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Central PA - March 2017


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CTP's latest warning update still shows some love for us northern/western sections so that's encouraging:

 

URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
National Weather Service State College PA
306 PM EDT Mon Mar 13 2017

PAZ006-011-012-018-019-025-026-034>036-140715-
/O.CON.KCTP.WS.W.0003.170314T0000Z-170315T0200Z/
Potter-Cameron-Northern Clinton-Northern Centre-Southern Centre-
Blair-Huntingdon-Bedford-Fulton-Franklin-
Including the cities of Coudersport, Emporium, Renovo,
Philipsburg, State College, Altoona, Huntingdon, Mount Union,
Bedford, McConnellsburg, and Chambersburg
306 PM EDT Mon Mar 13 2017

...WINTER STORM WARNING REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM 8 PM THIS EVENING
TO 10 PM EDT TUESDAY...

* LOCATIONS...The Central Mountains.

* HAZARD TYPES...Heavy snow.

* SNOW ACCUMULATIONS...10 to 16 inches. Higher amounts are
  possible on the tops and windward side of ridges.

* TIMING...Snow will move into far southern and far northern
  Pennsylvania around or after sunset. The snow will rapidly
  overspread all of central Pennsylvania by midnight. The heaviest
  snow will fall from midnight through mid morning Tuesday.
  Additional, lighter snow is expected Tuesday afternoon and
  evening.

* IMPACTS...Travel will become very difficult late tonight through
  Tuesday afternoon, with snow covered, slippery roads, and poor
  visibilities. The morning commute on Tuesday will be extremely
  difficult if not impossible. Avoid travel, if at all possible.
  Avoid travel, if at all possible, late tonight and Tuesday morning.

* WINDS...Southeast turning to the northeast overnight and then
  to the north on Tuesday. Speed generally 5 to 10 mph with
  gusts up to 20 mph.

* TEMPERATURES...25 to 30 degrees.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation reminds motorists
to adjust speeds based on driving conditions and to take it slow
in ice and snow.

&&
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8 minutes ago, Rickg2 said:

PAZ040-044-047-048-072-141900-
/O.UPG.KBGM.WS.W.0004.170314T0000Z-170316T0000Z/
/O.NEW.KBGM.BZ.W.0001.170314T0000Z-170315T0000Z/
Northern Wayne-Lackawanna-Luzerne-Pike-Southern Wayne-
Including the cities of Damascus, Equinunk, Scranton, Hazleton,
Wilkes-Barre, Milford, and Honesdale
259 PM EDT Mon Mar 13 2017

...BLIZZARD WARNING IN EFFECT FROM 8 PM THIS EVENING TO 8 PM EDT
TUESDAY...

The National Weather Service in Binghamton has issued a Blizzard
Warning, which is in effect from 8 PM this evening to 8 PM EDT
Tuesday. The Winter Storm Warning is no longer in effect.

* LOCATIONS...Wayne, Pike, Lackawanna, and Luzerne counties in
  Northeast Pennsylvania.

* HAZARD TYPES...Heavy snow, as well as significant blowing and
  drifting.

* ACCUMULATIONS...Snow accumulations of 14 to 20 inches in valley
  locations and up around 2 feet at higher elevations.

* TIMING...Snow will overspread the area near or just prior to
  midnight. Snow will become heavy at times shortly after midnight
  with heavy snow continuing through much of the day on Tuesday.
  The snow will taper off to lighter snow and snow showers Tuesday
  night. Winds will increase from the north or northeast later
  tonight with occasional gusts to 35 mph late tonight and
  especially Tuesday. Most of the snow will be over by Tuesday
  night but blowing and drifting snow will cause travel problems
  through Wednesday.

* IMPACTS...The heavy snow will combine with strong winds to cause
  low visibility along with considerable blowing and drifting
  snow. White out conditions will be common, especially over the
  Pocono plateau. Travel will become nearly impossible in many
  areas. Bitter wind chills may produce frostbite with prolonged
  exposure to the cold.

* WINDS...North 15 to 25 mph with gusts up to 45 mph.

* VISIBILITIES...Snow and blowing snow will reduce visibilities to
  a quarter mile or less for several hours.

* TEMPERATURES...Mostly in the 20s.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A Blizzard Warning means blizzard conditions are expected or
occurring. A blizzard is the most dangerous and life-threatening
winter storm. Blizzards reduce visibility to less than 1/4 mile
from falling and/or blowing snow with frequent wind gusts over
35 mph for at least 3 hours. A blizzard warning means that
prolonged whiteout conditions are expected or occurring which
will make travel extremely dangerous or even impossible. If you
venture out, you could be risking your life.

&&

$$

 

 

Looks like ABE is also in this Blizzard warning.

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3 minutes ago, Jmister said:

CTP's latest warning update still shows some love for us northern/western sections so that's encouraging:

Just saw their latest forecast graphics... they actually upped totals for the western and true central counties. Not sure what they're seeing at this point but I'd like to trust them! Still expecting about 8" and would be thrilled with 10+

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3 minutes ago, canderson said:

It's unusual for CTP to bark this loudly. I trust them and they must be seeing things that they really support.

I'd imagine ratios could be really nice back here with snow still on the ground and everything frozen solid. Plus starting at night will obviously help things pile up too.

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NWS BGM upped our totals a bit. we are now at 20 with a range of 18-24. that is up a bit from this morning. 

I am going to the store to make sure I have dog treats. because my dog gets mad when he runs out of treats and as DT says this is a "big dog". (actually he is a mini jack russell and loves the snow.)

 

Rick

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It's unusual for CTP to bark this loudly. I trust them and they must be seeing things that they really support.


They are remembering last year to coup the NAM had and looking at the current Hi-res NAM mesoscale banding and thinking "fool me once..."


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
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CTP upped Harrisburg:

 

Tonight
Snow after 8pm. The snow could be heavy at times. Low around 27. East wind 6 to 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. Total nighttime snow accumulation of 6 to 10 inches possible.
Tuesday
Snow. The snow could be heavy at times. High near 31. North wind 11 to 13 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New snow accumulation of 7 to 11 inches possible.
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34 minutes ago, snowalot said:

I was going to ask if we think Lancaster County might go to blizzard warning being that west chester and Berks just went to it. I was looking at wind profiles and we seem close.

I just read afd from ctp and they say no guidance suggests blizzard condition  (frequent wind gusts >= 35mph) totals. They did up snow totals though. It will be nice to enjoy a great finish to an extremely warm winter season.

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1 minute ago, pawatch said:

They must see something they like. 

image.jpg

I kinda think that verifies until Altoona. It seemed like in previous storms, places like Lewistown, Mount Union/Orbisonia, McConnellsburg, and Chambersburg (to a lesser extent) fared as well as much of the LSV. Places like Mifflin/Juniata/SE Huntingdon counties seem to do well in these setups. We'll see.

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3 minutes ago, Atomixwx said:

I kinda think that verifies until Altoona. It seemed like in previous storms, places like Lewistown, Mount Union/Orbisonia, McConnellsburg, and Chambersburg (to a lesser extent) fared as well as much of the LSV. Places like Mifflin/Juniata/SE Huntingdon counties seem to do well in these setups. We'll see.

With the NW and Laurels I think they're banking on the remaining deform precip that lingers back and eventually a bit of lake enhancement as the flow turns northerly to northwesterly, which was why there was reference in the AFD to the 24hr/8" threshold someone quoted a bit ago. The warnings for the NW/Laurels go until Wednesday 8am while the rest of the region's warnings end Tuesday evening. The lakes are definitely open for business with how warm the dead of winter was, and with plenty of cold air getting pulled in behind this storm there could actually be some decent snow just from that in some of the usual areas. 

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14 minutes ago, canderson said:

When is the last time State College had 12"+ in one storm?

Yea it was the Feb 5-6, 2010 storm. I'm pretty sure you have to go back to either March 13-14, 93 or early March '94 to get a storm that dumped 20"+ on UNV. 

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