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wxmanmitch

Meteorologist
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Everything posted by wxmanmitch

  1. 6.8" of sleety, slushy snow that froze into a glacier overnight last night. 2.15" liquid equivalent. It was a weird event in that the usual mountain vs. valley snow dipoles didn't exist with this storm as it was pretty much all overrunning with a weak low and midlevel wind field. It's not everyday when Bennington (10") gets more from a synoptic snowstorm than I do. Purely a latitudinal gradient with snow increasing from SSE to NNW around here. 82.6" for the season, while Landgrove at 1,900' about 30 miles NNE of my location has had 129.4". Usually he and I quite similar, but I've been on the wrong side of the gradient several times this winter...
  2. 9.4" storm total with 1.74" LE. Like a number of storms this winter it would've been good if it was a bit colder. Upslope part of the storm underperformed in S VT with only 3.2". Alas, something is better than nothing...
  3. 6.2" of snow with 1.43" of LE. There's some sleet in it, plus a slight glaze resulting from some freezing rain/drizzle during the dry slot overnight last night. Now let's see if I can do a daily double with the snow on 0.3" liquid by tomorrow from the upslope... -SN, 30.6° F. High was 32.1° F.
  4. 5.9" as of 12:30 AM EST. Changeover to straight sleet has occurred so this should about do it for the front end. 29.5° F.
  5. 4.5", heavy snow and wind. 29.5° F. Flakes occasionally aggregate and try to mix with sleet, but so far high UVVs and precipitation have been keeping midlevel WAA at bay. Very dense snow, probably a 6-7:1 SLR, but actually rather dry. Not loading up on trees or utility wires.
  6. Dumping heavy snow, 2" when I got home at 8 pm, probably 2.5-3" now. Some aggregation going on. 29.6° F. Just rain with some sleet mixed in Williamstown and North Adams, MA.
  7. I had two squalls today dropping 2.9" collectively. I had another 0.5" from one last night. This clip is from the height of squall number 2, which was shorter but more intense than squall 1.
  8. Happy New Year! Here are 2023's weather numbers for my location 5 miles NW Readsboro, VT at 2,230': Average Temperature: 44.0° F Low Temperature: -25.4° F (2/4) High Temperature: 83.0° F (7/6) Total Precipitation: 75.94" Total Snowfall: 124.1"
  9. Heavy, heavy flizzard ongoing! 31.2° F. Might have to call in the National Guard to dig us out…
  10. Season's Greetings! I will admit I haven't been on here much of late, but Twitter/X has been such a s***show since Musk's hostile takeover of the platform that gleaning weather info off of there has become an increasingly difficult proposition. My feed which was once a global town square of sorts with weather enthusiasts and professionals interacting with each other has turned into a cesspool of misinformation and junk that I have zero interest in. That said, as bad as it has gotten, it is still the best of the major social platforms for late breaking weather info as there are still relevant posts in my feed from time to time, and not the several days old stuff that I typically see on Facebook. Thanks to Musk X is dying, and may not be around much longer for better or worse IMO. I had high hopes for this winter with a weakening Modoki style El Niño taking hold, but those are beginning to fade some in light of the fact that we've had our warmest and least snowy December since 2015, and I'm not convinced this upcoming colder pattern can deliver the goods. It will be better than the status quo regardless. Hopefully we can get a good back loaded winter. I struck out with three storms earlier this month and late November with 32.5-33° F rain and "snain" that didn't accumulate to more than an inch of slop. Stratton and points north of there did considerably better with those. I guess this is payback for that epic 42" dump I had in mid March. In other news I've finally got decent internet up here with the installation fiber optic internet (~1.2 Gbps down/1.1 Gbps up) that blows even Xfinity and Spectrum out of the water. The aforementioned companies would never bring their services to my area and the incumbent provider Consolidated Communications (formerly FairPoint) wouldn't bring in their own fiber service, Fidium. Being on the wrong side of the digital divide, many of Vermont's towns banded together to form a series of regional communication union districts (CUDs) to chase after federal broadband infrastructure money and form non-profit community operated ISPs. As one of the least served towns in my respective district, we were one of the first to get fiber from Deerfield Valley Fiber (DVFiber). It's so nice to be off of that 10/1 Mbps bonded DSL connection where websites loaded like it was 1999. That speed may have been adequate in 2003, but not in 2023. I'll leave you with an epic sunrise shot from yesterday morning. It will be a totally brown Christmas here in the highlands of southern Vermont as well.
  11. 149.4" season total. Pretty much an average year snowfall wise, thanks in part to that epic nor'easter in mid March that dumped 42" here.
  12. A raised bed garden in the backyard. It had to be dumped on a tarp in the driveway as there's no way a dump truck can get to the edge of my backyard.
  13. I've thought the same thing. I bet that closed Calumet Air Force Station up on the Keweenaw is a tremendous weenie spot too. But if I could move anywhere it would probably be Baker Mountain in Washington State.
  14. ++BLFL (Heavy, heavy black flies), 71/52° F. I don't think I recall them ever being this bad, and they're bad every year about now. There are literally dozens of them crawling on my arm at any given time if I spend anytime outdoors. Here I am looking like an idiot continuously helplessly waving my electric bug zapper tennis racquet thingy through the air. Nothing works against them. Alas, yard work must get done and there's lots of dirt to move again this year. Tons of vernal pools for the black flies to just reproduce in thanks to that 42" snowstorm in mid March that had over 4" of LE.
  15. 32/31, snow. About 1.3" so far. Nice fluffy flakes.
  16. It took nearly 3. I pushed the cylinder into the snow as deep as the length of the cylinder and then used a spatula (as shown in the CoCoRaHS manual) to ensure the snow wouldn't fall out as I captured the core. I had to repeat 2 more times until I hit the board. The cores were then placed on a large metal baking pan to be brought inside for melting. I let them melt on top of the pellet stove for a while before measuring with the inner cylinder.
  17. My apologies for the delay in updating here, but we had a nearly 24 hour long Internet and phone outage and I have no cell service here. Anyway, I had a 42.1" storm total with a 4.44" liquid equivalent (LE). I cleared my snow boards every 24 hours at ~4 pm. I had 1.0" (0.05" LE) on Monday, 30.4" (3.43" LE) yesterday, and another 10.7" (0.96" LE) today. LE on Tuesday and Wednesday was found by coring the snow on top of the snow board using the outer cylinder of the Stratus rain gauge and then melting it down as this amount of snow easily overflows the outer cylinder multiple times over. The melted water was then measured with the funnel and inner cylinder. Given the LE, the snow has a definite blue tinge to it. Dry but dense at this elevation. Paste in the valleys (where my electric and telecom services come from). I measure multiple times a day but only clear the board once in 24 hours. These numbers represent the maximum amount recorded during that 24 hour period. In the case of Monday and Tuesday's measurements, the maximum depth was recorded at the 4 pm observation time as it was actively snowing, today it was 10.7" at 10 am. It stopped snowing around this time and by 4 pm it had settled to just under 10" on the board. Given the liquid equivalent, I probably would've had over 48" if I cleared the board every 6 hours. Total depth on the ground is 55" as we had ~18" before the storm.
  18. Jim Cantore has been in town. I don't know if he still is, but TWC was doing live reports from the center of town by the monument and town hall.
  19. 27.3" as of 2 pm. Getting difficult to measure because of blowing and drifting. Snow consistency has definitely dried out some compared to earlier, so it's very fluffy. Just puking dendrites, 28° F.
  20. 24.5" as of 10 am. Did a first pass with the snowblower. It struggled under the load a bit, but not too bad. 2 feet of dense powder is better than 6" of slop. It let up briefly a short while ago as I flirted with the dry slot but it's back to moderate/heavy snow again. 27° F.
  21. 22.1" as of 8 am, so it's probably 23" or higher now. Dumping heavy snow with occasional wind gusts to 25 or 30 mph. 27° F. Power out since around 3:30 am, but on backup. Internet still on for now anyway. Long way to go with this one too.
  22. 29.5° F, moderate snow. Had 3.7" total as of an hour ago, so we're probably 4-4.5" now.
  23. Light snow, 30.7° F. There was 1.0" as of 5 pm, so maybe 1.3 or so by now. Snow growth has been fantastic so far with lots of dendrites. Should be a good one here...
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