting to be about time for a spring snowpack update with cores. Maybe early next week.
  14. Hits us with both waves. Probably the best outcome - unless you can squeeze more juice out of them, of course
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