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Just now, TugHillMatt said:

Oh, so they do have some wisdom on something... :P

How much of your white fertilizer survived? The 6 inches here was demolished in 12 hours!!!! Dewpoints weren't even high. It must have been the gusty south wind, rain, and warmer ground from the 40s the day before. I thought since it had a higher moisture content, it might last longer.

I still have a snow cover here but it’s probably half of what it was the other day. Of course I always expect lake effect snow to compact to about half of what is measured even when it’s cold. 

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Just now, CNY_WX said:

I still have a snow cover here but it’s probably half of what it was the other day. Of course I always expect lake effect snow to compact to about half of what is measured even when it’s cold. 

Nice. Now it will freeze and make for a solid base. Still a few areas here with snowcover but probably 80% bare. Still has a liiiiitle wintry feel with piles along all the roads, driveways, and lots.

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Rgem looks like a decent hit for the Sunday/Monday system for CNY and east. Western NY doesn't look so good.

I am curious as to if the Low was to move a bit more to the west if we could get heavier snow here, or if somehow (season trend) warm air gets pumped in. It doesn't seem like being on the NW side matters anymore.

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10 minutes ago, TugHillMatt said:

Nice. Now it will freeze and make for a solid base. Still a few areas here with snowcover but probably 80% bare. Still has a liiiiitle wintry feel with piles along all the roads, driveways, and lots.

Maybe we should start making our own snow like the guy down in Midlothian VA used to do. Not sure if he still does, lost track of that from back in EUS forum etc when we all posted together and not compartmentalized into subforums.

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1 minute ago, Syrmax said:

Maybe we should start making our own snow like the guy down in Midlothian VA used to do. Not sure if he still does, lost track of that from back in EUS forum etc when we all posted together and not compartmentalized into subforums.

I remember that. Back when we used to have real winters up here. Now we have the mid Atlantic winters. 

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27 minutes ago, Syrmax said:

Maybe we should start making our own snow like the guy down in Midlothian VA used to do. Not sure if he still does, lost track of that from back in EUS forum etc when we all posted together and not compartmentalized into subforums.

 

24 minutes ago, CNY_WX said:

I remember that. Back when we used to have real winters up here. Now we have the mid Atlantic winters. 

I remember it too. There is another poster on the mid-Atlantic forum who has a snow machine. I think he's posted pictures of the mountains of snow he has in his yard sometimes. haha

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3 minutes ago, BuffaloWeather said:

You need one of those Tug. 

My family, especially my wife, have joked with me over the years about getting one so she can live down south and I can get my "snow". It's just not the same... BUT, if we continue getting Virginia weather here, I may just have to consider that expensive purchase..

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3 minutes ago, TugHillMatt said:

My family, especially my wife, have joked with me over the years about getting one so she can live down south and I can get my "snow". It's just not the same... BUT, if we continue getting Virginia weather here, I may just have to consider that expensive purchase..

Actually there are spots down south that are getting more snow than us. West Texas is getting hammered. 
 

489B0D45-1CB0-4865-8C75-7D5C13359559.png.604c280d2d780d0871d752f59aac7cb7.png

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You would think with a record breaking NAO we would be at least a little chilly. We learned a lot this year, Pacific controls the cold. Which honestly makes a lot of sense. Our source of cold air is Canada, Canadas source of cold air comes from the Pacific with a west to east flow. The Atlantic matters more for Europe then it does for us. Atlantic blocking only really matters for New England/Mid Atlantic snowstorms. That is why -NAO is talked about so much in these forums. 

1609372800-z6nBcCnrDkM.png

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Stations:
NY-OG-28 
Brewerton 1.5 ESE 
Lat: 43.228345 
Lon: -76.113248 
* indicates Multi-Day Accumulation Report
Station               NY-OG-28
Date Precip in. Snowfall in. Snowfall SWE in. Total Snow Depth in. Total SWE in.
12/01/2020   0.38 0.0 NA NA NA
12/02/2020   0.11 0.7 NA NA NA
12/03/2020   0.08 1.4 NA NA NA
12/04/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/05/2020   0.12 0.0 NA NA NA
12/06/2020   0.02 0.1 NA NA NA
12/07/2020   -- -- -- -- --
12/08/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/09/2020   0.08 0.8 NA NA NA
12/10/2020   0.20 0.7 NA NA NA
12/11/2020   0.02 0.0 NA NA NA
12/12/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/13/2020   T 0.0 NA NA NA
12/14/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/15/2020   0.03 0.3 NA NA NA
12/16/2020   -- -- -- -- --
12/17/2020   0.36 3.4 NA NA NA
12/18/2020   0.01 0.1 NA NA NA
12/19/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/20/2020   0.02 0.3 NA NA NA
12/21/2020   0.10 0.2 NA NA NA
12/22/2020   0.04 0.0 NA NA NA
12/23/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/24/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/25/2020   1.17 0.0 NA NA NA
12/26/2020   0.10 0.3 NA NA NA
12/27/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/28/2020   0.01 T NA NA NA
12/29/2020   NA 13.2 NA NA NA
12/30/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/31/2020   0.08 0.0 NA NA NA
Totals :  2.93 in. 21.5 in. 0.00 in. -- --

The lake effect the other night somewhat saved the month. 21.5 inches is still well below normal. 

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The Sunday system appears to be another one of these primary waves moving up the Ohio Valley and bringing warm air up here...THEN energy transfers to the coast, leaving us in the middle with light junk trying to fight a changeover to snow.

Are these the ONLY synoptic systems you can get up here, guys? Don't you dare say "only since you moved here, Tug."   Bahaha

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Synoptic hybrid events :wub: Those are the best lol

A strong cold front crossed the Lower Great Lakes from west to east 
during the day of the 19th.  The airmass was only marginally cold by 
late in the day on the 19th, with lake effect rain mixed with wet 
snow developing off Lake Erie near Buffalo, changing to all snow 
across the higher terrain south of the city during the evening.  The 
heavier snow did not develop until a secondary cold front crossed 
the area on the morning of the 20th, bringing a strong push of 
arctic air into the region.  A strong area of low pressure developed 
over New England on the 20th and moved very slowly north into 
southern Quebec on the 21st.  Abundant moisture and lift associated 
with the strong low pressure system produced widespread light to 
moderate snow across much of the region from the Genesee Valley into 
Central and Northern New York.

The close proximity of the strong low and the associated deep 
moisture and lift made this a hybrid lake effect snow event.  Lake 
enhanced snow covered a much larger area than in our typical lake 
effect snow events that feature very narrow bands of heavy snow.  
The most persistent lake enhanced snow was found east and southeast 
of Lake Ontario, with storm totals of over one foot in a large area 
from Rochester eastward to the Tug Hill region and Watertown.  
Upstream connections to lake effect snow off Georgian Bay also 
enhanced snowfall across parts of Central NY.  Very persistent 
upslope flow into the higher terrain of the Tug Hill Plateau played 
a critical role in producing the highest totals from this event, 
with a few locations seeing 3 to 4+ feet of snow over a 3 day 
period.  This event also produced unusually heavy amounts of lake 
effect snow outside of our area across the Finger Lakes and Southern 
Tier.  The Binghamton airport and several other locations in the 
Finger Lakes and Syracuse area received over 2 feet of snow over the 
3 day period.
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17 minutes ago, CNY_WX said:
Stations:
NY-OG-28 
Brewerton 1.5 ESE 
Lat: 43.228345 
Lon: -76.113248 
* indicates Multi-Day Accumulation Report
Station               NY-OG-28
Date Precip in. Snowfall in. Snowfall SWE in. Total Snow Depth in. Total SWE in.
12/01/2020   0.38 0.0 NA NA NA
12/02/2020   0.11 0.7 NA NA NA
12/03/2020   0.08 1.4 NA NA NA
12/04/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/05/2020   0.12 0.0 NA NA NA
12/06/2020   0.02 0.1 NA NA NA
12/07/2020   -- -- -- -- --
12/08/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/09/2020   0.08 0.8 NA NA NA
12/10/2020   0.20 0.7 NA NA NA
12/11/2020   0.02 0.0 NA NA NA
12/12/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/13/2020   T 0.0 NA NA NA
12/14/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/15/2020   0.03 0.3 NA NA NA
12/16/2020   -- -- -- -- --
12/17/2020   0.36 3.4 NA NA NA
12/18/2020   0.01 0.1 NA NA NA
12/19/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/20/2020   0.02 0.3 NA NA NA
12/21/2020   0.10 0.2 NA NA NA
12/22/2020   0.04 0.0 NA NA NA
12/23/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/24/2020   0.00 0.0 NA NA NA
12/25/2020   1.17 0.0 NA NA NA
12/26/2020   0.10 0.3 NA NA NA
12/27/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/28/2020   0.01 T NA NA NA
12/29/2020   NA 13.2 NA NA NA
12/30/2020   T T NA NA NA
12/31/2020   0.08 0.0 NA NA NA
Totals :  2.93 in. 21.5 in. 0.00 in. -- --

The lake effect the other night somewhat saved the month. 21.5 inches is still well below normal. 

January is definitely going to be a below average snowfall month unless the last 2 weeks we get 2-3 feet. 

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14 minutes ago, wolfie09 said:

Synoptic hybrid events :wub: Those are the best lol


A strong cold front crossed the Lower Great Lakes from west to east 
during the day of the 19th.  The airmass was only marginally cold by 
late in the day on the 19th, with lake effect rain mixed with wet 
snow developing off Lake Erie near Buffalo, changing to all snow 
across the higher terrain south of the city during the evening.  The 
heavier snow did not develop until a secondary cold front crossed 
the area on the morning of the 20th, bringing a strong push of 
arctic air into the region.  A strong area of low pressure developed 
over New England on the 20th and moved very slowly north into 
southern Quebec on the 21st.  Abundant moisture and lift associated 
with the strong low pressure system produced widespread light to 
moderate snow across much of the region from the Genesee Valley into 
Central and Northern New York.

The close proximity of the strong low and the associated deep 
moisture and lift made this a hybrid lake effect snow event.  Lake 
enhanced snow covered a much larger area than in our typical lake 
effect snow events that feature very narrow bands of heavy snow.  
The most persistent lake enhanced snow was found east and southeast 
of Lake Ontario, with storm totals of over one foot in a large area 
from Rochester eastward to the Tug Hill region and Watertown.  
Upstream connections to lake effect snow off Georgian Bay also 
enhanced snowfall across parts of Central NY.  Very persistent 
upslope flow into the higher terrain of the Tug Hill Plateau played 
a critical role in producing the highest totals from this event, 
with a few locations seeing 3 to 4+ feet of snow over a 3 day 
period.  This event also produced unusually heavy amounts of lake 
effect snow outside of our area across the Finger Lakes and Southern 
Tier.  The Binghamton airport and several other locations in the 
Finger Lakes and Syracuse area received over 2 feet of snow over the 
3 day period.

Super cool! Thanks for uploading the radar fro BUF also. 

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