After another mild day here at mid-week, a colder and stormier pattern begins later Thursday with an increasing chance of widespread snow across the region. That snow could develop in the afternoon hours on Thursday and last all the way into Friday morning with accumulations expected not only for the mountains, but also the lower elevations. Temperatures will climb to the 50’s today, only reach the low-to-mid 40’s on Thursday, and then likely be confined to the 30’s on Friday.
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The main weather story around here today will be the stiff winds from a west-to-southwest direction bringing us mild conditions and an elevated threat of wildfire activity. The overall pattern turns colder and more unsettled later in the week with the chance of snow; especially, in nearby higher elevation locations.
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It has been persistently cold in the northeastern states from around Thanksgiving Day to the present time with the month of December being observed as the coldest since 2010 in many spots including Washington, D.C. and New York City. A warmer weather pattern is on the way, however, which will bring noticeably milder conditions to the region in the Wednesday through Saturday time period. The peak in temperatures will come on Friday and Saturday for the northeastern states, but both of those will feature some rainfall dampening the mood a bit. The next strong cold front looks like it’ll arrive in the eastern states late on Saturday, and its passage will reverse the warmer trend by the time we get to the second half of the upcoming weekend and the early part of next week.
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The new year will start off on the mild side, and the dry, mild weather pattern will last right through the upcoming weekend. Temperatures are likely to peak in the middle and upper 50’s during the next couple of days and near the 60-degree on both days this weekend.
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The weather around here will feature above-normal temperatures through the rest of the week and upcoming weekend, and it stays on the dry side as well.
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The weather starts off the new week on the chilly side, but temperatures should climb to above-normal level from Tuesday through the rest of the week. In addition to the milder weather, it looks like it should stay dry for the bulk of the week.
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While the nation’s mid-section enjoys rarely ever-seen sustained warmth for the next few days, the northeastern states will continue to experience plenty of winter weather right into the early part of January. One system is bringing some accumulating snow today to the northern Mid-Atlantic region and Northeast US and some interior higher elevation locations will receive several inches. Another storm system is likely to threaten the Mid-Atlantic region and Northeast US on Friday with significant accumulating snow in some areas and substantial icing in others. A key player at the end of the week will be a strong high-pressure system over southeastern Canada which will act as an anchor for low-level Arctic air that can lead to frozen precipitation throughout the Mid-Atlantic region and Northeast US.
Looking ahead to next week, the winter weather pattern is likely to continue across the northeastern states with two major-league Arctic air outbreaks on the table. Both of these Arctic air masses will have originated up across the northwestern part of Canada where temperatures on Monday morning bottomed out at -67.7°F... reportedly the lowest temperature in Canada since January 1999…in other words, get ready, next week’s Arctic invasions might be quite noteworthy.
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The big weather story around here will be the continuation of our recent warm and dry weather pattern for the next few days with afternoon highs well up in the 60’s. It does turn colder by the weekend, but temperatures will still be in the moderate zone with highs on Saturday and Sunday near the 50-degree mark.
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The big story today will be another round of very strong down sloping winds which can gust to 50 mph in the metro region and foothills. It will be warm today with afternoon highs near the 70-degree mark and then cooler on Saturday and Sunday. The overall pattern going forward looks warmer-than-normal across the central US and Rocky Mountain States with sustained above-normal temperatures.
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The big story today will be the very strong downsloping winds which can gust into the 50-60 mph range in the metro region and even higher than that near the base of the foothills. It will be cooler on Thursday and not as windy following the late-night passage of a frontal system that can produce some rain and/or snow shower activity.
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