Jump to content

weatherwiz

Meteorologist
  • Posts

    79,180
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by weatherwiz

  1. I’m really hoping this pans out and I can get a foot. My girlfriend (who I met in 2021) moved up from Florida late 2018 or so and this would be the biggest storm she’s seen. Thought it would happen last year but Connecticut got crushed. I’m also hoping to see what the dogs reaction would be (if he cares). He’s coming the end and it would be cool to see if he would like it and go around in it with his doggy wheel chair 

    • Like 4
  2. 1 minute ago, bristolri_wx said:

    This is a good map.  Sums it up.  Even if there's sleet along the southern areas, it mostly falls after the bulk of the heavy stuff falls.  I think the NAM turns down the volume in subsequent runs...

    Yeah I don't see sleet reducing totals anywhere. The bulk of everything already occurs. Its not a big deal

  3. Wasn't entirely sure I'd get to do into enough detail to make a forecast but alas I did. 

    I originally had the whole area of 12-18" but wanted to highlight that potential for some higher amounts in northeast Mass...I think that signal could be very real. Didn't want to go crazy and throw out 18-24" contour so just bumped 12-18 to 10-15 to add a 15-20 area. This is what winter is all about!!!!!!  LFG!!!!!!! Massive snowstorm and a Pats trip to the super bowl incoming. Someone pinch me I'm dreaming 

    image.png.f60358b7bb06b4e54cc33e44de6942cd.png

    https://weatherwiz.blogspot.com/2026/01/significant-snowstorm-to-impact.html

    • Like 2
    • Weenie 1
  4. 1 minute ago, dendrite said:

    You’re ripping like 0.60”+/6hr at times. Even with clearing there’s going to be compaction on the bottom of those cores as the weight increases on the lower crystals. A little wind will break the crystals down a bit too. So I just find it hard to see 12-15” of fluff in 6hrs during the meat of it.

    If you were clearing hourly then yeah…you’re probably getting 20-25:1 hourlies at times. 

    Yup...great point. 

    I'll say too...looking around at various locations, I would like to start seeing some stronger omega values popping up on some of these soundings. It's easy to get carried away with ratios given everything but we aren't going to automatically snag very high ratios because the DGZ is deep and its cold. There are really a ton of details to go over and analyze on this

  5. 3 minutes ago, weathafella said:

    To me, the difference between 10-15 and 15-20 is the Monday snow.  It seems like Sunday and Sunday night, particularly 4pm-midnight are a slam dunk very heavy snow period 

    If that Monday snow verifies I think someone in northeast MA may pull >24" 

    I would not forecast that now but I think there could certainly be some reports. This storm is going to be full of surprises...I can't get over the whole DGZ thing looking around on bufkit lol. I think dendrite mentioned this about the snow ratios and how its difficult to maintain upward of 20:1 - 25:1 but where and when the best lift is occurring...there is going to be a swath verifying those ratios at least for a brief period of time

  6. 1 minute ago, ORH_wxman said:

    The DGZ is essentially from the sfc to 700mb on Monday so anything low level is gonna be quite efficient. The question is just how much lift can we generate in the low levels. Stronger onshore flow will certainly help as you push that marine boundary layer into the arctic dome…that alone will generate decent low level lift. But that’s why getting a decent secondary staying to our south as long as possible is key. Once it reaches our latitude, winds in the BL will be less and less onshore.  

    This is why I can't wait until we get into meso model range. The mesos I think should handle this very well and this is when we can really talk about the potential for >15" totals and where those would be most likely to occur.  

  7. That would be a huge hit on the GFS, especially with the 850 low developing just south of the region. I like how the sfc low and 850 low go virtually west-to-east to our south with a bit of elongation to the low...that should help (I would think) result in a much wider than usual fronto band (combined with other factors of course) than usual. This inflow oof

    image.png.0ccdba0721494d58793731ae1262e41f.png

    • 100% 1
×
×
  • Create New...