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Here comes winter -- October 28-November 1 Snowstorm Potential


Hoosier
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10 hours ago, cyclone77 said:

Nice to see an over-achiever there. 

Snow is beginning to stick to paved areas here as well, as we've dropped to 30.  Closing in on an inch on non-paved areas.  Flakes are larger now.  The first 4hrs had very fine flakes.

This happened with at least two of southern WI's would-be big dogs last winter, leading to lower than expected totals. Ironically for us we saw big fluffly flakes right at the start of this event, but they were melting on contact with the pavement at first.

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I'm going with 3.9" total.  The snowboard, out in the yard, has 3.7" while the deck and car, close to the house, have 4.5".

My total for the week will be lower than many other spotters in the CR area, but we ended up doing as well as we could have.  The two systems dropped their best snow right through this area.  Farther north and west in Iowa, very little snow fell this week.  I'm sure those areas will surge past us once winter arrives.

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Upgraded to WWA here. Lake band gonna rock later on this side of the big lake too

 

.UPDATE...
Issued at 951 AM EDT Thu Oct 31 2019

Observations as of 9:50 AM indicate our current rain/snow line
lies along a line from Muskegon to Big Rapids with snow falling
north of that line and rain/drizzle falling south. As this area of
mid- level f-gen forcing shifts east, all precipitation across
lower MI is expected to transition over to snow through the
afternoon and evening. Pockets of particularly heavy snow with low
visibility and hazardous travel will be conceivable along the
lake-shore thanks to a possible lake convergence band. Slightly
higher snowfall amounts than previously forecast will be feasible,
with up to around 2 inches possible for most areas south of I-96,
and higher amounts up to 3-5 inches possible to the north,
especially in higher elevations.

Despite warm ground temperatures, if snow rates are high enough,
heavy, wet snow accumulation will be possible on roads and lead
to hazardous travel particularly on bridges and overpasses as
gusty winds lead to efficient cooling. In addition, scattered
power outages will be probable as heavy, wet snow accumulates on
trees, some still carrying leaves, alongside gusty winds to
35-45 mph this evening.
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