I'm at home in MoCo. I went up to visit family in Kingsport, but came back. Looks like I slept through thundersnow.
The ceremonial beer can has been placed:
Probably more like 4.5", but based on radar, looks like more is coming.
Welp, trip to Boone has been cancelled. The person I was going to see has gotten pretty sick over the past day. Hopefully no COVID, but I'm still riding this one out in MoCo now.
I apologize in advance for lowered totals with the 12z runs.
OMG they took my advice and used geologic processes to describe the system, lol:
The strong cold air advection will also crater
temperatures into the middle and upper 20s most locations.
Thank you MRX!
(at least I can hope that's why this person chose the word crater)
@jrips27
I just thought of another possibility for you:
https://parks.ky.gov/corbin/parks/resort/cumberland-falls-state-resort-park
I rented a cabin there to try and chase a storm in 2019. Storm didn't work out, but it's a pretty place. One of the few places you can see a moonbow on clear nights. The cabins are basically their own little hotel rooms and they have a larger resort hotel that reminds me of Bryce Canyon National Park's. It is only about 15 - 20 minutes off the interstate. The last 10 minutes or so is on a 2 lane state route, so not sure how quickly they will plow it.
In my defense COD has a floater just over the Carolinas and part of TN right now, so I clicked on that one for the highest resolution. But it did cross my mind. Sorry:
You know, we've not had to pull out the old "the energy hasn't been sampled yet" weenie rule for this one yet. Hopefully that's a good sign.
The players are lining up:
That northern energy is really digging in, almost north to south. It's after that southern disturbance and it's going to catch it.
Some of those sleet soundings on the 18z NAM have pretty narrow windows for melting.
We will hug MRX:
"I believe the strong CAA (and resulting increase insnow ratios) and rapid cooling of the atmosphere due to dynamiccooling will support a bulk of the QPF falling as snow."