DAYS 1-5 (NOVEMBER 30 – DECEMBER 4)
Last day of November! Here comes another weather system in a month that’s seen quite a few pass by, but a lack of larger storm events. This is no different. A low pressure system moves quickly through the Great Lakes and into southeastern Canada. Its warm front is going by our region this morning with a blanket of mid level clouds, but some snowfall being generated by the front is passing north and west of our area (WHW) as was expected to happen. It’s the cold front trailing the low that will bring us a round or two of rain showers from later this afternoon into this evening as it sweeps across the region from west to east. And then we welcome December with a chilly, blustery day on Monday, but with dry conditions. This sets the stage for our next “weather system” – a much talked about system coming our way from the southwest on Tuesday. As usual, guidance has been all over the place in its array of simulations repeatedly run on the family of models we have access to, for better or for worse, adding a lot of noise to the information stream, but what really counts is what this system is going to actually do to our region. This is my best educated guess: This storm threat is born of 2 “pieces of energy”. The first one is a trough swinging through the Ohio Valley toward the Northeast. The second is a wave of low pressure from the Gulf, moving across the Southeast, with a low pressure area taking shape off the North Carolina Coast. These 2 systems would have to fully merge before a stronger storm could result, and that won’t be happening until they are east of our longitude. What we get is a system that is the result of the process of the merger. Most of our moisture is actually going to come from the northern system, with minor infusion from the southern one. The track of the low associated with the southern system is going to be pretty far off our coast as it goes by, and while it will be strengthening, it’s not doing so at such a rate that helps draw in colder air. We also will lack a cold high to the north, which in the progressive nature of the pattern will be sliding away through Atlantic Canada as what remains of the northern system progresses east northeastward. Despite the track pretty far south, we will be in the circulation of the newer storm, which as you know at this time of year is going to pull ocean-warmed air into the coastal plain. Also, this will be a fairly short-duration event – from about mid morning to mid evening Tuesday – approximately 12 hours. Putting all this together, we’re looking at greatest chances for accumulating snow that you have to perform snow removal for outside of the I-95 belt – favoring higher elevations of southern NH and central MA, while chances for that kind of snowfall drop off rapidly the further east and south you go, in favor of a rain event – which could start as mix/snow and end as mix/snow for some depending on the precipitation and temperature profile as the system comes through. There will be colder air coming in right behind the system, so icing up of untreated surfaces will be a concern by the early hours of Wednesday. Wednesday’s weather will be dry, chilly, and breezy behind the system. A cold front is expected to cross the region on Thursday from northwest to southeast, bringing the chance of rain and snow showers. I’ll look a little more closely at that for timing and rain showers vs. snow showers in the next update.
TODAY: Mostly cloudy. Rain showers likely west to east by late-day. Highs 45-52. Wind S 5-15 MPH.
TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy with rain showers likely in the evening. Partly cloudy overnight. Lows 30-37. Wind shifting to W 10-20 MPH, higher gusts.
MONDAY: Sun/cloud mix. Highs 38-45. Wind W 10-20 MPH, higher gusts.
MONDAY NIGHT: Clouding up. Lows 22-29. Wind N up to 10 MPH.
TUESDAY: Overcast. Precipitation arrives prior to midday north and west of Boston, around midday Boston southward – snow to potential mix I-495 to I-90 north and west, snow/mix to rain I-95 belt, mainly rain but can start as brief mix Boston south. Highs 33-40 except 40-47 Cape Cod / Islands. Wind NE 5-15 MPH.
TUESDAY NIGHT: Precipitation ending followed by overnight clearing. Expected snow totals generally a trace to 1 inch I-95 belt with closest to 1 inch most likely inland, 1 to 3 inches interior southern NH and I-495 / I-90 region west from I-495 westward, 3 to 6 inches higher elevations Worcester County to interior southern NH, with a slight chance of isolated 6+ amounts at highest elevations. Lows 22-30. Wind shifting to NW 5-15 MPH.
WEDNESDAY: Sunny to partly cloudy. Highs 32-39. Wind NW 15-25 MPH.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear. Lows 22-29. Wind SW 5-15 MPH.
THURSDAY: Variably cloudy. Chance of rain and snow showers. Highs 37-44. Wind SW 10-20 MPH shifting to NW.
DAYS 6-10 (DECEMBER 5-9)
With a somewhat active jet stream pattern (doesn’t mean all hits here) it is somewhat difficult to time unsettled weather threats, but eyeing late December 5 to early December 6, and December 7 as potential unsettled time frames. No solid indications of major storminess and too early to determine any precipitation types / transitions. Overall temperature pattern favors near to slightly below normal.
DAYS 11-15 (DECEMBER 10-14)
Colder pattern may transition to a little milder heading toward mid month as upper air pattern shifts somewhat. A couple of precipitation threat windows exist in this time frame with fine-tuning to come.