4:00AM
UPCOMING BLOG POSTS
As many of you know, this year will mark the 40th anniversary of the Great Blizzard of 1978. But that was not the only remarkable event of that dynamic winter. The weather pattern leading up to it was very active and, to a 10 year old, quite memorable. A little later this month I will create a special blog post with a look back through my 10 year old eyes at the month of January 1978, as it just so happened that I began my weather diary on January 1 of that year. Of course I will make a similar post about the big storm itself as we get closer to its anniversary in early February.
DAYS 1-5 (JANUARY 12-16)
The weather pattern during the next 5-days will also be fairly dynamic and active and it will start with a very mild day today, in stark contrast to recent extreme cold. We’ll be in an area of warmth between offshore high pressure and a sharp cold front approaching from the west. My concern in the last few days included the threat of significant icing as this cold air arrived during Saturday, and the arrival of that cold will be rather sudden when it does occur with the passage of that cold front. However, the latest information suggest that the wave of low pressure that I thought would form a little sooner and pass south of New England will form near New York City Saturday morning just as the front is slicing across the region. The timing of the front is just slow enough and the low’s development just so that it will pull most of the meaningful precipitation out of a good portion of southern New England just before the coldest air pours in, but there should be spotty precipitation around so that what rain is falling will become freezing rain then sleet from northwest to southeast from late morning to early afternoon. Beyond this, only some low level moisture will be left behind and that will be good for only a little freezing or frozen drizzle and spotty very light snow heading from later Saturday afternoon through Saturday night. For the Patriots home playoff game, expect temperatures falling from the 20s to the upper 10s during the course of the game with tailgaters experiencing no more than a touch of frozen drizzle drops or light snow grains. The greater danger will be from puddles and standing water and any remaining snow on the ground that will have frozen solid by the end of the day through the night. So be cautions walking or driving on untreated surfaces! The orientation of high pressure should allow just enough drying for partial sun Sunday except clouds will dominate Cape Cod and some bands of light ocean-effect snow may develop. The air flow is expected to bend a little more to become more northeast across coastal NH, eastern MA, and down into RI for some periods of ocean-effect snow, albeit light, during the MLK Jr. Day holiday on Monday. The next disturbance will approach from the west Tuesday with cold air in place and bring the chance of additional snowfall by later in the day, based on current expecting timing.
TODAY: Mainly cloudy. Areas of fog. Scattered rain showers. Highs 48-55 Cape Cod and South Coast, 56-62 elsewhere. Wind S 10-20 MPH and gusty.
TONIGHT: Cloudy. Areas of fog. A period of widespread rain showers, some heavy, along with a chance of thunderstorms. Temperatures steady 48-62 evening. Overnight lows 48-55. Wind S 15-25 MPH, gusts as high as 40 MPH interior and 50 MPH coastal areas.
SATURDAY: Overcast. Areas of fog early. Another period of widespread rain showers, some heavy, and a chance of thunderstorms early to mid morning tapering off to scattered late morning through early afternoon but transitioning to freezing rain showers and sleet showers from northwest to southeast during this. Spotty light freezing drizzle, frozen drizzle, and very light snow grains mid afternoon on. Temperatures 48-55 early then falling rapidly through the 40s and 30s reaching the upper to middle 20s by the end of the day. Wind SW 15-35 MPH and gusty southeastern MA and variable 5-15 MPH with higher gusts elsewhere during the morning, shifting to NW to N 10-20 MPH with higher gusts from northwest to southeast across the region from late morning on.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Overcast evening with patchy frozen drizzle and very light snow grains. Mostly cloudy overnight. Lows 15-22. Wind N 10-20 MPH. Wind chill below 10 at times.
SUNDAY: Partly sunny except mostly cloudy with episodic snow showers Cape Cod with minor accumulation possible. Highs 25-32. Wind N to NE 5-15 MPH, higher gusts across Cape Cod.
MONDAY – MLK JR DAY: Mostly cloudy. Chance of snow showers coastal NH, eastern MA, and RI. Lows from the lower to middle 20s. Highs from the upper 20s to lower 30s.
TUESDAY: Cloudy. Chance of snow late day or night. Lows from the upper 10s to lower 20s. Highs from the upper 20s to lower 30s.
DAYS 6-10 (JANUARY 17-21)
Depending on the evolution and movement of low pressure, a snow/mix threat will exist January 17 and possibly into January 18 before drier weather arrives for the middle and end of the period. Temperatures below normal but moderate toward the end of the period.
DAYS 11-15 (JANUARY 22-26)
Expecting somewhat milder weather overall with a precipitation threat early in the period then fair weather following this.