The Northeast Weather Blog...

Blizzard conditions Feb. 9-10...
Posted by: Zachary Labe, 20:21 GMT le 03 février 2010 +0
Most computer guidance is unanimous in a strengthening a double barrel low pressure setup redeveloping on the east coast. Climatology and past analogs support this, featuring a widespread precipitation event for the entire eastern seaboard. Due to animous blocking this will allow the storm system to affect southern areas more so than Northern New England.

Thoughts on February 5-7 Snowstorm...
A anomalous southerly flow is allowing cirrus clouds to stream overhead as 'the calm before the storm' infects the entire Middle Atlantic region. As this flow continues to increase, national water vapor loop is indicating over +4SD moisture anomalies streaming out of the Gulf of Mexico courtesy of a low pressure developing in Louisiana. As the infrared and water vapor loops take on the classic comma head approach, cloud tops continue to cool towards Texas and Louisiana noting the actual intensity of this storm system. As the low deepens below 1004mb, plumes of moisture will stream up the eastern seaboard with PWATs (precipitate waters) rising to near 1.2in across the southern Middle Atlantic. As the low pressure attempts to move northeastward, a low undergoing bombogenesis in the northern Atlantic is slow pulling away. The simple physics element of uniform polars repelling will be the example set forth by the unusual blocking scenario to the north where the low is already progged to be near 944mb. The exact displacement of this low is critical to the northern extent of the SLP (surface low pressure) track. Also to note is the correlating negative NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation) phase below -1 along with a positive PNA (Pacific/North American Pattern) and negative EPO (Eastern Pacific Oscillation) ridge. These all indicative of cyclogenesis along the eastern seaboard. Located in southern Canada is also a polar vortex, which will slowly be retrograding northeastward, but will pose critical again to the northern progression of this storm system.

By Friday morning weak dbz (virga) will likely be across southern Virginia and West Virginia as mid levels around 10000ft are indicative of RH (relative humidity) less than 40% by GFS bufkit prognostics. But shortly thereafter moisture will stream into the region with the stratiform snowshield marching slowly to the north in contrast with a weakening and departing high over northern Pennsylvania. As the SLP tracks into South Carolina Friday mid morning precipitation will be into Washington DC and southern Maryland. A weak easterly flow at the surface will allow for thermals to favor rain for those south of the Virginia/North Carolina border, but increasing inversion heights will allow cold air damming to favor severe freezing rain in the foothills of the Appalachians. By Friday late morning things begin to get interesting as the 850hPa low tracks into southern North Carolina on a east-northeast trajectory. Using the typical rule of thumb of the heavy snow axis about 100+mi north of the 850hPa low track, heavy snow will likely be across northern Virginia into Maryland as a strong convergence zone develops across the region. Increasing isentropic lifts heights will favor precipitation rates over .1/hr for standard QPF (Quantitative Precipitation Forecast). With a favorable low level jet near 60knots around 850-925mb aloft, strong vertical lift will favor frontogenesis heights increasing over Maryland and northern Virginia by early afternoon with snowfall totals already around 2-4in for parts of northern Virginia and into West Virginia. As the 700hPa low tracks through southern Kentucky, the stratiform precipitation shield will finally lift northward above the Pennsylvania I-76 turnpike by early afternoon with precipitation in the form of snow. As for temperatures during most of this event, use a simple rule of thumb... Take your wetbulb/dewpoint temperature at the onset of falling precipitation and add on 3-4F. That then will likely be the temperature for the most part during the entire system especially considering WAA (warm air advection) is confined to southern Virginia on southward.

By Friday evening, the northern extent of the precipitation shield will likely be between I-76 and I-80 with virga to the north. A strong convergence axis in northern Maine with increasing momentum transfer of air particles will favor cold air diving into the northern edge of the storm with favorable snow growth zones highlighted as followed. High resolution models are indicative of increasing dendritic growth along the Pennsylvania turnpike south to northern Maryland with H85s temperatures near (-5)-(-8)C during a majority of the event. With excellent snow growth levels around 10000ft, ratios in this region will be in the realm of 12:1 or 15:1 making for a fluffy snowfall once again. Take for instance KMDT (Middletown/Harrisburg, PA) QPF totals from December 19 at .66in, yet 8.8in of snow was officially measured. Keep in mind ratios are defined by temperatures aloft, and not boundary layer (2m-10m) temperatures. Another mesoscale feature will likely occur from Washington DC northward into northern Maryland and perhaps southern Pennsylvania with the formation of coastal/surface front which will serve as an axis for snowfall rates near 2-3in/hr. Finally the formation of a CIS/CCB band is likely towards central and northern Maryland also as a potential gravity wave forms in central Virginia along the northern right front quadrant north of the warm front as rising air parcels continue to rise and sink favoring anomalous precipitation rates. These mesoscale features will serve in isolated higher amounts of snowfall in the northern Middle Atlantic during the height of the event Friday night.

As pressure falls along the SLP track near the Virginia/North Carolina border increase to -3mb/hr, cyclogenesis will favor in a deformation axis towards Maryland and Virginia in particular adding an additional .5in of QPF that northern areas will not see in the precipitation shield. This axis will also be accompanied by strong vertical lift courtesy of the cold air covergence layer favoring mixing aloft allowing a transfer of winds to the surface with gusts over 35-40mph along the coast with blizzard thesholds being met potentially as far west as Annapolis.

As the low pulls away during the later half of Saturday, precipitation will quickly end from west to east leaving a sigificant snowfall in its wake especially over Maryland and northern Virginia into northern Delaware. The northern edge of this precipitation shield is highly uncertain with guidance recently trending to the south courtesy of anomalous blocking, so at this point those from the Pennsylvania turnpike and on northward should be playing on the conservative route. There will likely be a sharp cutoff between the horizontal lines of Indiana, Pennsylvania-Harrisburg, Pennsylvania-Allentown, Pennsylvania and Butler, Pennsylvania-Williamsport, Pennsylvania-Scranton, Pennsylvania. This exact location is yet to be determined, but guidance suggests this may even sink south especially looking at foreign models. In any case elevation and orographic lift along with higher snow ratios may favor heavy snow along and south of the Pennsylvania turnpike. The bullseye appears to be in northern Maryland from southern to central Hartford County and a country east and west of that. Isolated snow totals may be near 30-32in in this region. See more information below on snow totals. Also for those in southern Pennsylvania, watch for the slim possibility of a mesoscale band forming along the cold conveyor belt of the northern end of the precipitation shield. This sometimes is a common factor in terms of strong blocking with limited northern extent of QPF. This was noted recently from the past light to moderate snowfall that 'overperformed.' At this point the highest "bust" potential so to speak exists from Altoona to Harrisburg to Allentown to New York City. There will be sharp line between 12in and 1-2in. In any case this will be a high impact event, but fortunately the low will not be cutoff from the jet allowing for a general quick motion of the SLP out into the Atlantic with the duration of the storm only around 18hrs or so for most locations as the storm is out of here for many areas especially in Pennsylvania north of the deformation by noon. Stay tune for any updates and/or changes during the day Friday. Have a great day!!!

Radar...
Radar...

Warnings...
Warnings...

NAO...
NAO...

This is my current rain/snow line...

Farmville, Virginia - Ashland, Virginia - Warsaw, Virginia - Salisbury, Maryland - Ocean View, Delaware

*Note this line is a general estimation for precipitation type (rain vs. snow) during the height of the precipitation. As the deformation axis departs, this line will likely drop southward. Also during any intense convection correlated with a gravity wave development may favor brief periods of sleet especially towards La Plata, Maryland and the southern suburbs of Washington DC. Also south towards the Appalachians in North Carolina a major freezing rain/ice storm is likely to occur with QPF amounts in excess of .5in of pure freezing rain. North of this line by about 20mi will definitely have all snow.

Storm Reports...
COMING WHEN PRECIPITATION COMMENCES!!!

Storm Impacts...
1. Impressive mesoscale banding in northern quadrant favoring isolated snow totals up to 30in in northern Maryland.
2. High winds near 40-60knots aloft will allow for mixing to filter gusts over 35mph especially within 50mi of the coast.
3. High impact on Friday evening commute with precipitation lasting through Saturday afternoon.
4. Heavy snow (+4in) will fall from western Virginia northward into southern New York state and southern Connecticut.
5. Sharp northern QPF gradient favoring a line horizontally across Pennsylvania between Mansfield, Pennsylvania and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Snow Map...

*Note the region at the 5-9in/12in line will more likely be in the range for 8-14in. There is a high bust potential in this event considering the sharp northern cutoff, so any swing of 25mi for the surface low track will change forecasts dramatically.

Selected City Accumulations for the Northeast...
Hagerstown, MD- Heavy snow, 18-26in isolated higher amounts
Baltimore, MD- Blizzard conditions, 14-22in isolate higher amounts
Salisbury, MD- Sleet/freezing rain/snow, 3-7in
Washington, DC- Blizzard conditions, 14-22in isolated higher amounts
Wilmington, DE- Heavy snow, 12-18in
Dover, DE- Heavy snow/sleet/freezing rain, 5-12in
Trenton, NJ- Heavy snow, 6-10in
New York City, NY- Moderate snow at times, 2-5in
Poughkeepsie, NY- Cloudy with flurries, coating of snow
Binghamton, NY- Cloudy with flurries, coating of snow
Albany, NY- Cloudy with flurries
Hartford, CT- Cloudy with light snow, C-1in
Concord, NH- Cloudy
Providence, RI- Cloudy
Worcester, MA- Cloudy
Boston, MA- Cloudy
Nantucket, MA- Cloudy with light snow, C-3in
Hyannis, MA- Cloudy with light snow, C-3in
Portland, ME- Mostly cloudy
Bangor, ME- Partly cloudy
"Subject to Change"

Model Analysis
Computer model mayhem can best be describing this entire scenario with striking differences for the northern edge of the QPF shield. The GFS/ECMWF combo seems to have the best consistency, but the NAM/ETA/MM5 seem a good deal further south highlighting strong confluence to the north. For now I took a general 1.0in QPF line from Pittsburgh to Harrisburg to Reading with 2.0in QPF along the Mason-Dixon line. This fits well with local SREFs except for a bit of tweaking. The biggest concern is the NAM and GGEM runs, but for now the NAM seems to have have some initiating issues illustrating 5 vortices of energy at the height of the storm indicative of QPF problems. It also has a east-southeast trajectory at one point which is suspicious to say the least. The GFS seems to have a better hold on the system, but looking back at similarities in the December 19th event, the GFS did have the precipitation shield well too far northwest with the NAM scoring on the chalkboard so this arises some concern. In any case high resolution models for the 0z cycle will be interesting, but probably siding more towards the NAM. I also took my .1in line about as far north as KUNV with little QPF towards IPT. In any case this event is marginal in terms of confidency so stay tuned to the latest.

After the storm...
Interesting potential lies ahead in the medium and long range as the AO (Arctic Oscillation) continues to be well below normal negative values diving once again into off the charts territory. With a similar negative AO oriention I expect a constant feed of cold Canadian air into the northern half of the United States. With above normal geopotential heights over the northern Atlantic blocking will continue to favor favorable conditions for east coast cyclogenesis and below normal temperatures. The first threat appears quickly on the horizon for Monday-Tuesday with ECMWF taking a miller B scenario with 6-10in amounts across the entire northeast on the 12z 2/4/10 run. The GFS takes a less amplified approach with light amounts scraping New England perhaps with some higher totals. In any case wavelengths have also favored this time period for an east coast storm threat. I have not really focused, as expected, on this scenario, but it is the next threat posed towards the east coast. Also towards Sunday-Tuesday upslope from weak shortwave rotating through the Great Lakes will favor 1-4in of light snow over the snow belts of northwestern Pennsylvania and the Laurel Highlands into Garret County, Maryland. Cold air advection will also be widespread across the northern Middle Atlantic with highs Sunday-Tuesday ranging 7-14F below normal into the low to mid 20s with lows in the single digits courtesy of 850mb temperatures around -10C or below and 1000-500mb thicknesses below 530dm. After the Monday-Tuesday threat, wavelengths favor a day 8 threat with foreign guidance such as the JMA posing a Miller A winter storm threat with a low pressure ejecting out of the gulf of Mexico. In any case the next two weeks are likely to feature well below normal temperatures with several threats of snow from coastals to clippers. On a side note Lake Erie surface ice has definitely increased especially towards the shallow portions of the lake near Cleveland so the heavy lake effect snow is likely done for the season.

Please post storm reports in this blog from across the Northeast during the winter storm and please post location of observation in each report...

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"Here northeast of Harrisburg 2009-2010 winter statistics"
(Snow Stats)
Current Snow Cover- 20.75in
Monthly Total- 43.25in
Seasonal Total- 61.35in
October Total- 0.0in
November Total- Trace
December Total- 16.0in
January Total- 2.1in
February Total- 43.25in
Winter Weather Advisories- 5
Winter Storm Warnings- 3
Ice Storm Warnings- 0
Blizzard Warnings- 0
Freezing Rain Advisories- 2
Winter Storm Watches- 3

(Temperature Stats)
Lowest High Temperature- 18.8F
Lowest Low Temperature- 11.7F
Wind Chill Advisories- 0
Wind Chill Warnings- 0

(Winter Storms Stats)
Dec 5 - 1.5in - First accumulating snow of season
Dec 8-9 - 2.5in - Snow changed to plain rain
Dec 13 - .1in - Freezing rain
Dec 19 - 9.0in - Heavy snow, higher amounts to south
Dec 31 - 3.0in - 2.5hr warm air advection event
Dec 31 #2 - .2in - Freezing rain/sleet later in day
Jan 8 - 1.5in - Light snow associated with clipper
Feb 2 - 3.75in - Weak coastal storm
Feb 5-7 - 19.0in - 10th largest snowstorm on record
Feb 9-10 - 20.5in - Blizzard conditions/snow depth up to 36in

Weather wizard (Patriot News)Link.

Sure has been a long cold spell" is a lackluster comment you'd hear at a social gathering when a person can't think of anything else to say.

Not so with Zachary Labe. The 17-year-old junior at Central Dauphin High School is passionate about weather. So passionate that he's one of just 28 high school students who've been accepted for membership in the American Meteorological Society, the association for radio and television forecasters.

If that isn't passionate enough, there are the weather instruments in Labe's bedroom. They make noise. Day and night. One goes off if the temperature makes an abrupt change, another when a storm begins, and there are more.

Even if it's 2 a.m. and snow or rain snow begins, the alarm wakes Labe. In seconds he's out of bed, running through the upstairs hall yelling, "There's a storm!" And out he goes in the middle of it. In a rainstorm, he takes a lightning detector.

Among Labe's large collection of weather equipment is a top-of-the-line weather station that the federal government uses, but he doesn't use it. "It's not very accurate," he said.

After taking a National Weather Service class, Labe could get an account from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which gives him information to interpret for a weather forecast. And Labe is usually right on. In fact, his prediction is accurate more often than professional forecasters,' he said.

Take the night of Jan. 22-23. Several meteorologists said we'd have rainstorms, perhaps thunder. Labe's prediction said nothing about precipitation. Not a drop fell.

"It's impossible to be perfect in predicting," Labe said. "But you can be less imperfect than others."

Forecasts can't be perfect because forecasters make interpretations. NOAA's "super computers" take information such as wind velocity and humidity and use mathematical equations to transfer the results onto maps and graphs.

Labe interprets NOAA's information, figures out a forecast, then color codes several of NOAA's blank maps of the U.S. to indicate information including temperatures, the jet stream swish and humidity.

In 2007, at age 14, Labe started forecasting with about 10,000 other amateur meteorologists on the Web site Weather Underground -- www.wunderground.com -- under the name "Blizzard92," which he used because he was young and the Internet can be a dangerous place.

The folks at the California-based site noticed Blizzard92's accuracy and in 2009 sent Labe an e-mail asking if he'd be one of nine featured forecaster bloggers in the country, taking on Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland. Of course, he would.

As a featured blogger, Blizzard92 had to upload a photograph of himself. This took the cat that was his age right out of the bag. Not only were the Weather Underground people amazed that he was 17 and had expert knowledge, Labe received thousands of comments on the site.

And the other eight people selected? They all have degrees in meteorology.

Labe's interest in weather ignited long before he was 12. He often heard his grandparents and uncle discussing the weather. They were farmers, and weather was vital to their livelihood.

Labe didn't say a whole lot, but he started accumulating books on meteorology and weather history. He stayed up nights watching the skies during storms, recorded information in a weather journal and asked for a weather station. His parents bought him an inexpensive one to start. It, of course, led to more equipment.

Labe belongs to Skywarn Storm Spotter for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. When there's a storm and tree branches fall or other damage happens, he reports it to NOAA.

Among his other memberships are the Mount Washington Weather Observation Service in New Hampshire and the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail and Snow Network, to which he sends precipitation amounts every 24 hours.


Lower Susquehanna Valley Doppler...

(Courtesy of WGAL)
Major Winter Storm... (Blizzard92)
19.0in of snow
Major Winter Storm...
Major Winter Storm... (Blizzard92)
19.0in of snow
Major Winter Storm...
Major Winter Storm... (Blizzard92)
19.0in of snow
Major Winter Storm...
Major Winter Storm... (Blizzard92)
19.0in of snow
Major Winter Storm...
Significant snowstorm... (Blizzard92)
19.0in of snow...
Significant snowstorm...
Significant snowstorm... (Blizzard92)
19.0in of snow...
Significant snowstorm...
Significant snowstorm... (Blizzard92)
19.0in of snow...
Significant snowstorm...
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1251. upweatherdog 02:46 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Good luck with the storm all!



Looks like I could get my share of snow on Monday. A strong northern stream shortwave looks to try and phase with the southern stream system over the Great Lakes, bringing around .70, inches of QPF over the northern Great Lakes, with QPF probably closer to one inch over the northeast wind LES belts of the northcentral U.P. BUFKIT soundings indicate a very deep snow growth zone between 2000 and 9000ft with OMEGA values around between 10 and 50 -mb/s, averaging around 30 -mb/s. Snow to water ratios are roughly 25/1 to 30/1. Model data and past climatology suggests we have the potential for 16 to 24 inches of snow by Tuesday.
Member Since: 14 octobre 2007 Posts: 173 Comments: 1365
1252. Zachary Labe 02:47 GMT le 06 février 2010    
About 4in of snow here so far 10mi northeast of Harrisburg, most of which has fallen in the last 2hrs. New blizzard warnings up for Baltimore.
Member Since: 14 décembre 2007 Posts: 253 Comments: 14316
1253. zotty 02:48 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting HeavySnow:


CHANGE!!!

Heavy ASS SNOW HERE right now. Sorry 'bout dat.


heavy- how hard? can you upload a picture or something from your cell?
Member Since: 19 août 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 587
1254. testbenchdude 02:48 GMT le 06 février 2010    
1.75" unofficial measurement outside my apartment building in West Chester, PA. Still coming down in big, fat flakes. Slight breeze. I'd call that about 1"/hour thus far since the start.
Member Since: 19 octobre 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 209
1256. SilverShipsofAndilar 03:00 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Just over 5" of snow so far on the deck. The real deal happens overnight though -I can't wait.
Member Since: 1 décembre 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 600
1257. pastagirl 03:01 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Hi Greenval1,

Are you in Ruckersville? If so, I'm right up the road from you in Rochelle, and we are also getting a lot of sleet.
Member Since: 2 juillet 2006 Posts: 0 Comments: 12
1258. RkTec 03:01 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Heck of a band down there by Philly extending across southern Jersey. That band almost looks to have become stationary and growing in size.

Snow has become moderate here with 0.2" accumulation.
Member Since: 27 janvier 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 384
1259. Zachary Labe 03:01 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting SilverShipsofAndilar:
Just over 5" of snow so far on the deck. The real deal happens overnight though -I can't wait.

So far this from what I see this will outperform December 19th in our area by a good deal.
Member Since: 14 décembre 2007 Posts: 253 Comments: 14316
1260. RkTec 03:02 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Lightining in Snow Storm in Clarksburg, MD on 2/5/2010 around 8:30pm

Guy caught a lightning bolt in the pic. (upper right corner of pic)

Link
Member Since: 27 janvier 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 384
1261. TheRasberryPatch 03:03 GMT le 06 février 2010    
28F
dewpt 27F

just measured 3.5" of snow

my wind gauge is showing light winds out of ENE

i came from Hershey heading east on 322 and the roads are almost non-existant until i hit Campbelltown of course. S. Londonderry had there trucks out running the streets.
Member Since: 26 janvier 2007 Posts: 72 Comments: 5645
1262. PalmyraPunishment 03:05 GMT le 06 février 2010    
9:59 PM - Camp Hill, PA
28.7 F
Snow
2.5 inches has fallen.
Member Since: 31 janvier 2007 Posts: 9 Comments: 2250
1263. Tazmanian 03:06 GMT le 06 février 2010    
dont all ways get your hops up in the air or get too happy about some in like a big snow fall you may feel bad about it come later on like some of you are seeing
Member Since: 21 mai 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111360
1264. Zachary Labe 03:06 GMT le 06 février 2010    
CTP increasing amounts now for 12-18in for Harrisburg. New Winter Storm Warnings also now for areas in the middle Susquehanna Valley.
Member Since: 14 décembre 2007 Posts: 253 Comments: 14316
1265. Zachary Labe 03:07 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Dry slot has now disappeared and mesoscale bands will be lifting out of Maryland with 2-3in/hr rates in the next 2hrs with increasing northeasterly winds.
Member Since: 14 décembre 2007 Posts: 253 Comments: 14316
1266. Tazmanian 03:09 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting Blizzard92:
Dry slot has now disappeared and mesoscale bands will be lifting out of Maryland with 2-3in/hr rates in the next 2hrs with increasing northeasterly winds.



WOW
Member Since: 21 mai 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111360
1267. Tazmanian 03:09 GMT le 06 février 2010    
DC is geting hit hard
Member Since: 21 mai 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111360
1268. weathergeek5 03:10 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Shoveled twice already. the snow is really picking up again. The snow is now a fluffy powdery snow.
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1269. 717WeatherLover 03:10 GMT le 06 février 2010    
BRING IT ON!!!!!!!
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1270. Followingseas 03:18 GMT le 06 février 2010    
9" in NW DC. 2" last hour snowing heavily now with 15-20 kt winds. 30 degrees.
Member Since: 5 février 2010 Posts: 0 Comments: 91
1271. TheRasberryPatch 03:19 GMT le 06 février 2010    
can you believe i am actually enjoying watching TWC with Jim Cantore. I always did like him especially since he has become and expert, not that i watch TWC much.

Blizz - i have been kind of out of the loop the last few hours, what do our ratios look like and what about Baltimore's?
Member Since: 26 janvier 2007 Posts: 72 Comments: 5645
1272. RoyMcAvoy 03:21 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Reston Va (20 miles NW of DC)

10" total
3.25" last two hrs.
1273. bwi 03:23 GMT le 06 février 2010    
8" 31.9f. Coming down really well now -- faster than it can melt!
Member Since: 4 septembre 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 1134
1274. Hoynieva 03:23 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting TheRasberryPatch:
can you believe i am actually enjoying watching TWC with Jim Cantore. I always did like him especially since he has become and expert, not that i watch TWC much.

Blizz - i have been kind of out of the loop the last few hours, what do our ratios look like and what about Baltimore's?


----
You know what's funny about Jim Cantore? I grew up thinking he was huge, like a giant, not just physically but the way he went into hurricanes and the like with no fear whatsoever. Until one day, one day I saw him standing next to a child and the child was about as tall as him and it made me feel different in a way. I had no less respect for him, but I felt television had fooled me with their camera magic. I admit, I always liked him as it's obvious that he's a true weather fanatic, but that is a day I will never forget (for better or worse).
Member Since: 20 janvier 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 1292
1275. Tazmanian 03:24 GMT le 06 février 2010    
WOW and where not in too the main part of the storm yet
Member Since: 21 mai 2006 Posts: 5088 Comments: 111360
1276. 717WeatherLover 03:24 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Jim Cantore used to be my hero! Specially when I used to live in Miami and had to watch the Hurricanes. Matter of fact we lost our house in ground zero of Hurricane Andrew! Thank God for insurance!
Member Since: 18 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 270
1277. flattyboy50 03:25 GMT le 06 février 2010    
S.Delaware obs at 1020PM...snowing as hard as it has so far. 1.5-2.0 inches per hr. Large wet flakes, all granular stuff. plastering everything faceing NE. Temp rose to 34F last hr, but now back down to 32F. Wind up too, first gust to reach 30MPH last hr. Visability currently est about 1/3 mile. Barometer 29.86 falling rapidly...
Member Since: 19 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 155
1278. 717WeatherLover 03:26 GMT le 06 février 2010    
I just love it when Jim gets giddy over the weather, like we do!!!
Member Since: 18 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 270
1279. TheRasberryPatch 03:29 GMT le 06 février 2010    
hey flattyboy - can you compare this to the storm that hit in Feb 1989? i recall driving on a friday evening heading to Fenwick...Baltimore was supposed to get it, but the storm was too far out. as i crossed the Chesapeake i saw snow and the farther towards the coast i got on 404 the more snow i hit until i got to millsoboro and the road to roxanna. you had no idea what was road or farm land. i actually slid up to a pile someone had plowed in the middle of the road there.
Member Since: 26 janvier 2007 Posts: 72 Comments: 5645
1280. flattyboy50 03:38 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Rasberry- Only on a local scale would I compare this storm to that one...in fact, I completely forgot until you just reminded me again of it. It did put a lot of snow down in a short period of time though.
Member Since: 19 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 155
1281. flattyboy50 03:39 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Barometer down to 29.51" in Norfolk.
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1283. pittsburghnurse 03:43 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Love that word bombogenesis. We had a flash of something... lightning maybe ... around 30 minutes ago. Could have been a transformer but our power hasn't flickered.
Member Since: 14 octobre 2006 Posts: 1 Comments: 638
1284. 717WeatherLover 03:45 GMT le 06 février 2010    
On the national weather service enhanced doppler national map there is a box in PA but I can't find any new warnings or watches. Does anyone else see it?
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1285. goofyrider 03:46 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Sp. Lk., NJ Since that first flake about 70 min we have zip. It took 2-3 hrs before ACL saw snow vs radar signature. This is like the Dec storm except we are warmer and have higher dewpoints.
Member Since: 27 février 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 1892
1286. Annapolismike 03:47 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Annapolis,

In from shoveling, and can hear tree branches breaking from the weight of the snow.

Unofficially about 6 inches of very heavy snow. It is coming down at a rate of about 2" an hour right now. Dry slot came thru around 8:30-9. Snowing heavily since then.
1287. originalLT 03:48 GMT le 06 février 2010    
As I said many tims before, P451, I hate the term "snow showers" unless they are talking about precip related to a cold frontal passage.This is not the case here. Its a terrible and misleading term when used with this type of storm.
Member Since: 31 janvier 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 5067
1288. OceanEffect2010 03:49 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting upweatherdog:
Good luck with the storm all!



Looks like I could get my share of snow on Monday. A strong northern stream shortwave looks to try and phase with the southern stream system over the Great Lakes, bringing around .70, inches of QPF over the northern Great Lakes, with QPF probably closer to one inch over the northeast wind LES belts of the northcentral U.P. BUFKIT soundings indicate a very deep snow growth zone between 2000 and 9000ft with OMEGA values around between 10 and 50 -mb/s, averaging around 30 -mb/s. Snow to water ratios are roughly 25/1 to 30/1. Model data and past climatology suggests we have the potential for 16 to 24 inches of snow by Tuesday.


This looks to be finally New England's storm. It could go ballistic for us mid week. Models agree on some type of storm, but differ greatly on significant phasing and timing.
1289. OceanEffect2010 03:52 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Blizzard, how far north do you think the snow will make it?
1290. snowkitty 03:52 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Owings Mills MD
28F ... Heavy snow falling ...Trees are really weighed down now with a strong breeze ... for how long is Balt supposed to have snow falling at a rate of 2 - 3"? I'm not sure what we have right now, it looks like about 10"
Member Since: 18 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 84
1291. TheRasberryPatch 03:56 GMT le 06 février 2010    
this is a very intense storm from what i am seeing. not very often do we have snow from the east coast reaching to chicago. wow

the last time i recall a storm with the snow coming down like this was probably the Dec 30, 2000 in Orange County, NY
Member Since: 26 janvier 2007 Posts: 72 Comments: 5645
1292. PalmyraPunishment 03:57 GMT le 06 février 2010    
we got... a lot fo snopw
Member Since: 31 janvier 2007 Posts: 9 Comments: 2250
1293. Beachfoxx 03:58 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Stay safe... this is an amazing winter storm to watch. : )
Member Since: 10 juillet 2005 Posts: 153 Comments: 29285
1294. testbenchdude 03:58 GMT le 06 février 2010    
West Chester, PA checking in. About 4" on the ground and still snowing heavily, big flakes. Little to no breeze.
Member Since: 19 octobre 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 209
1295. SilverShipsofAndilar 03:59 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting PalmyraPunishment:
we got... a lot fo snopw


Have a few more of those Mike's?
Member Since: 1 décembre 2008 Posts: 0 Comments: 600
1296. 717WeatherLover 04:00 GMT le 06 février 2010    
I just measured 5.75" here in Lower Paxton Township, bout 3 miles east of I-83.
Member Since: 18 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 270
1297. PalmyraPunishment 04:01 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting SilverShipsofAndilar:


Have a few more of those Mike's?


changeover to vodka = wpooopppopop
Member Since: 31 janvier 2007 Posts: 9 Comments: 2250
1298. llcooljj 04:01 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Wow!

The snow is crazy, the wind is crazy, and we’re only maybe 25% into it!

This story will be one to tell the grandchildren!

But I won’t have any grandchildren, so I hope some youngens some where will eventually read this blog!
Member Since: 18 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 60
1299. bwi 04:01 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Watching the pressures off NC: 994.5mb at Frying Pan Shoals.
Member Since: 4 septembre 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 1134
1300. PhillySnow 04:02 GMT le 06 février 2010    
11:00pm; 4.25 inches, 10 miles west of south philadelphia. No wind to speak of yet.
Member Since: 18 décembre 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 795
1301. zotty 04:02 GMT le 06 février 2010    
Quoting PalmyraPunishment:


changeover to vodka = wpooopppopop


so was that a sixer of mhl? what is the mixer of choice tonight?
Member Since: 19 août 2009 Posts: 0 Comments: 587

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About Blizzard92
Cornell University- Atmospheric Sciences Student; Central PA SKYWARN Storm Spotter; American Meteorological Society Member; PA CoCoRaHS Branch Member

Local Weather
Partly Cloudy
63 ° F
Partiellement nuageux
Personal Weather Stations
Linglestown, PA
Elevation: 520 ft
Température: 62.0 ° F
Point de rosée: 41.0 ° F
Humidité: 46%
Vent: Calme
Rafale de vent: 12.0 mph
Updated: 15:15 EDT le 25 mai 2013
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