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White Christmas Miracle? December 23-24th


Baroclinic Zone
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1 hour ago, Great Snow 1717 said:

At one time I had family in the Fort Kent and Caribou areas. One of my uncles said in all the years he lived in Caribou there was only one school closing  that he could recall and that was because the school bus doors were frozen and could not be open

That's a new one for me.  The single full day's closing in FK was due to a busted forecast.  Folks went to bed that February evening expecting the 1-3" that was forecast and they wouldn't even bother running the plows for that.  Then we got 18" in 9 hours and by the time roads and especially parking lots were cleared, the day would be shot anyway.
The half day came 6 week later, March 14-15, 1984.  Forecast was 6-12", the 6" new had fallen by sunrise with moderate snow - no cancelling for that.  By late morning the new snow was 14" with 3"/hr rate, so the buses loaded up at noon and all of them made their runs with little problem.  You've probably been on Rt 11 between Portage and FK so you're familiar with the hills.  CAR recorded 29.0", I had 26.5" (Biggest I've seen) and FK 24", but they measure 1/day at 7 AM, 6-8 hours after accum ended.

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2 minutes ago, tamarack said:

That's a new one for me.  The single full day's closing in FK was due to a busted forecast.  Folks went to bed that February evening expecting the 1-3" that was forecast and they wouldn't even bother running the plows for that.  Then we got 18" in 9 hours and by the time roads and especially parking lots were cleared, the day would be shot anyway.
The half day came 6 week later, March 14-15, 1984.  Forecast was 6-12", the 6" new had fallen by sunrise with moderate snow - no cancelling for that.  By late morning the new snow was 14" with 3"/hr rate, so the buses loaded up at noon and all of them made their runs with little problem.  You've probably been on Rt 11 between Portage and FK so you're familiar with the hills.  CAR recorded 29.0", I had 26.5" (Biggest I've seen) and FK 24", but they measure 1/day at 7 AM, 6-8 hours after accum ended.

My uncle always told me that I did not know what REAL WINTER was like...lol

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GYX has upped my p/c

Afternoon
Snow likely, mainly after 5pm. Cloudy, with a high near 32. East wind around 5 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. Total daytime snow accumulation of less than one inch possible.
Tonight
Snow. The snow could be heavy at times. Low around 27. East wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 6 to 10 inches possible.
Wednesday
Snow, mainly before noon. High near 30. North wind 5 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90%. New snow accumulation of 2 to 4 inches possible.
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Fun times.

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TONIGHT/...
Christmas comes early for snow lovers as a Norlun trough
impacts Maine and New Hampshire tonight. Snow continues to
spread from west to east during the late afternoon and evening
hours. By late this evening and through the overnight hours, an
inverted trough is expected to become stationary across the
MidCoast, likely reaching westward into Casco Bay. This serves
as a focus for heavy snowfall overnight, with high ratios and
ideal dendritic growth conditions supporting higher snow
totals.

With this update, confidence has increased in much of the
MidCoast experiencing the heavy snowfall, which likely reaches
into the western Maine mountains and into the eastern Whites.
Winter storms warnings have been expanded another tier of zones
inland, where high ratios should help support higher totals.

Closer to the coast, high ratio and fluffy snow is still
expected, but surface temperatures around freezing likely cause
the snow to become a bit stickier and settle more once it`s on
the ground. In all these areas, 6-12 inches of snow is expected.
Locally higher amounts are possible, and would most likely
occur just back from the coast where surface temps in the 20s
limit settling, and in areas of increased elevations, even if
only by a few hundred feet. The heaviest snowfall rates are
expected through the overnight hours, with 1-3 in/hr at times in
the heavier snow bands. Reduced visibility and difficult travel
conditions are expected overnight.


&&

.SHORT TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/...
Snow continues into the morning hours through much of Maine.
Heavy snowfall rates of 1-3 in/hr continue into the early
morning commute along the coast, and then ease through the late
morning and early afternoon hours. Winds increase toward the end
of the snowfall event, with gusts of 20-30 mph likely to cause
some blowing and drifting snow into the afternoon hours
tomorrow. Temperatures also fall on the backside of the system,
with temps spending most of the day in the 20s.

Temperatures fall into the teens across most of the region for
Christmas Eve. Then, clouds begin to move in overnight as the
next shortwave moves in on northwesterly flow. Snow showers
spread southeastward after midnight, likely reaching into
central locations by daybreak on Christmas morning. Snowfall
amounts from this would remain light, but a coating to an inch
of snow is possible by daybreak across the mountains and
foothills.
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That inverted trough is gonna separate the marine air from the cold air over the land that’s in the lower mid 20s. Wherever that coastal front sort of set up in pivot that’s where the high totals are gonna be just in a very small area but that small area could get absolutely pummeled.

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53 minutes ago, Damage In Tolland said:

Radar filling in over ENY and W CT heading East Let’s see what the afternoon and evening bring 

I am on the edge of my seat in anticipation...
 

Tonight
Rain and snow likely, mainly before 9pm. Patchy fog before 3am. Otherwise, mostly cloudy, with a low around 31. Calm wind becoming west 5 to 7 mph after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 21 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New snow accumulation of less than a half inch possible.
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