I’m thinking of this as a 6-12 inch or for us. That qpf signal has been on most runs for 4 days. A good storm but nowhere near JPot. Unless this thing kind of reorients itself in some way. Others need the JP more than us.
The models have consistently had a horrible Connecticut valley like downsloping signal from Plymouth New Hampshire, straight down towards Southern New Hampshire. I have a feeling it has to do with the wind direction due to the angle of approach of the storm. Brian will know.
And also don’t see Ensembles still look quite good for many? We’re not at the point where we switch over to operational runs. That’s probably more like tomorrow afternoon. I don’t understand all of the moaning. I’ve never thought this was going to be that big up here though. We get shadowed and down sloped in these weird angle storms sometimes. But western New England to me and probably a good bit of eastern New England should have a lot of fun as it stands now.
Just have the great great grandkids wheel you out into the yard and put on a virtual simulator of 1888 that some one will have made by then, and ask the grandkids to buy a couple packs of ballpark franks and just toss them at you.
wouldn't it be funny if we got a DC-Portland KU and got all the I-95 cities to normal? The weenies of 2053 would look at the data and be like "ah just an average winter."
I was wondering given how we've been focusing on Tuesday. Oy, I'd like Tuesday, one more on Thurs-Fri, and then onto being able to plant my lettuce by mid April. The snowpack is very sturdy right now.
certainly in the internal areas and hills of SNE.
This whole stall loop capture thing, which has been on the models for several cycles, is why I think we are locked and loaded for this storm. Those usually don't fade away into nothing. I think this ends up a little further east. Stronger storms tend to hook more nw when deepening rapidly but we haven't had any big deepeners in a while so I could see that being overdone and thus a bit more east. And then there is Messenger...