A strong Nor’easter will bring significant, heavy snow to portions of the interior Northeast late tonight through Tuesday. This heavy and wet snow will likely be hazardous and disruptive to travel and may lead to downed trees and power outages. pic.twitter.com/qOwgACGz84
— NWS Weather Prediction Center (@NWSWPC) April 18, 2022
“This late season snowfall will be heavy and wet, and could produce significant impacts,” the National Weather Service wrote, “including downed trees, power outages, and difficult shoveling. Hazardous to difficult travel conditions are expected to develop due to the slushy, snow-covered roads.”
The zone from northeast Pennsylvania to central New York state is of particular concern for power outages because of potential snowfall rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour Monday night.
Snowfall totals will be heavily dependent on elevation, with mountainous areas seeing the heaviest amounts.
Blizzard delivers record April snowfall in northern Plains
The same overarching storm system may bring isolated severe weather to the Outer Banks of North Carolina in its “warm sector,” with a brief tornado or two possible.
A center of low pressure was pushing through Middle Tennessee during the morning hours Monday, with a counterclockwise swirl of clouds visible on satellite imagery. Light snow was falling to the north over portions of the Great Lakes with rain to the east.
That low, energized by an upper-air disturbance arriving from the west, will transfer its energy to a new low developing near the North Carolina coastline late Monday. On Monday night, it will work up the Mid-Atlantic coast and reach southern New England by Tuesday morning.
Lows spin counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, which is why extreme eastern North Carolina, essentially the Outer Banks, will end up with a sliver of mild air streaming north ahead of a cold front. A change of wind speed and/or direction with height, known as wind shear, could foster some rotation within a couple of thunderstorms. A level 1 out of 5 “marginal risk” of severe thunderstorms has been declared along the immediate coastline from Charleston, S.C., to Cape Hatteras, N.C.
Behind the low west of the system’s track, northerly winds will drag frigid air south from Canada. Moisture overlapping with near-freezing conditions will deposit a strip of snow inland from the West Virginia-Virginia border to Quebec and Ontario.
Storm timing and predicted snow totals
Rain arrived in the nation’s capital from the southwest before noon Monday, mixing with a bit of sleet, but snow was developing in parts of the Blue Ridge and the Allegheny range. Snow could be moderate to heavy for a brief time during the afternoon before it tapers off around 5 or 6 p.m. south of the Mason-Dixon Line. About 2 to 4 inches of snow could fall in the mountains of western Maryland and northeast West Virginia as well as the Blue Ridge in Virginia. Higher amounts are possible near mountain peaks.
Many areas of western and west-central Pennsylvania will also see accumulating snow, particularly in the higher terrain. Up to 3 to 6 inches is possible there Monday afternoon and night.
Southeast Pennsylvania will see mostly rain between late Monday morning and Monday night, but snow is probable in the Poconos in the northeastern part of the state, which are under a winter storm warning for up to 4 to 8 inches through early Tuesday.
In New York City, rain will develop Monday night and will last until a little before sunrise, totaling almost an inch. Boston will see its heaviest rain from midnight to about 8 a.m. Tuesday, with perhaps a clap of thunder or two to the southeast over Cape Cod.
Heavy snow is also anticipated in interior portions of New York state, particularly near and just east of Interstate 81. Winter storm warnings are in effect there, with the Weather Service warning that heavy snow could impact the morning commute Tuesday. A general 4 to 8 inches is likely, with isolated amounts to nearly a foot, mainly above 2,000 feet in elevation.
‘Tis the season! A potent spring snowstorm impacts the region this evening ->Tue morning. This is a tricky forecast, especially because it is…April 18th! Attached is our latest forecast. For more details on the storm, check out our public briefing at: https://t.co/pCBJMoQtPy pic.twitter.com/RMo3KFG3a4
— NWS Binghamton (@NWSBinghamton) April 18, 2022
“We are growing increasingly concerned about the potential for power outages and very difficult travel across central New York and northeast PA,” the Weather Service office in Binghamton, N.Y., tweeted. “The snow is expected to be heavy and wet, with the potential for rates as high as 3” per hour overnight tonight.”
Regardless of total accumulation, snowfall to that degree is extremely difficult or impossible for road crews to keep abreast of. Some thundersnow is possible, too.
Up to a few inches of snow is also probable in Vermont, although the coastal storm may draw enough warm air into the state to change precipitation to ice and rain and cut back some on accumulations. Even so, the Weather Service in Burlington wrote that “quick accumulation of snowfall will impact the morning commute, and may result in isolated to scattered power outages.”
Rain moves in late today, changing over to heavy wet snow overnight, especially in higher terrain. Snowfall rates of 1+ in/hr possible late tonite, especially in N NY. Snow turns back over to rain Tue, except over highest terrain. Hazardous travel & power outages possible pic.twitter.com/Knjdjk2DL9
— NWS Burlington (@NWSBurlington) April 18, 2022
After a multiday stretch of anomalous cold and wintry weather, high pressure will shift off the East Coast toward midweek. That will boost southerly winds and allow mild air to spread northward.
D.C. will be in the mid-70s on Friday before reaching 80 on Saturday and possibly the mid-80s Sunday. Friday will be in the upper 60s to near 70 in New York City, though the weekend could be cooler as a stalled frontal boundary lingers across the region.
The comparatively mild and near-seasonable temperatures will help eat away at whatever snowpack accumulates in the next 48 hours.
Tax Day storm to plaster Northeast with inland snowfall & More Sweden Latest News Update
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