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17 minutes ago, BuffaloWeather said:

Sorry we don’t like Ohio folks stealing the juice from our lake. ;)

Still not sure how we’re on different sides of the same lake and you’re not in our sub-forum. Cleveland and the belts should be with us and the southern potion of Ohio should be with the Tennessee/Kentucky crew or even Pittsburgh. 

 

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Haha!!  You Buffalo area guys definitely get that fetch though!   Ya I do agree about the sub forum split, we are kind of on our own island over there. Thanks , appreciate it!   

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Latest from kbuf

 

A strong upper level jet and mid-level forcing will
amount to widespread rain and snow across the forecast area Friday
into Friday night. Cold air advection will spread across the region
Friday night and any rain will be transition to snow with some light
accumulations possible. Temperatures will fall into the upper 20s to
low 30s Friday night.
850 mb temperatures will fall steadily into the weekend, with
anomalously cold air being sent down into the Great Lakes region
behind Fridays low pressure wave. Widespread lake effect snow in
the typical west-northwest flow belts is highly likely. Details
of how much and exactly where that falls is uncertain at this
stage. Blowing snow could also be an issue, especially close to
the lakeshores. Winter weather headlines will likely be needed
as we get closer to the event, therefore will maintain mention
in the Hazardous Weather Outlook product.

Lake snows will diminish Sunday into Sunday night as a surface ridge
moves in from the Ohio Valley. Chances for precipitation look to
ramp up again Monday into Tuesday as another deep trough is set to
take hold in the central CONUS early next week. Any details related
to synoptic snow are uncertain given the nature of the shortwave
energy that would be driving it.

Beyond this period, there is growing confidence that a much colder
air mass will settle across the lower Great Lakes during the mid to
end part of next week, resulting in the potential for
significant lake snows as models supporting 850 mb temperatures
dropping into the -15C to -18C range.
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Definitely all gravy. This is my first winter away from the Lakes. I used to live right on the lakeshore just outside Toronto. Now I live up on the Niagara Escarpment about 220M or 720 feet higher. I've asked a few local meteorologists what to expect and they mentioned a lot more snow compared to those right along the lake (Hamilton DT, Grimsby, St.Catherines) 

Though not by much, i am also closer to you guys when tracking snowstorms. 

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11 hours ago, BuffaloWeather said:

This isn't normal cold. This is a piece of the PV hitting our area in normal November. We will be running 20 degrees below normal. The coldest anomalies across the entire planet will literally be right here next week.

 

What an awesome cross-polar flow regime setting up for at least a week and perhaps beyond.  I also agree that, thats extremely significant cold shot for this time of year, even for around here.  Rarely do we see such cold air brought in by WNW-NW  flow as its usually brought in by W-WSW winds which adds to the reason of such anomalously extreme LES storms, that happen during the month of November, in and around KBUF.  Sure it can happen as it is now, but its quite anomalous, but I'll take it:drunk:. The 00Z GFS has just shot after shot of synoptic love and with all this cold around, with the mean trough situated where it is, means a constant W-NWnwerly flow for days but I'd bet money the winds veer enough during this shot of cold that both Watertown and Buffalo get in on the fun.  If not that way, then definitely synoptically!

What a pattern though.  Just imagine if it was a week before Christmas, now that would be nice!

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I know it's pretty hard to see and pretty coarse but the BTV WRF has a bullseye over the southtowns of over 1.5" liquid equivalent and that's not even the whole thing as the band is still over the southtowns at the end of the run. This is likely way overdone but the potential for an accumulating (possibly significant) snow event for the southtowns is looking like more of a possibility.

 

 

IMG_0370.PNG

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23 minutes ago, WesterlyWx said:

I know it's pretty hard to see and pretty coarse but the BTV WRF has a bullseye over the southtowns of over 1.5" liquid equivalent and that's not even the whole thing as the band is still over the southtowns at the end of the run. This is likely way overdone but the potential for an accumulating (possibly significant) snow event for the southtowns is looking like more of a possibility.

 

 

IMG_0370.PNG

I think what is important here is both models are getting into their sweet spot of forecasting...this shows up tomorrow and the snowblower will need to be run.

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1 hour ago, Thinksnow18 said:

I think what is important here is both models are getting into their sweet spot of forecasting...this shows up tomorrow and the snowblower will need to be run.

Latest 06z BTV wrf has well over 2” of QPF just south of Buffalo through Saturday afternoon... this is definitley way overdone but I would not be surprised to see some heavy wet snow with lots of graupel and thunder/lightning Saturday morning. 

C4950694-1595-4AFB-B794-20F86A45212D.jpeg

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1 hour ago, WesterlyWx said:

Latest 06z BTV wrf has well over 2” of QPF just south of Buffalo through Saturday afternoon... this is definitley way overdone but I would not be surprised to see some heavy wet snow with lots of graupel and thunder/lightning Saturday morning. 

C4950694-1595-4AFB-B794-20F86A45212D.jpeg

That’s a transition zone special!  Should be waking up to a winter wonderland Saturday morning!  Hype level is a solid 9 out of 10 right now!

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8 minutes ago, SouthBuffaloSteve said:

That’s a transition zone special!  Should be waking up to a winter wonderland Saturday morning!  Hype level is a solid 9 out of 10 right now!

The heart of that band is Amherst to south buffalo with the Lackawanna south buffalo are with the bullseye...if this is realized 6 to 12 is likely with local amounts if up to 2 feet

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On Saturday...the bands of lake effect snow should briefly intensify
as the cold air will deepen to -10 to -12c (H85 temps). Point
soundings suggest that the cap will rise to nearly 15k ft over Lake
Ontario and a respectable 12k ft or so over Lake Erie. The only
debatable parameter will be the amount of synoptic moisture that the
lake will have to enhance. Guidance has not been impressed with the
amount of environmental moisture...but there should still be enough
in the vcnty of Lake Ontario to support a `healthy` lake snow band.
Given the hgt of the cap and -10c isotherm...stronger convection in
the Ontario band could support lightning. Will not add heavy snow or
lightning to the forecast just yet...as confidence is not quite
there yet...mainly due to the possible lack of synoptic moisture.
Otherwise...it will be brisk and chilly across the region with winds
of 20 to 30 mph being the norm. Given that temps will be in the mid
30s for the bulk of the day...this would translate into wind chills
in the teens and 20s. Stay tuned.
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