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Central PA Winter 25/26 Discussion and Obs


MAG5035
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A beautiful day across the area before a major snowstorm impacts some of our area starting tomorrow morning through Monday midday. With snow tomorrow we may end up having snow cover last through the entire month of February and a Top 10 all-time stretch. Snow chances begin to increase toward dawn tomorrow with the heaviest potential snow being tomorrow night into Monday morning. Temps will fall below freezing during the storm tomorrow and will not get too far from freezing both Monday and Tuesday. We see a warmup to near normal temperatures for late February with highs in the low to mid 40's by the end of the week.

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I think the trepidation some of the more mainstream outlets have in throwing out big totals is twofold:

1.  The sharp cutoff with the coastal that we all see depicted across multiple models and has been discussed at length.

2.  That whatever falls from dawn until late afternoon tomorrow may have trouble accumulating efficiently.  If we have something like 1/4" per hour rates combined with surface temps a little above freezing it is going to be difficult to build much depth.  There could be a fair amount of wasted qpf, and then we're back to eying the coastal impact come evening time and everything that comes with that (see #1 above).

Just my two cents, but I think it's fair to do some hedging on some of the bigger totals we're seeing the models spit out.  And this is to say nothing of the fact that a slight eastward shift could still be in the cards.  Lots of uncertainty but that's what makes it all "fun", I think ha.

I'm setting the bar at 6" for KMJS and letting the chips fall where they may.

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7 minutes ago, Mount Joy Snowman said:

I think the trepidation some of the more mainstream outlets have in throwing out big totals is twofold:

1.  The sharp cutoff with the coastal that we all see depicted across multiple models and has been discussed at length.

2.  That whatever falls from dawn until late afternoon tomorrow may have trouble accumulating efficiently.  If we have something like 1/4" per hour rates combined with surface temps a little above freezing it is going to be difficult to build much depth.  There could be a fair amount of wasted qpf, and then we're back to eying the coastal impact come evening time and everything that comes with that (see #1 above).

Just my two cents, but I think it's fair to do some hedging on some of the bigger totals we're seeing the models spit out.  And this is to say nothing of the fact that a slight eastward shift could still be in the cards.  Lots of uncertainty but that's what makes it all "fun", I think ha.

I'm setting the bar at 6" for KMJS and letting the chips fall where they may.

Reasonable my friend, reasonable.

Going off of the pattern, my climo and some weight to models, I'm sticking with my 3-6" idea from last evening. My boom beyond that has lowered significantly. I do agree with MU on the idea that the progressive nature will probably lead to a bit more offshore track. You mentioned my other concern...what if we don't have rates tomorrow and then largely miss the coastal?

My total goalposts are 2"-8" for my house with 3-6" the most likely outcome. That's not being negative, that's 60 years of storm, climate, pattern and instincts.

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12z GFS appears a bit wonky with its precip depiction etc so I think this may be its first run being more of a dud. At this point, Im getting away from the fine details the globals try to show since we are less than 24 hours from go-time


.

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