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WxWatcher007

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Everything posted by WxWatcher007

  1. 1.71” of rain so far. 33.7/32 I don’t need to see anything else. Excuse my language, but I’m fucked here. First time I’ve typed that since being on the forum. Congrats to everyone else getting a good storm today. Keep the pics coming and I sincerely hope as many cash in as possible.
  2. I expect 0.0 here too but I am a little angry that this fell apart in the fashion it looks to have. We’ll see what the day brings, but this is easily the worst season I’ve ever seen imby subjectively. That said, hoping for a miracle.
  3. Good to see the CC drop here. Still heavy rain.
  4. Yeah, that ends at 00z. At this point I’d sign for that and just move on. I’m expecting no accumulation here now. Feel like I need a Hail Mary. Absolutely pouring here.
  5. Good luck out there. It looks good on the guidance. Could be a high end period if things break right.
  6. My only hope at this point. Pretty bullish for W CT and solid for E Mass.
  7. Mesoscale Discussion 0287 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1154 PM CDT Mon Mar 13 2023 Areas affected...Hudson Valley region into parts of southern New England Concerning...Heavy snow Valid 140454Z - 141030Z SUMMARY...Heavy wet snow will increase overnight, with 1-2 inch per hour rates possible, especially at higher elevations. DISCUSSION...At 0430Z, an intensifying cyclone is evident in WV/IR imagery well off of the Mid Atlantic coast (near 37N, 71W). A surface trough extends northwest of this cyclone, with an apparent mesolow (suggested by radar imagery and surface/ship/buoy observations) moving north-northeastward along the surface trough toward western/central Long Island, where the strongest 2-hour pressure falls are currently noted. Meanwhile, a strong mid/upper-level shortwave trough is moving eastward out of the OH Valley region toward the Northeast/New England. Increasing deep-layer ascent associated with the approaching shortwave trough combined with persistent low-level moisture transport will intensify precipitation rates overnight from the Hudson Valley region into parts of southern New England. Temperatures remain near/above freezing across the region as of 04Z, though higher elevations and portions of the Hudson Valley have turned over to snow. For western MA/northwest CT/southern VT into adjacent portions of the Hudson Valley, limited near-surface warm advection along/west of the surface trough will allow precipitation type to remain as snow overnight, resulting in the potential for 1-2 inch per hour snow rates as precipitation intensifies. Farther east, stronger low-level warm advection results in some uncertainty regarding precipitation type at lower elevations, though very heavy wet snow rates will be possible at higher elevations in the Worcester Hills and vicinity overnight.
  8. Heavy heavy rain. Shadowing never an issue when it’s liquid. 36/34
  9. Right. I hope it’s wrong but I’m prepared for an LES type gradient because that’s what it looks like. It’d be horrific but it is what it is.
  10. Exactly. You just have to hope all hell breaks loose and you drop enough cement on the trees and lines that the grid collapses when the eyewall crosses.
  11. We need a widespread 4+ in The Valley to get close to that, I think.
  12. Yeah, I’m long past ready to be done at this point. Punted in December. Watched people fawn over ten day virtual potential every week since. It’s like the clockwork orange scene but for four months.
  13. Echoing this: no matter what happens the folks that get crushed should post plenty of pics and videos.
  14. That's f****** awful. Absolutely f****** awful.
  15. It really is. I’m mesmerized by the visible loop. It’s going to be a beast.
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