Cold Start. Mild Finish (March 25-29)
Here’s your Monday-Friday outlook…
Here’s your Monday-Friday outlook…
Discussion: A few pieces of upper-level energy will come together (phase) and produce a rain & wind storm for the Mid-Atlantic and NorthEast US. Overall timing impact for New Jersey is between late-tonight (Wednesday) and early Friday AM with the meat
Discussion: A weak disturbance passed through today bringing very light precipitation mostly across Delmarva and maybe skimming extreme SNJ. No cause for snow concern given the above-freezing surface temp profile. In-fact not much of anything has fallen at all. This
Discussion: A cold front will push through this evening after a very mild, warm sector-influenced, day. Rain and thunderstorms are possible ahead and along the cold front. This should set up a cooler Saturday through Wednesday. I’m watching Monday for
Discussion: A broad area of high pressure will cross over the Mid-Atlantic US from NW to SE this week. Tuesday and Wednesday day look colder from the front-side of the high’s northerly flow. Thursday and Friday look milder as the
Discussion: A well-organized low pressure system (a mature mid-latitude cyclone) will track through the Great Lakes between now and tomorrow (Sunday) evening. A warm front, attached to the low, will push a period of precipitation through New Jersey from SW to
Discussion: Real quick tonight (Thursday night) is already another cold one but likely the last really cold one for a while. A weak wave should move through the Mid-Atlantic US on Friday. This could produce light mixed precipitation across SNJ with
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Discussion: Let’s have a quick storm recap. It is March which means most of NJ, especially those along the I-95 corridor and SE, are battling climatology and higher sun-angle. Therefore it takes tremendous rates of snowfall (like what NNJ saw)
Click here for full-resolution snow map! Discussion: I think the SE and colder trend has leveled off. Over the past few days we’ve watched a once amped interior snow storm (rain for most of NJ) trend into a weaker and faster