Jump to content

Jerichohill

Members
  • Posts

    12
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Jerichohill

  1. Once again, a disappointing trend right before the storm comes. I am so tired of this Was previously in a 6-8 in band, now 3-4
  2. notably the check was in the middle box yesterday, so now they have increased their confidence
  3. Still rainy and temp 38 in Del Ray. However... NWS Sterling WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL NOON EST TODAY... * WHAT...Heavy snow. Additional snow accumulations of 2 to 4 inches. * WHERE...The Washington Metropolitan area and central Maryland. * WHEN...Until noon EST Sunday. Rain is expected to change to snow around daybreak, with the heaviest snow expected through 11 AM. * IMPACTS...Plan on slippery road conditions and reduced visibility. * ADDITIONAL DETAILS...Snowfall rates around 1 to 2 inches per hour are possible in heavier bands of snow. Temperatures will rise above freezing this afternoon as the precipitation ends. However, temperatures will quickly fall below freezing tonight.
  4. This is a really disappointing event. I'd be generous to say we have gotten 1.5 inches here in Del Ray so far
  5. back to decent snow in del ray, about an inch and a tad more. call it 1.25
  6. From NWS Sterling: Warm advection envelops the region Saturday night as the storm presently along the West Coast gathers Gulf Moisture and sends it our way. With cold air mass in place, precip likely begins as snow region-wide by late Saturday night. Temps stay a little milder with the clouds, with lows in the 20s. .LONG TERM /SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/... A potent upper level low will move east along the Ohio Valley Sunday and Sunday night, prior to moving into the mid-Atlantic region Monday. As it reaches our CWA, the development and intensification of a coastal low is expected. Helping in feeding this rapid development will be additional upper level energy that will move inside a deepening trough of low pressure across the eastern third of the U.S. The deepening trough and energy that will be intensifying the coastal low will perhaps slow its forward eastward progress early next week. A cold wedge east of the Appalachians will set up the atmosphere in which a large part of our CWA should see, at least, some accumulating snowfall late Saturday night through Monday. The slow forward progress could allow for some places to see a continual snowfall or perhaps some constant bands of light snow.
×
×
  • Create New...