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George BM

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Posts posted by George BM

  1. 6 minutes ago, aldie 22 said:

    I'm just riffing here guys but stay with me....if it hasn't snowed by easter then i am pretty sure this winter was not good. I mean i could be wrong but it's just a gut feeling

    Eh. I'd at least wait until Cinco de Mayo. We were not too far from an event in early May of 2020 when a wave tracked just off to our north followed by some flakes and graupel pellets flying in northern zones on the 9th of that month.

    • Like 2
    • Haha 1
  2. 17 minutes ago, Eskimo Joe said:

    If we manage even a climo December temp and precip wise, I'll consider it a win.

    Unsolicited fact: Last December in the area was generally slightly BN temp-wise and AN precip-wise.

    (Yes. Luck was about as bad as possible in multiple ways that month. Our luck will be better this year.)

    • Like 2
  3. 7 minutes ago, midatlanticweather said:

    The fog is crazy out my way and temps below freezing now. Not a good thing. 31.5 degrees and 98% humidity. It looks cool as it really is ground fog. 

    Yeah. I wouldn't be too surprised if it got slick out there especially in colder spots N and W by morning. Lots of low-level moisture, clear skies, light to calm winds...

  4. 1 minute ago, dailylurker said:

    I ran my propane heat in my greenhouse last night for the first time. I went in at 7am to check it and it was 86 lol. I'll save that for colder nights. Got down to about 30 here in the wooded area I live. 

    What was the relative humidity?

    • Like 1
  5. Forecast Discussion

    Monday, December 11, 2023 4:26AM EST

    A high to extreme impact overrunning winter event will affect the region over the next couple of days. Early this morning temps have fallen into the upper teens in the suburbs w/ low/mid 20s in town on NE winds. Snow has already moved into far southwestern areas including Charlottsville, Culpeper and Fredericksburg. This snow will overspread the rest of the area as dawn occurs. Temps could initially fall a few degrees, to 15-20F, as this occurs with the dry airmass in place. Snow will become heavy at times by mid-morning as the shortwave approaches from the west strengthening the WAA. Around that time, a changeover to sleet will occur over those southwestern areas towards central VA as warmer air aloft begins to overspread the region. This changeover to sleet will probably occur within the DC metro by midday or so as the aforementioned southwestern areas changeover to freezing rain. By the mid/late afternoon hours everyone south of I-70 in northern MD and the Baltimore metro region should have changed over to freezing rain. The precipitation throughout the day will be heavy at times.

    Temperature-wise most of the region will start the day in the mid/upper teens before rising into the lower 20s towards northern MD by late afternoon, mid/upper 20s in the Greater Washington metro region and perhaps to near freezing in our southern zones towards Fredericksburg and Culpeper. Despite the fairly heavy freezing rain rates through the afternoon the temperatures greater than 5F below freezing may allow for significant ice accretion on trees and powerlines leading to numerous to potentially widespread power outages by evening. Freezing rain will lighten up and become showery as we get into the mid to late evening hours but with temperatures remaining in the 20s ice accretion (especially given the lighter rates) will be efficient.

    By midnight, when round one should be out of the region, snow/sleet totals will range from 6-10”+ north of DC and across northern MD to 5-8” in the Greater DC metro region to 2-5” towards central VA and southern MD zones. Concerning ice accretion, areas near I-70 will most likely see around 0.25-0.4” of ice accretion with the Greater DC metro experiencing ½ to ¾ of an inch of accretion and southern areas receiving around half an inch as slightly warmer temps in those areas as well as the heaviest precip shifting north through the afternoon will limit ice accretion somewhat.

    As the first shortwave moves to our east during the overnight/ pre-dawn Tuesday hours colder air aloft will start moving back southwards over the region. As a larger slug of moisture moves into the region towards dawn with the main system approaching from the WSW precip in the form of snow and sleet will overspread the region with freezing rain most likely in southern zones. At the same time, a reinforcing shot of arctic cold air will push in from the very strong ~1060mb surface high to our north. As a result, as the air aloft warms during the day on Tuesday with heavy precip overspreading the region the surface temps will remain deep in the 20s and may even fall a few degrees F as we go into the midday/afternoon hours. Precip will take the form of heavy snow towards I-70 and Baltimore with heavy sleet across the Greater DMV. A significant to potentially catastrophic ice storm from freezing rain will be taking place mainly south of I-66 & US-50 at least through the midday hours.

    By Tuesday afternoon strong WAA aloft will allow all areas with the exception of far northern MD towards the MD/PA line (where a wintry mix will continue) to change over to freezing rain. Once again, the precip rates will be heavy at times w/ even some elevated convection possible during the afternoon and into the evening. While the air aloft will warm through Tuesday surface temperatures, thanks to the strong arctic high to the north, will likely remain steady ranging from the upper teens to the north to the mid/upper 20s in the southern reaches of the forecast area with the 20-25F range in between. It’s the PM hours of Tuesday that could prove to be truly historic with the chance of 1 to 2 inches of ice accretion on top of upwards of a foot or more of hardened snow and sleet. This may lead to catastrophic tree damage with structural damage to numerous buildings as well as nearly universal power outages.

    By Tuesday night the main area of low pressure will pass by just south of the region. As that happens freezing rain and a wintry mix will change back over to snow from northwest to southeast before all precip eventually tapers off by just before dawn on Wednesday.

    Once all of this is over snow and sleet totals of 10 to 15 inches will be commonplace in the region with upwards of 18+ inches in some locations in northern MD and 5 to 10 inches to the south. But on top of and embedded within that snow/sleet will likely be 1.5 to 2.5 inches of ice accretion potentially making roadways impassable for several days if not weeks given that temperatures will remain well below normal over at least the next 7-10 days with some sub-zero lows possible.

     

    Forecaster Wannabe: George BM

    • Like 12
    • Weenie 1
  6. Sixty-nine years ago today a truly historic thing occurred in the region. Hurricane Hazel blasted the region with 70-100+ mph wind gusts! A truly phenomenal thing experiencing limbs dashing across the street with shingles flying like bats everywhere.

    DC gusted up to 98mph that afternoon. Truly incredible.

    • Like 5
  7. 14 minutes ago, wxdude64 said:

    Happy 44th anniversary to those that remember what happened that overnight/morning. It's what got me started keeping weather records :) 

    That was crazy. Snow covering fully leafed trees that were still well before peak fall foliage. Would be very intriguing to experience again. 

    • Like 2
  8. 5 minutes ago, WxUSAF said:

    Unlocking for one more day since I forgot to bump this yesterday 

     

    On 10/1/2023 at 4:44 PM, George BM said:

    DCA: 2/01/24

    IAD: 12/25

    BWI: 2/01/24

    RIC: 12/25

    BWI Oct departure: +2.2F

    Almost had a 2018 snowfall contest moment. :yikes:

    ...

    DCA: 11/07

    IAD: 10/27

    BWI: 10/27

    RIC: 11/08

    BWI Oct departure: +0.2F

    • Haha 1
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