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April 10-12 Winter Storm


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That GFS run was quite dramatic. It looked a lot stronger but it also went much farther north. The 18 zulu run had Michigan at 30-40 degrees with 10 inches of snow, this run has 70 degrees with a possible severe threat? I think I'm gonna revisit this storm next week...

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All guidance has shifted well north and with a stronger system.

The big difference is how guidance is handling blocking with the NAO. New guidance with the further north solution now has much less strong blocking further west, which allows much more ridging ahead of this system...allowing a much more amped and further north system.


.

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1 hour ago, cyclone77 said:

Should be a classic early spring north/south temp gradient setting up with this one.  The Euro has Hoosier in the 70s, while up at Geo's old stomping ground they're stuck near 40 at midday Thursday.  

Tricky temperature forecast.  Could envision that warm front getting hung up longer somewhere in the metro area (aided by cold lake) until the surface low makes its closest approach. 

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NWS North Platte, NE:

Northerly winds will also increase on Wednesday night and into
Thursday. This will lead to possible blowing and drifting snow for
Wednesday night and Thursday. Current thinking is that for early
Wednesday evening winds will only really have an impact on falling
snow as the character of the snow will be too wet to blow much once
it is on the ground. However, as the night progresses and snow
ratios rise to from 15:1 to near 20:1, snow will be easier to blow
once it is on the ground, resulting in not only blowing snow but
drifting snow as well. Northerly winds on Thursday morning will rise
to 45 to 55 mph which could result blizzard conditions and
significant visibility reductions leading to continued travel
concerns. While snow is expected to move east by late Thursday
afternoon, blowing snow will continue well into Thursday night as
winds remain above 35 mph across the region through this time.

Overall, the highest snow totals will be across the northern
portions of north central Nebraska where rain transitioned over to
snow quicker. Lesser amounts are expected as one moves south towards
I-80. After looking at recent guidance, have significantly increased
totals across the north with the highest amounts generally along a
line from Valentine to Spencer where up to 25 inches could be
possible. Snow will taper to the south where the precipitation
remained rain a bit longer. Lowest amounts at this time will be
across eastern Frontier and southern Custer counties where up to 3
to 4 inches is still possible. Regardless of snow totals, the snow
combined with the potential freezing rain earlier and strong winds
during and after the snow, will lead to quite dangerous travel
conditions across much of western and north central Nebraska.
Caution should be exercised if travel is absolutely necessary on
Wednesday into Thursday night.
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2 hours ago, beavis1729 said:

NWS North Platte, NE:


Northerly winds will also increase on Wednesday night and into
Thursday. This will lead to possible blowing and drifting snow for
Wednesday night and Thursday. Current thinking is that for early
Wednesday evening winds will only really have an impact on falling
snow as the character of the snow will be too wet to blow much once
it is on the ground. However, as the night progresses and snow
ratios rise to from 15:1 to near 20:1, snow will be easier to blow
once it is on the ground, resulting in not only blowing snow but
drifting snow as well. Northerly winds on Thursday morning will rise
to 45 to 55 mph which could result blizzard conditions and
significant visibility reductions leading to continued travel
concerns. While snow is expected to move east by late Thursday
afternoon, blowing snow will continue well into Thursday night as
winds remain above 35 mph across the region through this time.

Overall, the highest snow totals will be across the northern
portions of north central Nebraska where rain transitioned over to
snow quicker. Lesser amounts are expected as one moves south towards
I-80. After looking at recent guidance, have significantly increased
totals across the north with the highest amounts generally along a
line from Valentine to Spencer where up to 25 inches could be
possible. Snow will taper to the south where the precipitation
remained rain a bit longer. Lowest amounts at this time will be
across eastern Frontier and southern Custer counties where up to 3
to 4 inches is still possible. Regardless of snow totals, the snow
combined with the potential freezing rain earlier and strong winds
during and after the snow, will lead to quite dangerous travel
conditions across much of western and north central Nebraska.
Caution should be exercised if travel is absolutely necessary on
Wednesday into Thursday night.

25"?!

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So the models two days ago had the snow starting at 10am here. Yesterday it was 4pm. Turns out it was 10am and came down heavy. 6'' of snow in 5 hours. It also many turn out to be at least 15'' here when the models had warmer all and some rain. Still not as bad as out west with 2-2.5' of snow which is insane. 

StormTotalSnowWeb_Minnesota.png

 

This looks to be the opposite of the 1991 Halloween Blizzard. Too bad it's not Easter yet so we could call it Easter Blizzard. 1991:

1991snow.png

 

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