US and Canada Daily Snow
By Joel Gratz, Founding Meteorologist Posted 4 years ago February 20, 2020
Good (powdery) news for the weekend & next week
Summary
Thursday and Friday will be mostly quiet across the lower 48 states, and then we’ll ramp back into a stormy pattern with a southwestern system over the weekend and multiple days of snow in the Northwest and the Rockies early next week.
Short Term Forecast
Snow Stakes are the Best
Many mountains have installed snow stake cameras which show you how much snow has fallen, in real-time. There is no more need to squint at nighttime webcams to see if it’s snowing or to wait nervously for the 500am snow report to be released. This cam from Winter Park, Colorado measured 13 inches from Sunday night through Monday afternoon (February 16-17) which was a part of a 26-inch storm cycle.
Forecast for Thu, Feb 20 – Fri, Feb 21
If you’re chasing powder in the lower 48 United States, the deepest snow on Thursday will be in Tennessee and North Carolina. Finally some love for the Southeast! Elsewhere, coastal Alaska and British Columbia will see deep totals.
Forecast for Sat, Feb 22 – Sun, Feb 23
There has been an important shift in the forecast. It now appears that the southwestern storm will track farther north than previously anticipated. This means that not only will Arizona, New Mexico, southern Colorado, and southern Utah receive significant snow, but most of Colorado should see a snowy Saturday night and Sunday as well. The other storm on the map will be making landfall in the Northwest on Sunday with snow hitting British Columbia and Washington.
Forecast for Mon, Feb 24 – Tue, Feb 25
Next week, the southwestern storm will head into the Midwest and the snow over the Northwest will move through the Rockies. I expect multiple snowy days to start the week in Washington, British Columbia, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, and Colorado.
Extended Forecast
Outlook for Wed, Feb 26 – Sun, Mar 1
We will end February and start March with a pattern that favors storms over the northern Rockies and potentially the Northeast as well. California, which has a solid base but could use fresh snow, might be stuck in the middle between storms moving inland from the Pacific Ocean. Let’s hope that this changes soon.
Thanks so much for reading and please check back for my next post on Monday, February 24th.
JOEL GRATZ
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