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January 16-18th: Rolling the dice


SnowenOutThere
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7 minutes ago, snowfan said:

Really don't see anything supporting the WWA esp west of the bay or the earlier map showing places west of the bay getting 2-4. 

Looks like it's driven by forcing at 850mb swinging thru.  Probably gonna be frozen, but shorter duration west of 15.  One of those forecasts where mets are put to the test.

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*shrugs*

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Baltimore MD/Washington DC
936 PM EST Sat Jan 17 2026

.WHAT HAS CHANGED...
Winter Weather Advisory has been expanded further to the
south and west to include much of the eastern portions of
central Maryland, all of Northeast Maryland including the city
of Baltimore, Washington D.C. and the I-95 corridor into
southeastern Prince William County in Virginia. A prolonged
period from Sunday night through Tuesday night looks to be very
cold. Wind chill values remain somewhat unchanged and a little
warmer than previously anticipated.

&&

.KEY MESSAGES...
- 1) Low pressure will ride along a frontal boundary later
  tonight and during the day Sunday. A mix of rain and snow will
  transition to all snow.

- 2) Very cold conditions are expected over the region Monday
  night through Tuesday night, with below normal temperatures
  continuing through the remainder of the week.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
KEY MESSAGE 1...Low pressure will ride along a frontal boundary
later tonight and during the day Sunday. A mix rain and snow
will transition to all snow.

A front bisecting the region will be the focal zone of an area
of low pressure that will develop along it and move toward the
east as the front slides to the south and east. Many locations
will be in the middle to upper 30s in the areas that are
expected to encounter accumulating snow late tonight and Sunday.
As we approach daybreak Sunday morning, these temperatures will
slowly drop a degree every hour or two to reach close to or
below the freezing mark as precipitation begins. A mix of rain
and snow could start between 4am and 6am in eastern Maryland and
eastern Virginia, before the atmosphere cools down evenmore with
falling precipitation. Thus, the cold atmosphere will support
accumulating snowfall through much of the day Sunday.

East of I-95, more precipitation is expected, but temperatures
may be slightly above freezing for a large part of the event,
and precipitation may even be rain for a while. The best
potential for cold air and higher precipitation totals to
overlap appears to be central and northeastern Maryland,
northeastern Virginia. The model trend has been bringing
snowfall farther to the northwest; thus, resulting in the
potential for accumulating snowfall of 1 to 3 inches instead of
a dusting to near an inch. The Winter Weather Advisory previous
issued has been expanded to the west, southwest and south. Much
of central Maryland, far northeast Virginia, Baltimore and
Washington DC has been included. End time for the precipitation
could be pretty early in the day closer to and west of the Blue
Ridge. How long the precipitation lasts closer to the Chesapeake
Bay will depend on the western extent of the second frontal
wave. In any event, dry conditions look likely by mid Sunday
evening. Temperatures from the mid teens to mid 20s are expected
Sunday night, so any residual moisture or slush could refreeze.
 
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13 minutes ago, yoda said:

*shrugs*

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Baltimore MD/Washington DC
936 PM EST Sat Jan 17 2026

.WHAT HAS CHANGED...
Winter Weather Advisory has been expanded further to the
south and west to include much of the eastern portions of
central Maryland, all of Northeast Maryland including the city
of Baltimore, Washington D.C. and the I-95 corridor into
southeastern Prince William County in Virginia. A prolonged
period from Sunday night through Tuesday night looks to be very
cold. Wind chill values remain somewhat unchanged and a little
warmer than previously anticipated.

&&

.KEY MESSAGES...
- 1) Low pressure will ride along a frontal boundary later
  tonight and during the day Sunday. A mix of rain and snow will
  transition to all snow.

- 2) Very cold conditions are expected over the region Monday
  night through Tuesday night, with below normal temperatures
  continuing through the remainder of the week.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
KEY MESSAGE 1...Low pressure will ride along a frontal boundary
later tonight and during the day Sunday. A mix rain and snow
will transition to all snow.

A front bisecting the region will be the focal zone of an area
of low pressure that will develop along it and move toward the
east as the front slides to the south and east. Many locations
will be in the middle to upper 30s in the areas that are
expected to encounter accumulating snow late tonight and Sunday.
As we approach daybreak Sunday morning, these temperatures will
slowly drop a degree every hour or two to reach close to or
below the freezing mark as precipitation begins. A mix of rain
and snow could start between 4am and 6am in eastern Maryland and
eastern Virginia, before the atmosphere cools down evenmore with
falling precipitation. Thus, the cold atmosphere will support
accumulating snowfall through much of the day Sunday.

East of I-95, more precipitation is expected, but temperatures
may be slightly above freezing for a large part of the event,
and precipitation may even be rain for a while. The best
potential for cold air and higher precipitation totals to
overlap appears to be central and northeastern Maryland,
northeastern Virginia. The model trend has been bringing
snowfall farther to the northwest; thus, resulting in the
potential for accumulating snowfall of 1 to 3 inches instead of
a dusting to near an inch. The Winter Weather Advisory previous
issued has been expanded to the west, southwest and south. Much
of central Maryland, far northeast Virginia, Baltimore and
Washington DC has been included. End time for the precipitation
could be pretty early in the day closer to and west of the Blue
Ridge. How long the precipitation lasts closer to the Chesapeake
Bay will depend on the western extent of the second frontal
wave. In any event, dry conditions look likely by mid Sunday
evening. Temperatures from the mid teens to mid 20s are expected
Sunday night, so any residual moisture or slush could refreeze.
 

I guess they just disregarded or didn’t even check the latest models that went warmer and cut back on snow accums. Or maybe they didn’t think the new runs were correct.

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