DAYS 1-5 (FEBRUARY 18-22)
An active pattern will throw a low of unsettled weather at our region over the next several days, on a wavering border between cold air in Canada and mild Pacific air residing in a large part of the eastern US. Today’s event is a fairly narrow band of precipitation coming along the boundary with the help of a weak wave of low pressure. It’s mild enough that we should see it start as rain then shift toward sleet to snow, but it will be in a fairly narrow band that may leave parts of the Merrimack Valley, northeastern MA, and southern NH out of most of it, with the steadier precipitation focused to the southwest of Boston. As for snowfall accumulation, I’m not looking for much, maybe up to an inch or two where it snows longest / steadiest, which I think will stretch from Boston’s southwestern suburbs west northwestward across central MA. The conveyor belt of moisture goes dry by late evening when drier air moves in, and this will last through Thursday which will be a fairly decent day. And then we wait for the next batch of moisture to come out way with another low pressure area, this one slightly more organized than its predecessor. Its precipitation area will be a little more widespread and cross the region during Friday afternoon and night with a variety of precipitation, favoring rain / mix to the south and mix / snow to the north. This time I favor up to a few inches of snow accumulation favoring north central MA into southern NH, but will refine those details over the next 48 hours. Behind this one can come some lingering snow showers into Saturday morning which may be formidable enough for some minor additional accumulation in some areas. The next one to watch has been shown to have a lot more potential to be a significant winter storm on a lot of guidance – a solution that I have doubted quite a bit, but don’t reject 100%. Watching that. However, how I think it plays out is based on the behavior of a regional blocking to our west and northwest by then – high pressure over southern Hudson Bay of Canada and elongated upper low pressure over the Great Lakes. I believe this forces the disturbance fueling the next system to move a little more quickly to the east and a little further south, igniting low pressure along the southern Mid Atlantic Coast early Sunday which then moves east northeastward, passing south of New England Sunday night. My early idea on this system is that while it does start to intensify fairly quickly, it does so a little more slowly than many model depictions indicate and with a track far enough south that southern portions of our region are side-swiped by the main precipitation area (probably snow as it should be cold enough) and the remainder of the region sees lighter snowfall from a pressure weakness between that storm and the aforementioned upper low which will be sliding eastward across northern New England by that time. I’ll continue to monitor this threat.
TODAY: Cloudy. Areas of fog into mid morning. Precipitation arrives west to east midday-afternoon as mainly rain then trending to sleet and snow later in northern areas, with greatest chance of steadier precipitation central and east central MA southward, less chance in NH. Highs 33-40. Wind N to NE up to 10 MPH.
TONIGHT: Cloudy. Mix/snow probable evening with snow accumulation of a coating to 1 inch, except up to 2 inches possible higher elevations mainly central and south central MA. Precipitation ends and clouds break overnight. Watch for icy spots on untreated surfaces. Lows 28-35. Wind N to NE up to 10 MPH.
THURSDAY: Sun/cloud mix. Highs 35-42. Wind variable up to 10 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT: Clouding up. Lows 28-35. Wind variable up to 10 MPH.
FRIDAY: Cloudy. Snow/mix/rain arrives midday-afternoon. Highs 35-42. Wind variable to NE up to 10 MPH.
FRIDAY NIGHT: Cloudy with mix/snow, tapering off overnight. Early call on snow accumulating for this event less 1 to 3 inches except under 1 inch toward the South Coast. Lows 28-35. Wind NE to N 5-15 MPH.
SATURDAY: Mostly cloudy with scattered snow showers until midday, then partial sunshine. Highs 33-40. Wind N 5-15 MPH.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 23-30. Wind N under 10 MPH.
SUNDAY: Cloudy. Chance of snow. Highs 30-37. Wind NE 5-15 MPH except 15-25 MPH Cape Cod.
DAYS 6-10 (FEBRUARY 23-27)
There maybe lingering early snow February 23 in southeastern areas, otherwise dry weather into the middle of next week before the next unsettled weather threat appears in the February 26-27 timeframe. Temperatures near to below normal.
DAYS 11-15 (FEBRUARY 28 – MARCH 4)
Another threat of wintry weather exists around the start of March with fair weather before and again after. Temperatures mostly below normal.