MaineJayhawk Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 I think IP is going to be the soup dejour here "dryslot" in Chinese is "He Ping Ping" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
klw Posted April 11, 2013 Author Share Posted April 11, 2013 Yeah if we get 1/2-3/4" QPF at 3:1 ratios..lol, 2-3" of snow/sleet. Anything coming down over there or is it just virga? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dryslot Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 "dryslot" in Chinese is "He Ping Ping" lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
powderfreak Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 Anything coming down over there or is it just virga? Just virga....was just up at 3600ft and nothing doing up there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MaineJayhawk Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 Yeah, nothing coming down at 15' asl in Portland either. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bobbutts Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.Spin Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 I'm going with 3-6" for the ski area forecast up here... really doesn't seem like all that difficult of a forecast for the higher elevations. Mid-layer warming might be the only issue if its snow or sleet, but its freakin' cold up there already. Thanks for the heads up and the map PF; the point forecast for the higher elevations of Mansfield seems in line with your thoughts. Roger Hill was certainly speaking about a good shot of snow for the area in his early morning broadcast – obviously with a focus on the higher elevations. For the North-Central Vermont area he was going with T-3”, with the 3” in the higher elevations, but that may be the “populated” higher elevations. It seemed like he felt that the mountain peaks were going to do well. There’s nothing on the advisories map for the northern 2/3 of Vermont, although a lot of the surrounding advisories seem to be focused on the potential for ice, and that doesn’t seem to be as big a deal around here: The anticipated totals on that map certainly falls off to the south, and it’s at a level of detail that it even drops to the black “none” for the lowest elevations in the Winooski Valley. That’s consistent with what we’ve got in our point forecast, but with the marginal temperatures it can go either way. It’s nice that there’s getting to be some discussion about the event in the general weather discussion thread though; for a while there it seemed as if that was just sort of focused on temperatures, grass, grills, etc. Oh, I just saw the updated maps that bobbutts posted. The advisories map is substantially updated as well, so I’ll get those to show the progression for archiving – I’ll see if any changes happen after the afternoon update. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OceanStWx Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 I think IP is going to be the soup dejour here I agree. The depth of that cold wedge is so impressive that even if the surface creeps to 34, just a couple hundred feet up with be -2 C or something. Instead of 34 and RA you get 34 and a scalping. I think icing will be confined to the higher elevations. They won't have the depth of the low level cold that the lower elevations do, less time to refreeze. I do think BTV may have been overplaying the warmth card last night. I like what they say in their discussion from this afternoon though, pretty much right on line with our thinking from last night. Sleet should dominate, and though we have on real criteria for sleet and headlines, it can create some pretty bad driving conditions and it is late enough in the season that this will catch people by surprise. Sort of like we lower the thresholds for the first event of the year, the same goes for the last. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dryslot Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 I agree. The depth of that cold wedge is so impressive that even if the surface creeps to 34, just a couple hundred feet up with be -2 C or something. Instead of 34 and RA you get 34 and a scalping. I think icing will be confined to the higher elevations. They won't have the depth of the low level cold that the lower elevations do, less time to refreeze. I do think BTV may have been overplaying the warmth card last night. I like what they say in their discussion from this afternoon though, pretty much right on line with our thinking from last night. Sleet should dominate, and though we have on real criteria for sleet and headlines, it can create some pretty bad driving conditions and it is late enough in the season that this will catch people by surprise. Sort of like we lower the thresholds for the first event of the year, the same goes for the last. Most definitely, Folks will be caught with there pants down......... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
powderfreak Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 I agree. The depth of that cold wedge is so impressive that even if the surface creeps to 34, just a couple hundred feet up with be -2 C or something. Instead of 34 and RA you get 34 and a scalping. I think icing will be confined to the higher elevations. They won't have the depth of the low level cold that the lower elevations do, less time to refreeze. I do think BTV may have been overplaying the warmth card last night. I like what they say in their discussion from this afternoon though, pretty much right on line with our thinking from last night. Sleet should dominate, and though we have on real criteria for sleet and headlines, it can create some pretty bad driving conditions and it is late enough in the season that this will catch people by surprise. Sort of like we lower the thresholds for the first event of the year, the same goes for the last. Taber writes some phenomenal AFD's for BTV... you can tell he put some time into this one (copied below). I'm also curious if tomorrow is a situation where we are getting freezing rain at like 25F at near 4,000ft, while its sleeting at 1,500ft at 30F or something like that. The summits are so cold right now in the upper teens and low 20s. Also, as I was mentioning earlier, I've seen SE upslope flow on the east side result in more snow and less mix, though I'm not sure if upslope cooling on terrain that's below H85 will have any impact on warming up at H7. Brooke mentions it in his AFD, but the warming in this event just seems so high up there, that I'm not sure what low level upslope processes have on that. I would think the same in the GYX CWA with the SE flow into the foothills would be causing upslope cooling and heavier precipitation rates. .NEAR TERM /THROUGH FRIDAY/... AS OF 145 PM EDT THURSDAY...HAVE ISSUED WX WINTER ADVISORY FOR ENTIRE NORTH COUNTRY FROM MIDNIGHT TONIGHT THRU FRIDAY...FOR A MIX OF WINTRY PRECIPITATION. THINKING SLEET MAYBE THE PRIMARY FORM OF PRECIPITATION...ESPECIALLY ON FRIDAY MORNING. A DIFFICULT MORNING COMMUTE IS LIKELY ACRS THE NORTH COUNTRY ON FRIDAY...WITH PERIODS OF MODERATE MIXED PRECIPITATION LIKELY. A VERY DIFFICULT AND COMPLEX FCST WITH REGARDS TO LLVL THERMAL PROFILES AND ASSOCIATED PRECIP TYPE. LATEST TRENDS IN MODELS HAVE BEEN FOR A SLIGHTLY COOLER SOLUTION WITH MORE FROZEN PRECIP LIKELY ACRS THE NORTH COUNTRY. STILL THINKING A MIX OF SNOW/SLEET WITH SOME POCKETS OF FREEZING RAIN ABOVE 1500 FT. DIFFICULT TO HAVE FREEZING RAIN AND ICE ACCUMULATION DURING THE DAYTIME...DUE TO HIGH APRIL SUN ANGLE WARMING THE SFC...SO ICE IMPACT FROM FREEZING RAIN WL BE LIMITED...BUT STILL EXPECT PLENTY OF SLEET ON FRIDAY...CREATING HAZARDOUS DRIVING CONDITIONS. LETS FIRST START WITH CRNT OBSERVATIONS...TEMPS ALOFT ARE COLD WITH WHITEFACE AT 18F OR -8C...VERY DRY SFC DWPTS WITH VALUES IN THE SINGLE DIGITS AND TEENS. 12Z BUF SOUNDING SHOWS WARM LAYER OF +5C AIR AT 800MB...PLEASE NOTE WARM NOSE IS ABOVE 850MB...AND THIS RESULTS IN A GREATER POTENTIAL FOR SLEET. SFC ANALYSIS SHOWS ARCTIC HIGH PRES ACRS CENTRAL CANADA WITH LOW PRES NEAR CHICAGO IL ATTM. GREATEST 3HR PRES FALLS SHOW ELONGATED LOW PRES DEVELOPING TWD THE SOUTHERN MID ATLANTIC STATES...WHICH COULD LIMIT LOW/MID LVL WAA. PWS ANALYSIS SHOWS UPSTREAM VALUES AROUND 1.0"...WHICH IS >200% OF NORMAL...SO PLENTY OF MOISTURE AVAILABLE ASSOCIATED WITH DEEP FULL LATITUDE SYSTEM...WITH GULF MOISTURE AND SOME CONVECTION NOTED ACRS THE MS RIVER VALLEY. DEEP CLOSED MID/UPPER LVL CIRCULATION WL TRACK TWD THE WESTERN GREAT LAKES TONIGHT AND INTO SOUTHERN CANADA BY FRIDAY NIGHT...WHILE ELONGATED SFC LOW PRES TRACK FROM NEAR CHICAGO INTO THE OHIO VALLEY...THEN REDEVELOPS ACRS THE MID ATLANTIC COAST ON FRIDAY...WHICH MAY LIMIT AMOUNT OF WAA ACRS OUR CWA. NAM/GFS/ECMWF IN FAIR AGREEMENT WITH LARGE SCALE SYNOPTIC SETUP...BUT STILL OFFERING DIFFERENT SOLUTIONS WITH REGARDS TO THERMAL PROFILES. NAM IS THE COLDEST/SNOWIEST WITH GFS THE WARMEST...BUT TRENDING COLDER...AND THE ECMWF IS A GOOD COMPROMISE. ALL SOLUTIONS SHOW THE 1000 TO 500MB 540DM LINE LIFTING NORTH OF OUR CWA ON FRIDAY...WHICH INDICATES THE POTENTIAL FOR SNOW CHANGING TO SLEET/FREEZING RAIN...EVEN IN THE MTNS. HOWEVER...BAND OF VERY STRONG FGEN FORCING...DEEP LAYER OMEGA...AND EVEN A WEAK ELEVATED LAYER OF INSTABILITY LIFTS FROM SW TO NE ACRS OUR CWA BTWN 09Z AND 18Z FRIDAY...RESULTING IN A BAND OF MODERATE TO HEAVY MIXED PRECIP. GFS/NAM SOUNDINGS SHOW WARM LAYER BTWN 800MB AND 700MB BTWN 1-3C LIFTING ACRS OUR CWA...WHILE 925MB TEMPS HOLD IN THE -3C TO -6C RANGE...SUPPORTING A SLEET TYPE PROFILE...ESPECIALLY NORTHERN/CENTRAL VT AND PARTS OF NNY. THINKING STRONG DYNAMICS/SOME COOLING FROM EVAPORATION WL CREATE A BURST OF SNOW/SLEET INITIALLY WITH A QUICK DUSTING TO 3 INCHES POSSIBLE...WITH TIMING VERY CLOSE TO MORNING COMMUTE. ALSO...COOLING EFFECTS FROM SE UPSLOPE FLW...MAY KEEP LUDLOW TO STOWE TO JAY PEAK PROFILES JUST COLD ENOUGH FOR A MORE SNOW TYPE PROFILE WITH ACCUMULATIONS OF 4 TO 6 INCHES POSSIBLE...BEFORE CHANGING TO SLEET/FREEZING RAIN. THINKING THE AMOUNT OF SLEET WL CUT DOWN ON SNOW ACCUMULATIONS AND MAKE IT DIFFICULT TO REACH ADVISORY CRITERIA...BUT GIVEN AMOUNT OF SLEET EXPECTED AND POTENTIAL ICY ROADS AND TIMING...WARRANTS THE ADVISORY. ITS VERY DIFFICULT TO PIN POINT EXACT THERMAL PROFILES GIVEN THE VERY TIGHT THERMAL GRADIENT...BUT IF COLDER TRENDS CONT...ANTICIPATE EVEN MORE SNOW ACRS THE NORTHERN MTNS. QPF WL RANGE BTWN 0.40 TO 0.65" SE DOWNSLOPE REGIONS TO 1.5" IN THE FAVORITE SE UPSLOPE REGIONS. GUSTY SE WINDS OF 40 TO 45 MPH WL BE POSSIBLE LATE TONIGHT INTO FRIDAY ASSOCIATED WITH LLVL JET OF 45 TO 60 KNOTS. TEMPS WL COOL INTO THE 20S NEK TO L30S WARMER VALLEYS TONIGHT AND ONLY WARM INTO THE MID/UPPER 30S CPV/WESTERN SLV TO U20S/L30S MTNS/NEK. MID/UPPER LVL DRY SLOT WL IMPACT AREA AFT 18Z FRIDAY WITH MIXED PRECIP TAPERING OFF TO SCATTERED RAIN/SNOW SHOWERS. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
eekuasepinniW Posted April 11, 2013 Share Posted April 11, 2013 Sleet is the only weather that bores me to tears. Doesn't matter when or how heavily it falls. I rank it as even less interesting than 1/2 mile visibility fog. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.Spin Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 I’ve added the updated advisories map below – the advisories now cover the entire BTV forecast area as the headline indicates. I’ve also added the BTV NWS storm total snow forecast map – it doesn’t look like it’s changed from the earlier version, but I’m surprised that those highest projected accumulations appear to be east of the spine and not on it. The map has us in the 2-4” and the point forecast here sums to 2-5”+ through tomorrow, although the point forecasts in the area seem rather out of synch with lower numbers in the mountains. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dryslot Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CoastalWx Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Sleet b*tch. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dryslot Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Sleet b*tch. yup, ping ping Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OceanStWx Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Taber writes some phenomenal AFD's for BTV... you can tell he put some time into this one (copied below). I'm also curious if tomorrow is a situation where we are getting freezing rain at like 25F at near 4,000ft, while its sleeting at 1,500ft at 30F or something like that. The summits are so cold right now in the upper teens and low 20s. Also, as I was mentioning earlier, I've seen SE upslope flow on the east side result in more snow and less mix, though I'm not sure if upslope cooling on terrain that's below H85 will have any impact on warming up at H7. Brooke mentions it in his AFD, but the warming in this event just seems so high up there, that I'm not sure what low level upslope processes have on that. I would think the same in the GYX CWA with the SE flow into the foothills would be causing upslope cooling and heavier precipitation rates. Definitely a well stated AFD. I think because of the shift rotations we don't overlap very often, which is unfortunate. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nittany88 Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 All sleet and freezing rain along the west slopes. Cars and sidewalks covered in a glaze and about a quarter inch of sleet. Roads just kinda slushy. No snow. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.Spin Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Event totals: 0.2” Sleet/0.07” L.E. As far as I could see, there’s only been sleet at the house thus far in terms of precipitation. It was just cloudy at observations time, but there’s also some showery sleet around as well. Although it continues to be a below average season in terms of snowfall (<90% of average), the number of storms has been above average; this is the 51st accumulating storm of the winter season, not far off from the highest value (53) recorded in 2007-2008. Details from the 6:00 A.M. Waterbury observations are below: New Snow: 0.2 inches (sleet) New Liquid: 0.07 inches Snow/Water Ratio: 2.9 Snow Density: 35.0% H2O Temperature: 30.7 F Sky: Cloudy Snow at the stake: Trace Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
klw Posted April 12, 2013 Author Share Posted April 12, 2013 No snow for me. We did get a thick coating of sleet which was then frozen into place by a layer of freezing rain. It made for a prolonged period of scraping the cars this morning. Only one cut knuckle. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
powderfreak Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Heavy sleet...scalping stuff. We have seen a few brief bursts (like 1-2 minutes at a time) of large aggregates so its gotta be pretty marginal still aloft, but definitely 95% IP. Just had another brief burst of flakes. Its funny, they fall quickly and fast, then all the sudden gone again. Have several tenths of an inch of sleet but don't care enough at this point to keep track of it unless we get up to an inch or something. We all need to head to Jay Peak where they say they are "certainly going to get at least a foot" today on their website. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mreaves Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 No snow for me. We did get a thick coating of sleet which was then frozen into place by a layer of freezing rain. It made for a prolonged period of scraping the cars this morning. Only one cut knuckle. Yeah, once I got the driver's door open, I just turned the car on, set defrost on high and let it sit for 20 minutes. I'm sick of scraping. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
weatherMA Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Wow is it miserable out there. Cold, raw, windy, 29F. Trace of IP from earlier. Brutal. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.Spin Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 It’s certainly slow compared to snow, but the web cam is showing the accumulating sleet at the house – it looks like another 0.4” is down as of noontime. We’ve got a pretty heavy combination of sleet and rain here in Burlington as the big slug of moisture comes into the area: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Allenson Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Posted in the other obs thread but it's sleeting up a storm out there, lol. And yeah, like you guys said earlier, my truck was utterly encased in ice this morning--pretty solid stuff too, not the mushy, easy to scrape type. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mreaves Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Anybody want to weigh in on timing for N. VT? Specifically, is the day for skiing tomorrow in the snow or Saturday? Judging by what it looks like out my window, I'd say tomorrow would be your best bet Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
powderfreak Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 It is impressively cold... we continue to hold or drop in temperature up at the mountain. This slug of precip is going to be interesting. 3,600ft...18F 2,600ft...22F 1,550ft...25F MPV dropped 2F last hour, too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.Spin Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 As of ~1:50 P.M., we just changed over to 100% snow here in Burlington, and it’s finally starting to accumulate in this area. At the house it looks like we’re around 1.3” of total accumulation for the event thus far. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.Spin Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 On the web cam I can see that the precipitation is snow at the house, so it seems to be a fairly widespread changeover from sleet to snow. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
powderfreak Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Snow now in Stowe. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mreaves Posted April 12, 2013 Share Posted April 12, 2013 Switched to snow for a short time in Montpelier but looks like it has stopped for now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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