Craig Allen
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
There will be additional systems coming through.
Nothing.
Nothing as strong as what we just had, but these weak systems still have the opportunity to produce anywhere from a coating to maybe about an inch or two of kind of a wet snow in some of these same areas.
That one, one of them tonight into tomorrow morning and the other one for Thursday into Friday morning.
It is going to be heaviest from about New Jersey and Philadelphia on up towards New York City, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and on up towards Boston.
All these areas are under a blizzard warning right through the night tonight and into the mid-afternoon hours on Monday.
So knowing that, these are the areas that will have the heaviest snow.
They will also have the strongest winds and the lowest visibility.
I mean, complete whiteout conditions will be occurring at times from Philadelphia clear on up to New York City and then eventually Boston during the night into tomorrow.
That will produce amounts of approximately 12 to 18 inches of snow.
It is going to be heaviest from about New Jersey and Philadelphia on up towards New York City, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and on up towards Boston.
All these areas are under a blizzard warning right through the night tonight and into the mid-afternoon hours on Monday.
So knowing that, these are the areas that will have the heaviest snow.
They will also have the strongest winds and the lowest visibility.
I mean, complete whiteout conditions will be occurring at times from Philadelphia clear on up to New York City and then eventually Boston during the night into tomorrow.
That will produce amounts of approximately 12 to 18 inches of snow.
It's very clear-cut that we are going to be pummeled by blizzard conditions now, meaning whiteouts, winds over 50 mph, and snow rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour for well over three hours.
So from Philly to New York City, Providence and Boston, we will be measuring snowfall in feet.
Now down towards Baltimore and Washington, you may be too far south for anything that significant, but the rest of the 95 corridor may be brought to a standstill for a day or two.
It's very clear-cut that we are going to be pummeled by blizzard conditions now, meaning whiteouts, winds over 50 mph, and snow rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour for well over three hours.