DAYS 1-5 (JANUARY 3-7)
A disturbance will send some clouds through the region this morning, but it will clear out behind it this afternoon with more sunshine. Heavy frost is noted again, like yesterday, in many areas early today so allow a few extra minutes to scrape or defrost your car window if you have to drive early! Clouds return later today into Thursday as one low pressure system passes offshore and a cold front swings through the region from the northwest. The latter may produce a brief rain or snow shower Thursday through midday but otherwise it remains dry for most areas. High pressure brings dry, chilly weather late in the week. Over the weekend we eye low pressure approaching our region, and there is still quite a bit of detail to figure out. With this system at day 5 and still some disagreement and inconsistency in the guidance we use to try to help forecast it, I’m not really going to make any changes in my thoughts on it from yesterday, as the overall set-up looks the same to me. We should see our first widespread snowfall of the season, with some accumulation to talk about, but it may not start as snow or stay as snow for everybody. Synoptically speaking, I do expect somewhat elongated low pressure to be a little too far south to really nail the region, but close enough to produce a good shield of precipitation. Details will come into focus with time, but for now just prepare for the possibility of a messy / wintry end to the weekend.
TODAY: Limited morning sun with lots of high level clouds moving through. Brighter afternoon sun. Highs 37-44. Wind W 5-15 MPH.
TONIGHT: Increasing clouds. Lows 22-29. Wind W up to 10 MPH.
THURSDAY: Mostly cloudy with a chance of a rain or snow showers through early afternoon, then increasing sun. Highs 36-43. Wind variable 5-15 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT: Clearing. Lows 22-29. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
FRIDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 33-40. Wind NW 5-15 MPH.
FRIDAY NIGHT: Clear. Lows 17-24. Wind N under 10 MPH.
SATURDAY: Sunshine followed by increasing clouds. Highs 33-40. Wind N up to 10 MPH.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Clouds thicken. Snow arrives overnight but may start as mix/rain some coastal areas. Lows 28-35. Wind NE 5-15 MPH.
SUNDAY: Overcast with snow likely except snow or rain coastal locations. Highs 33-40. Wind E 10-20 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (JANUARY 8-12)
Dry January 8. Next window of opportunity for storminess is later January 9 into January 10. Early feeling on this is low pressure tracking west of New England but some variety of precipitation with cold air around to start before it becomes a mainly rain event. Obviously too far for any further detail and will monitor. Dry weather follows, but next storm may approach by the end of the period in an active pattern.
DAYS 11-15 (JANUARY 13-17)
Storm threat window January 13-14. Dry weather follows. Temperatures variable, mostly near to a little above normal.