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january 3rd potential coastal grazer


forkyfork
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My hopes are for a coating to a inch here locally. Would be nice to get with the artic airmass coming in. DCA towards acy is going to get crushed! Good for them 

Right? Of course I like a good storm, but I can’t have one all of the time. Let someone else enjoy it. I’m sure there are people down the shore that have missed out recently. I’ve had a ton of really good ones for years.

The last big miss was February 2010? So what. That’s 12 years now. Not a bad track record.


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3 minutes ago, North and West said:


Right? Of course I like a good storm, but I can’t have one all of the time. Let someone else enjoy it. I’m sure there are people down the shore that have missed out recently. I’ve had a ton of really good ones for years.

The last big miss was February 2010? So what. That’s 12 years now. Not a bad track record.


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Yeah definitely. They can have it.

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Looking for the reasoning between the GFSs northward expansion of the precip field, I note a vortmax at H5 held back a bit in the evolution from the trough axis. I think that this keeps mid level confluence from pinching down across the northern mid-Atlantic. I think that's the big difference between the GFS and NAM solution. Also note that Jetstream aloft is unimpressive on all modelling, lending credence to the dryer solutions. 

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14 minutes ago, coastalplainsnowman said:

Why not? If I almost get hit by a car, and also was not expecting to be hit by the car, is that not still a miss?

It's flawed logic.  Every Atlantic hurricane that fails to make landfall is a near miss for the Northeast? Wish casting gone wrong... 

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34 minutes ago, Blizzardo said:

And it'll take a bit for the ground to catch up. Not saying all is lost but its going to have to thump in the beginning.  

If it comes down heavy from the start it won’t have any issue accumulating at all. 

Good for DC to Atlantic City but suppression sucks. And this definitely will be one where it goes from all out heavy snow to flurries in 50 miles or less. Models are showing the brutal cutoff and I believe it. Dry air is pushing down as well. 

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5 minutes ago, pstar3182 said:

It's flawed logic.  Every Atlantic hurricane that fails to make landfall is a near miss for the Northeast? Wish casting gone wrong... 

what? Thats not how this works. The storm is a close miss because its…ready for this…almost hitting us. Not sure what the debate is here.

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16 minutes ago, EasternLI said:

Interesting reply to that tweet. Regarding the euro sounding. Was wondering about this. 

 


Yeah, we’ll need a further north track like the Euro to moisten up the lower layers. The 18z hi res NAM still further south. But it shares the very dry lower layer. This may come down to nowcast time.

16B3812F-132D-445A-B760-B08952900297.thumb.png.c176509eb305d739acaf49b0940b93e6.png

 

 

 

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11 minutes ago, psv88 said:

Agree. Not having the NAM in a setup like this gives me pause. The mesos are all south...which is why im not expecting much

Best to go into this not expecting much. Rates will likely be light which means mostly a grass and car topper. Obviously this isn’t a true repeat of feb 5/6 10 but the net results are similar. 

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1 minute ago, MJO812 said:

I will he happy with 1-3 inches 

Big difference between 1 and 3 inches. My guess is you'd be happy with 3 and a little disappointed with 1. I won't be satisfied with anything less than 4, but I would still be excited by a dusting. I expect nothing.

 

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OKX AFD has it summed up good (at least I think so) as of their 4:48pm update:

All attention is then turned to the approaching low pressure system.
This low will form along a frontal boundary over the southeastern
CONUS late tonight as a shortwave trough digs through the Southern
Plains. It will then track northeastward and pass just to our south
and east. 12z guidance has continued to show the area now being on
the far northern edge of the precipitation shield. This is a
similar solution to what the GFS has been showing for the past
several days. Given the cold air that will work into the area
overnight tonight, and the low being far enough to our south and
east, any precip that does fall over the area will be in the
form of snow. Uncertainty still remains, especially given some
dry air that needs to be overcome in the midlevels.

This will overall be a minor light snow event. Snowfall totals
are expected to be greatest over eastern Long Island, where 1-2
inches are possible. Farther west over northeastern NJ and NYC
up to an inch is possible. Snow totals drop off farther north,
with the CT coast and southern portions of the Lower Hudson
Valley likely seeing less than an inch and far northern
locations staying dry. Trends in track will need to be monitored
given the nature of the tight gradient in QPF and snowfall.

Timing of the event may be the biggest concern. Snow starts in the
early morning hours on Monday and will continue through the evening.
This could impact the morning commute and potentially the evening
commute for eastern Long Island. With temperatures dropping quickly
overnight tonight to below freezing, snow is expected to stick right
away. Given the uncertainty that surrounds this system, and current
light snowfall totals, have decided to hold off on any headlines
over our area in collaboration with neighboring offices. Subsequent
shifts will have to monitor new guidance and a Winter Weather
Advisory may be possible for eastern Long Island.

The area will likely be completely dry after 7PM and high pressure
will build in behind the departing low. Skies clear quickly from
west to east in the late evening and a cold night is expected. Winds
will also be decreasing overnight as the pressure gradient relaxes,
so there may be several hours of good radiational cooling
conditions. This will be the case especially if any areas have a
fresh snow cover. Lows Monday night are currently forecast to be in
the low teens across the interior and the LI Pine Barrens, mid teens
to low 20s elsewhere.
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38 minutes ago, psv88 said:

Agree. Not having the NAM in a setup like this gives me pause. The mesos are all south...which is why im not expecting much

Yep. Up where we are this likely won’t be a big deal if anything at all. Sometimes models over correct NW as well at this stage so it wouldn’t surprise me if it edged back SE a little to something like the Nam. 

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23 minutes ago, jm1220 said:

Yep. Up where we are this likely won’t be a big deal if anything at all. Sometimes models over correct NW as well at this stage so it wouldn’t surprise me if it edged back SE a little to something like the Nam. 

Or maybe the Nam is late to the table

I should be good for an inch or two but it will be tough seeing places to my south seeing alot of snow

 

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