New England Daily Snow

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By Brian Clark, Meteorologist Posted 9 years ago March 3, 2015

Tuesday Night Storm Update

Summary

Our first warmer storm since some time in January is on the way for Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. Precipitation will fall mostly as snow in northern portions of the region, with ice and rain mixing in for the south. A second storm might swing through later in the week, but also may stay too far south. Otherwise, we will see a return of colder air in the wake of this the Tuesday night storm.

Details

It's been quite some time since I've had to talk about anything but snow falling in our region. In fact, it's been since some time in late January...something like 6 weeks or so. That's pretty incredible for New England. The streak had to end at some point though, and I'm at least happy to say that we're not looking at the worst case scenario.

The primary low will track well to our west this time which is never ideal. Thanks to some secondary development in the Gulf of Maine as well as cold air that will be stubborn to leave, northern portions of the region will see mainly snow and frozen precipitation, while southern portions start as snow with a changeover to ice and rain. This will be a quick hitter, with precipitation not moving in until well after lifts close on Tuesday and tapering off not too long after lifts spin again on Wednesday. Total snowfall amounts will be tough to measure because anything that does fall at the onset of precipitation will be compacted and even melted by the warmer, latter half of the storm. With that said, here are my thoughts on snowfall amounts:

Southern NH: 1-3" before change to rain/ice

Central and Western NH: 2-4" before mixing with sleet/freezing rain

White Mountains: 3-6", may stay all snow, but sleet/freezing rain also likely

Western Maine: 3-6", likely to stay all snow

Central Maine: 2-4" before mixing with sleet/freezing rain

Coastal Maine: 1-3" before change to rain/ice

So again, it could be worse since most resorts will still see a net gain of snow from this event. High temperatures on Wednesday will be the warmest we've seen since late January as well, so expect the new snow to stay quite wet and even melt a bit through the day.

On Thursday or Friday, a second storm has a chance of coming up the coast. As of right now, that looks unlikely with a more southern track being favored by the forecasting models that would mean we miss out on any precipitation of any significance. We'll see how that develops in the next 24 to 36 hours. Otherwise, expect colder temperatures to return on Thursday and last through the end of the week.

Long Range

Besides a return to colder temps, there's no significant storms in the long range for the coming weekend. A weak storm passing well to our north will set off some snow showers Saturday night, with any accumulations being limited to the higher terrain. Then early next week, there's the possibility of a weak Alberta Clipper storm.

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Region Definitions:

Southern NH: Crotched, McIntyre, Granite Gorge, Pat's Peak

Central and Western NH: Gunstock, Dartmouth Skiway, Ragged

White Mountains: Loon, Waterville Valley, Cannon, Bretton Woods, Attitash, Black Mountain, Wildcat, Cranmore, King Pine

Western Maine: Sunday River, Sugarloaf, Mt. Abram, Black Mountain

Central Maine: Shawnee Peak, Lost Valley, Titcomb, Eaton

Coastal Maine: Camden Snow Bowl

About Our Forecaster

Brian Clark

Meteorologist

Brian lives in the Mount Washington Valley and works at one of the best ski shops in New England, Stan and Dan Sports in North Conway. He also teaches at Attitash Mountain Resort and runs a growing business that sells and repairs computers and smartphones.

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