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6 minutes ago, Shea said:

I’m not, but my husband is and that’s exactly what happened. We spent a few years at Fort Hood prior to Campbell so it’s been a LONG time without winter. We are from Colorado though so we aren’t a stranger to it. I didn’t really start being interested in weather until the December 2015 tornado outbreak in the south. I’m glad I get to expand my horizons beyond severe weather. 

Well that’s good because the only severe weather we get here is snow. Wish we got more of it here. Welcome to the board! 

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12 minutes ago, Shea said:

I’m not, but my husband is and that’s exactly what happened. We spent a few years at Fort Hood prior to Campbell so it’s been a LONG time without winter. We are from Colorado though so we aren’t a stranger to it. I didn’t really start being interested in weather until the December 2015 tornado outbreak in the south. I’m glad I get to expand my horizons beyond severe weather. 

Fort Drum gets crazy cold. They don’t receive a ton of snow in comparison to areas just south of there. 

But it might be a lot more snow than you are accustomed to:snowing:

Welcome! We love having new members. 

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26 minutes ago, Shea said:

I’m not, but my husband is and that’s exactly what happened. We spent a few years at Fort Hood prior to Campbell so it’s been a LONG time without winter. We are from Colorado though so we aren’t a stranger to it. I didn’t really start being interested in weather until the December 2015 tornado outbreak in the south. I’m glad I get to expand my horizons beyond severe weather. 

I’m originally from Nashville, so I know the tornado outbreaks well! There’s nothing up here as insane as the large scale tornado outbreaks they get in the southeast. But huge lake effect events can be stunning, and there is always the possibility of devastating ice storms that cover a wide area — but that has also been known to happen in KY and TN.

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Just got back from Chicago area...for my sons graduation from Navy Bootcamp (it’s still the living hell I remember it as being). Thankfully the storm timing wasn’t a week earlier. Would not have been helpful on graduation week.  Not that it was warm there (30s) but I managed to miss the record cold here on Thanksgiving. I’ll gladly pass on that. ;)

Having been loosely in touch with weather for the past week or so...I noticed the WSW’s up north of here. I liked the previous unconsolidated Watch/Warning system better as in situations like this, when I’d see a Lake Effect Snow Watch up north, I knew it was something I could largely ignore here nearer to SYR. Just putting up generic WSWs takes a bit more sleuthing to figure out what’s going on (I figure it’s for projected LES on/near the Tug).

 

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1 hour ago, Shea said:

Hello, I thought I should sorta say hi before I started to post randomly. I just moved up to Fort Drum from the far southern Kentucky area so while I know a far amount about severe thunderstorm forecasting and lingo I feel a tad bit lost when reading about snow. But basically I’m just happy to see any appreciable winter weather. After 7 years I’m already in heaven. I’m looking forward to learning. 

Welcome.  You’ll see more than your fair share of “appreciable” winter weather up near the Drum. ;)

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It appears from this vantage point that we will be seeing a more synoptic/hybrid lake enhanced snows on Wednesday for a good chunk of the CWA...my thoughts are most get some accums with the areas with of buffalo and tug hill to northern Oswego jackpotting off Ontario. After that we warm again and then another cold shot. 

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I guess u shouldn't go against the euro lol 

Clear trend by both Nam Products, majority NW/WNW..

3k nam looks Blah with light precip and marginal temps..

We went from a strong West-WSW band to some weak NW crap lol

I guess at least everyone can join in the fun..

12k Nam would be a nice median for everyone..

sn10_acc.us_ne (2).png

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Getting a little more excited for this one around these parts. Quite a few of the high res models have that convergent band running up the spine of Erie and hitting us. Obviously elevation is going to be huge and think Perrysburg gets the most out of this event. Thinking around 5-10" for the distant southtowns. 10-16" for Springville/Colden/Perrysburg. 3-6" for KBUF. 

prateptype.us_ne.png

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All I’m hearing is “higher elevations “ 

yet they have 12”-18” Down to parish..

 THURSDAY/...
Complex forecast this period. Consolidated surface low near the New
England coast Tuesday will rotate slowly into northern New England
by Wednesday. On the western side of the low, colder air will build
into the area during the day Tuesday. 850 mb temperatures just cold
enough to support snow, especially across the higher terrain.
Favorable moisture profiles, a westerly fetch and upsloping will
maintain steadier snows east of the Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. Snow
ratio should be rather inefficient for accumulating snows across
lower elevations, with better ratios across the hills south and
east of Buffalo and over the Tug Hill. Expect 2-3 inches of snow
across higher terrain east of Lake Erie with 3-5 inches
possible on the Tug Hill. Elsewhere, snow showers should only
accumulate an inch or so.

Tuesday night into Wednesday night, thermal profiles do not change
all that much with 850 mb temperatures remaining around -8C.
Boundary layer cooling improves, but it continues to look like
a combination snow event having both a synoptic and lake effect
component with some lake and orographic enhancement. Upslope and
lake components will play a big role with significantly more
snow expected across higher terrain although there should be
some snow accumulation in all areas. Lake enhancement could
bring locally high amounts east of the lakes during this time.
These areas could see localized amounts of up to a foot.

A Winter Storm Watch remains in effect east of Lake Ontario. Greater
forecast confidence has been gained to issue a Winter Storm Watch
east of Lake Erie.

Lake effect snow will continue Wednesday night, but snowfall rates
will diminish. Several inches of new snowfall will be possible
across higher terrain due to upsloping. Snow showers will then
linger Thursday, with only light additional accumulation expected.

This long-term snow event beginning late tonight and lasting into
Wednesday night will likely produce some fairly impressive storm
totals. Due to the marginal thermal profiles, the greatest
amounts should be across higher terrain, but accumulating snows
are likely just about everywhere.
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