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Upstate/Eastern New York


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2 hours ago, WesterlyWx said:

We got extremely lucky in January that we had that 3 week stretch with 70”. If not for that we’d be so far below average it would be 11-12 all over again. I know this winter is not over yet but I’d give this winter a C+ to B-. Got off to a rocking start in November with early lake effect snow and brutal arctic cold near Thanksgiving giving Buffalo the coldest Thanksgiving ever and then winter took quite a break in December and the first week in January before coming back with a blitzing Vengance near mid January with several lake effect events and the blizzard which was like Jan 14 all over again followed by a very windy few weeks including the hurricane force wind gust a couple weeks ago and now getting consistent small snowfalls and anaomolously cold weather for March this week. Can’t complain when I’m roughly a few inches above my entire seasonal average in early March but my biggest gripe about this winter has been the lack of consistent cold to build a nice snowpack. Seems we never stayed cold enough to build a nice pack even when we got the 70” in 3 weeks in January we never had a snowpack above 20” and even that only lasted a couple days as we had thaws in between significant lake effect events. If we can manage a whopper (12”+) before this season is over than I’ll slide this winter up into the B+/A- range. 

Those 2 LES events make it at least a B+ for me. That wind storm with the ice blocks along the lake shore were incredible too. But losing my favorite winter month in December makes it impossible to give an A. 

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2 minutes ago, rochesterdave said:

Hmmm. I’m shocked. I guess... It feels like an under winter. I guess we’ve been dinked and dunked to the over but I would love to see the airports measuring system. Lol. 

Anyhow, hoping on a bit of LES over next few days. Cause after that we are back into cutters. 

Off to Bristol. Anyone going?

I just got back from Stratton this weekend.  All things considered it was a pretty good trip.  Snow was decent with some blue bird days.  I may hit Bristol one night this week but the brutal cold isnt making it all that appealing, if you go I'll be interested to hear how the conditions are..  Probably going to Holiday Valley this weekend for the "Winter" carnival (I have no idea why they have the winter carnival in March, its ass backwards).  Anyway, Saturday looks pretty perfect, low 30's and sun with no wind.  Hoping to make a whole day out of it.  After that, looks like the ski season is just about dunzo with more rain on the horizon and warmer temps by mid month.  An average year at best.... :(

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850mb temperatures dive to about minus-20 Celsius for Tuesday
night through Wednesday evening, before starting to moderate
slightly into Thursday. Thus the dendritic growth layer will
reside in the lowest 5 kft agl, with just about any cloud cover
producing airy dry snowflakes. Also, in addition to the
instability already offered by the very cold air mass aloft with
1000-500mb thicknesses falling to about only 500 decameters, the
ever-increasing sun angle of March will also produce diurnal
instability Wednesday and Thursday afternoons, to eke out
additional snow showers and flurries. The airmass will indeed be
very dry, limiting coverage and accumulations of snow in a
general sense. However, the primary lake feed off of Lake
Ontario will be capable of yielding several inches of snow
across portions of Onondaga-Madison-Oneida counties. One trend
in the models, though, is that there will be several embedded
shortwaves within the main upper trough that pivots through and
then gradually lifts out during the period. So while confidence
in lake effect-supporting environment remains high, the
positioning of the lake band or bands will fluctuate
considerably.

Confidence getting greater than 7 inches in any 12 hour period
is not high enough for any of our counties yet for a Watch or a
Warning, but that cannot be ruled out. As it stands now, Winter
Weather Advisories easily appear likely be needed for at least
Onondaga-Madison counties, if not some of Oneida as well at
some point. In particular, late Tuesday night to midday
Wednesday may include a Huron-to-Ontario connection which would
produce higher snowfall rates. Unsure at this time how far south
this banding gets; some portions of Seneca-Cayuga could get
involved at times as well. Look for these details to be better
ascertained over the course of the next day or so. When adding
up all of Tuesday night through Thursday, 5 to 10 inches total
will probably be realized in some of the above-mentioned
counties, and if the primary Lake Ontario band manages to
persist over a localized area, there could be more.
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Kbuf

Very late today and tonight synoptic-scale moisture will begin to
increase across our region out ahead of an approaching mid level
trough...particularly from the Lake Ontario basin northward.
Coupled with the loss of diurnal influences and a lengthening
fetch across Lake Ontario as winds turn more west-northwesterly...
this should allow for the Lake Ontario lake snows to consolidate
and become better organized across Northern Cayuga and southern
Oswego counties this evening. The reconstituted lake snows should
then generally lift northward across the Tug Hill region overnight
as the low level flow backs to westerly...and then west-southwesterly
late.

In terms of potential snowfall amounts...at this point it still
appears that the Lake Ontario lake snows should be capable of
producing at least some advisory-worthy accumulations as they
redevelop and move northward tonight...with lower-end warning-type
amounts across portions of Oswego county not out of the question if
the band manages to hang up over an area long enough. This said...
occurrence of the latter remains questionable at this point given
a background synoptic environment only featuring a cap of 6-7 kft...
and more importantly continued uncertainty in exactly how fast the
band will migrate northward...both factors that could help to limit
accumulations. With this in mind we have just elected to retain the
existing Winter Weather Advisory for Northern Cayuga counties for
now...as well as add a new advisory for Jefferson and Lewis counties
to cover the expected northward foray of the lake snows from later
tonight through Tuesday/Tuesday evening...more details on which are
provided in the Short Term section below
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The wife and I are going to check out some of the towns I have found jobs in and applied for. This includes Cazenovia, Morrisville, Hamilton, Truxton, Cortland, Lansing, and Ithaca.

I am personally hoping for a job in Madison county, as it is a beautiful rural area with nice towns...and gets some good uplifting events.

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2 minutes ago, BuffaloWeather said:

This might be the first year in awhile a place off of Lake Erie beats the Tug for highest total in New York State. 

If Fulton picks up 10-12" this week while the So Tug area collects flurries, Wolfie may go postal. 

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That map is a good deal off lol

They have Fulton above average through February..

They are at 106 and avg is 175 over the last 24 years. 

All these seasonal snowmaps have no idea how much this area receives lol

They are probably computer generated and "estimated"..

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NYZ004-050330-
/O.NEW.KBUF.WS.A.0009.190306T0400Z-190307T1500Z/
Wayne-
Including the city of Newark
227 PM EST Mon Mar 4 2019

...WINTER STORM WATCH IN EFFECT FROM TUESDAY EVENING THROUGH
THURSDAY MORNING...

* WHAT...Heavy lake effect snow possible. Total snow
  accumulations of 8 to 16 inches possible in the most
  persistent lake snows.

* WHERE...Wayne county.

* WHEN...From Tuesday evening through Thursday morning.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS...Travel could be very difficult. The
  hazardous conditions could impact the morning or evening
  commute.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

Narrow bands of heavy snow could impact portions of the region.
Localized travel problems will be possible.
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Snow coming down pretty good now..This wasn't really in the forecast here neither..

This Afternoon Mostly sunny, with a high near 22. West wind around 15 mph.

 
 
Scattered flurries before 7pm, then scattered snow showers between 7pm and 8pm, then snow after 8pm.
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