Do you remember what your temp was at that time?
During the early evening hours it was pouring here - temp was steady between 34.7 and 35.2 during the main slug of rainfall. I'm just curious how "close" my temp was to being snow.
I'm interested in how much QPF fell in areas that had snow, or mainly snow. Seems like the higher end amounts were in the 6" or so range, not sure what ratios they had but I had nearly 1.1" of total rainfall.
Ironically, I can see Roundtop from my back door but I didn't see their lights on tonight.
Roundtop is a 45 minute drive but near the same latitude-if a bridge crossed the river between us I could probably be there in 15 minutes.
Roundtop has an annual preseason sale in mid November and often have their trails lit up that weekend. I can't imagine Liberty is even making snow yet given the temps. They might start blowing tomorrow night though.
Could be an ugly time for travel in PA tomorrow afternoon - CTP really playing up the potential for dangerous snow squalls over the much of central PA.
I was doing some cleanup in my yard after work yesterday and the amount of water was surprising - I guess the ground had frozen enough the night before that my 1"+ of rain didn't fully saturate.
It's a requirement of my position. It's amazing how quickly I shed the work clothes upon entering the house - tee shirt and shorts time!
My profile picture is my everyday work vibe. Pic was taken a couple of years ago at an HR conference in DC.
After a bit of a spike in temps earlier this morning, the temp has really leveled off here over the past couple of hours. It was 47 at 11am, it's now 46 two hours later.
46 and quite breezy here under variably cloudy skies.
You were referring to Elliott Abrams yesterday - I remember when I was young, there were a few terms he used often to describe cloud cover during the winter months:
Variably Cloudy - did NOT want to hear that. It meant flurries at best.
Considerable Cloudiness - not a big fan of that either...usually meant light snow/flurries that didn't amount to much
Cloudy - now we're talking. Potentially could be a meaningful snowfall
Overcast - the best term. Often used during significant events
That's my recollection and reaction to how his forecast would begin for the day...I always remember wanting to hear him start of with "Cloudy and cold today with..." or "Overcast and cold with..."