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Here It Comes

The NWS is issuing an advisory in this next update package that will run thru tomorrow AM for most of the area.  We will continue to see a mixed bag of wintry precip thru the evening and overnight on a showery basis.  In general, the harder it precips the more likely you would be to see snow or sleet vs. freezing rain or drizzle. For most, this will just be a nuisance event with minor ice accrual in the trees and elevated surfaces.  Ground temps are still way warm, so accumulation there will be difficult except under heavier bursts of sleet, which are possible, but won’t be widespread.  The fly in the ointment would be if areas like Wake Co. held on to substantial precip for longer, in which case things might be a little worse than expected.  You see, the axis of heaviest precip overnight and into tomorrow AM will be east and toward the costal plain. We’ll see how it plays out.

The winter that won’t die…

…and speaking of winter continuing, there’s another cold shot coming for the latter half of the weekend into next week 😉

Wintry Mix

Temps are locked-in near and below freezing with the cold air dammed east of the mountains.  We talked about a lull in the precip that we would have this AM, and that the question would be how much precip occurred after the lull with the cold air in place.  So at midday, we’re seeing the radar fill back in and precip advancing from north and east from the south and west.  The NWS has expanded the advisory to include Durham and Orange counties, and I expect that here in Wake Co. we will also begin to see some sleet and freezing rain as the afternoon wears on such that an advisory may also be needed later.  Precip should begin in Durham around 1pm and head east into Raleigh between 1:30 and 2pm.

Ok, Not a White Shamrock, Maybe a Glistening Crystalline Shamrock

I need to do some research to look back and see the last time Raleigh had an ice storm this late in the season.  A couple inches of snow is easier to achieve than a prolonged subfreezing ice event (because you can get a couple inches of snow. it lays.  it’s pretty. and then it melts several hours later or the next day.)

As I seem to say with every event…it’s a complicated setup…and still much discrepancy in the modeling.  Actually, this looks to be a one-two punch.  Tomorrow afternoon we begin with moderate to heavy soaking rains on top of already saturated soils and streams overnight (some minor river flooding).  And cold air begins to ooze in late from an advancing Canadian airmass (eh!).  The colder air begins to arrive as the heaviest axis of moisture from the first round exits.  We’re left in a relative minimum of light precip going into Monday AM and thru the day Monday.  However, there looks to be enough cold air and moisture to combine for a little freezing rain as we hover just at freezing (more moisture than progged would be bad.)  Then the timing of a secondary low riding up the coast as the near freezing temps are in place comes into question.  It looks like moisture will arrive overnight Monday into Tuesday AM to cause more significant freezing rain before the self-limiting physics of freezing rain warms the area (SE to NW) enough on Tuesday to turn everything to rain.

So what does it mean?  Bad or no?  2-3 days out in the middle of March…I’m inclined to err on the side conservative climatology, which casts a large cloud of skepticism on the likelihood of a significant impact for the Triangle.  For now let’s wait and see more data…which will probably only find us agonizing over the same questions two days from now!

A White Shamrock?

Not to hype, but… just because it’s late in the season and why not?

Another storm should arrive in NC on Sunday from the Gulf.  As colder air works in late Sunday into Monday, it’s possible that we could see a changeover to snow as the storm pulls northeast.  Hence…white shamrocks.  Of course, the elusive wraparound snow with the cold air chasing the moisture is in practice hard to achieve.  It’s a long way out and this would probably not end up being anything more than pretty with insufficient cold air to play with.  But I thought you’d like to know.

Go West, Young Man

Those in Raleigh hoping for more wintry weather will be disappointed it seems.  Farther west in the central and western parts of the state there is the potential for a significant winter storm.  This setup is even more complex than a normal NC winter storm with funky thermodynamics coming into play in a near-freezing environment.

For Raleigh, there may be a period of some sleet and a little glazing in the trees and elevated surfaces, but no problems on the roads for sure.  Just a lot of cold biting rain.  As you go west, there will be more significant icing before the changeover to rain.  And in the mountains the potential for a lot of heavy wet snow.

But since all of the significant winter weather will fall to our west…i get a pass on having to break this one down!  If something changes, I’ll, of course, let you know.

Meh…

A quick note to say that I’m not impressed with the winter weather potential here in the Triangle for tomorrow night/Fri.  We’re on the wrong side of marginal.  Toward Greensboro and Winston and Danville, maybe some minor issues.  In the mountains, yes.  Will continue to watch if there seems to be a trend toward colder solutions.

The Last Gasp

The back end of the precip band is within sight, but not before we get thru a couple of intense bursts of sleet and snow.  A weaker band is moving out of the Triangle now with a more intense, more convective line on it’s heels progged to arrive in Raleigh by 7.  This line has history of a couple of lighting strikes, so don’t be surprised to hear a rumble of thunder under an intense shower of sleet or perhaps snow.  The snow line is working it’s way south, entering north Raleigh at this time.  So when it all plays out, the forecast of 1/4 to 1/2″ of sleet and snow probably will pan out just fine.

The big story will continue to be the cold and with these bursts of sleet/snow the roads will become worse even more quickly.  Stay home tonight.  Schools may have to rethink a 2 hr delay as not being late enough for tomorrow.  Temp is down to 25 at WeatherTrex now.

Flash Freeze

The rain came… the cold chased.  But the cold wasn’t quick enough to get a prolonged period of accumulating sleet going before the first wave of steady precip headed east.  Some locations, north and west of the Triangle saw a little accumulation, around here just a couple of window-dressing sleet and snow showers.

What will happen from here…We’re in a lull in the precip for the next several hours (altho as I’m about to publish this…there looks to be another round of sleet/snow in the Triangle by 3:15/3:30) with just some spotty sleet and snow showers.  The concern now becomes the advancing cold air.  It has been below freezing since just after 1pm and the temperature will continue to drop into the mid 20s by the end of rush hour and to the mid teens overnight.  Once you get in the mid 20s, all the moisture leftover from this AM’s rain will quickly begin to freeze and things will become an ice rink regardless of whether we get more frozen precip this evening.

As for that additional frozen precip…We will see more showery sleet and snow episodes late afternoon into this evening.  When the precip is stronger, it’s more likely to be sleet or snow.  When it’s lighter, it’s likely to be freezing drizzle.  The only way to get any real accumulation would be under a more organized band that provided a prolonged hour or so of precip.   This would be most likely this evening and probably from the Triangle north and east.

The thing that makes this a dangerous situation isn’t really the volume of any frozen precip, but the fact the cold air rushing in now will freeze things up efficiently and quickly.  So watch out for the Flash Freeze!  Sounds like the next greatest meteorological buzzword to go around…a la Polar Vortex and Black Ice.  Ha!

Looking past tonight, Wed morning has the potential to be interesting with another nuisance event of some light freezing.

Then there’s Friday…probably just a cold dreary heavy rain, but something to watch for at least part of the area (NW) to experience heavy wet snow.

The Backdoor

In the meteorological nerd underworld, tomorrow will be a sight to behold.  To say the temperature differential across this front is steep is an understatement.  The backdoor cold front is dropping south this evening across VA.  Charlottesville dropped 20° in about 2 hours this afternoon.  It’s a little hard to imagine that we’re talking about winter weather when today was a beautiful foretaste of spring with a high of 71 and the 10pm temp still holding at 60° at RDU.

The backdoor cold front comes thru tomorrow AM with temps still near 50 at the bus stop.  Then, as we progress the rain begins and bottom falls out of the temperature floor.  The rain will changeover to sleet from north to south, which times out near lunchtime in the Triangle.  The sleet will be showery and perhaps heavy at times, before changing over to a light snow or freezing drizzle on the back end as the cold dry air takes over.  The amazing thing will be to go from waking up to 50°ish and ending up at about 25° for ‘slush hour’, I mean rush hour.  Then the cold air continues to funnel in with overnight lows in the mid teens.

Most probably, the sleet and then snow should accumulate in the Triangle to only something like 1/4 to 1/2″.  But remember sleet is more efficient at causing problems than snow.  The fact that we were so warm today obviously works in our favor for limiting accumulations.  So, there is the opportunity to dodge a bullet with lighter precipitation rates.  With lighter rates the ground has time to respond and melt the sleet.  We’ll evaluate the radar trends tomorrow AM and nowcast from there.

To reiterate, this is north/south storyline.  Closer to the VA border, the more sleet and snow.  Closer to Fayetteville, the more rain and fewer sleet pellets.  The real heart of the storm will impact central and northern VA with impressive snow totals.  Travel to DC and Baltimore will be a no go, while the NYC and Philly get just a glancing blow.

Glad I don’t have to make the early release call for the schools tomorrow!

Back on the Grid…

I’m just back from a mission trip to Costa Rica, which is why I’ve been silent on tomorrow’s winter weather event.  I have not had any time to formulate a reasonable assessment of the situation yet.  But I’m getting so many emails from many of you all that I thought I needed to put it out there why.  Give me until this evening and I will update.  What I will say now is that…it’s a very interesting situation and it looks like another no-win situation for the schools.  ugh.