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Major LES event-December 24-27


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5 minutes ago, Thinksnow18 said:

That’s actually a Delaware park to southern Niagara special. I grew up in NT and recognize this band...this will fire hose and we all end up with a foot plus

Big time run on GFS for you guys. 1-2' for northtowns. This is a northtown to southtown special. SW/WSW winds.

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5 minutes ago, SouthBuffaloSteve said:

Great run on GFS for big metro hit! 
 

I can’t wait to see what camp the NWS is going to take.  Every model is giving a slightly different output with widely different outcomes... Just remember 24 hours ago the NWS was “tossing the GFS”.  Let’s see what says the Euro and Canadian?!  

BABCB4EC-8D74-4158-839D-BBAE78815FC6.gif

Damn BuffaloWeather was right, that run is like 48 hours locked and loaded at Erie County. 

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2 minutes ago, SouthBuffaloSteve said:

It’s more of a 24-30 hour window of roaming the metro.  One thing all the models have agreed on this morning is to push back the starting time frame a good 12+ hours.  

I think the band starts Friday morning regardless of model qpf outputs. It's a bit sheared then for sure, but good enough for a moderate band of lake effect over the southern side of BUF. It gets better later in the day due to increased instability and less shear. 

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20 minutes ago, SouthBuffaloSteve said:

Great run on GFS for big metro hit! 
 

I can’t wait to see what camp the NWS is going to take.  Every model is giving a slightly different output with widely different outcomes... Just remember 24 hours ago the NWS was “tossing the GFS”.  Let’s see what says the Euro and Canadian?!  

BABCB4EC-8D74-4158-839D-BBAE78815FC6.gif

Please, sweet 30lb, 6oz baby Jesus. 

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5 minutes ago, lakeeffectkid383 said:

12z Euro has a nice band right through the metro for 12 hr +...

Where are you seeing that?  I’m only seeing a brief shift to WSW winds late Friday Early Saturday that brings the band close to the metro but never into it... Looks like a south of the south towns band to me... 

06FC298A-6ED5-47F3-939B-4E5E5A3630AF.jpeg

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12 minutes ago, SouthBuffaloSteve said:

Where are you seeing that?  I’m only seeing a brief shift to WSW winds late Friday Early Saturday that brings the band close to the metro but never into it... Looks like a south of the south towns band to me... 

06FC298A-6ED5-47F3-939B-4E5E5A3630AF.jpeg

May be just be the site I’m using but looks pretty darn close to the metro to me. 
 

 

330CA75C-FA83-40AD-8E17-DB526E944BF8.png

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Just now, WxWatcher007 said:

Where do you live so I know not to go there? 

Ha! NNW of Syracuse...a couple miles south of the Oswego county line. But, really the Syracuse area has been in a crap hole of light snowfalls and consistent thaws the past couple of winters. Everything dancing around us. Maddening. You wouldn't know we lived in the "snowiest major city" in the country...

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P&C forecast changed a little here with"occasional" included in the wording for Friday which makes sense.. Saturday still looks good for 4 days out..

Christmas Day
Snow before 7am, then occasional snow showers, mainly after 7am. High near 30. Chance of precipitation is 80%.
Friday Night
Occasional snow showers. Low around 13. Chance of precipitation is 90%.
Saturday
Snow showers. High near 25. Chance of precipitation is 80%.
Saturday Night
Snow showers likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 15. Chance of precipitation is 70%.
Sunday
A chance of snow showers. Partly sunny, with a high near 32. Chance of precipitation is 50%.
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For Friday morning, there should be a brief transition from ending
synoptic snow moving into Central NY and developing lake effect snow
developing on a WSW flow over the lakes.  The coldest aloft will
still be upstream and poised to move overhead later Friday
afternoon. So there may be a period Friday morning with a meager
lake response before a full-blown lake response takes hold.  As a
result, there`s still quite a bit of uncertainty to both the start
time and placement of lake effect snow.

East of Lake Erie...some models move the band well into the
Northtowns while others place it toward Metro Buffalo Friday
afternoon. Regardless, the coldest airmass should pass overhead
Friday evening and mark the period for the heaviest and most intense
lake effect snow, where 2"/hr and thundersnow will be a possibility
into Friday night as the band settles a little to the south
overnight.

East of Lake Ontario...a similar transition period is expected, with
widespread snow tapering off Friday morning...followed with a lake
response Friday afternoon. The most intense period should be Friday
night and well into Saturday.  Similar to Lake Erie however, there`s
still uncertainty placement at this point through Saturday.  The
best chance will probably be over/north of the Tug Hill Plateau.
Then another shortwave trough will move across the St Lawrence
valley and should push the band south over and eventually south of
the Tug Hill Plateau.

With concerns noted above, the watch will stand for now until
there`s more confidence in timing and placement along with
corresponding snow amounts.

In summary, the synoptic snow should yield 1-4" sloppy heavy snow
for nearly all of WNY, followed by a break or decrease, then
localized lake effect develops.  There`s high confidence for lake
effect downwind of both lakes, but details still need to be ironed
out.

Lighter lake snows will linger into Sunday and eventually fall apart
as warm advection ahead of the next system to affect the area turns
flow southerly and warms temperatures into the start of next week.
Long range guidance in fairly good agreement on a shortwave trough
rounding the base of the Northern Stream on Monday. The associated
cold front crosses the Great Lakes region during the day Monday,
leading to snow shower chances across the area. Daytime heating on
Monday may raise temperatures enough for some rain to mix in with
the snow, but should be all snow again by Monday evening. The large
scale system pushes out of the area by Tuesday morning, but much
cooler air ushering in behind the front may lead to some lake effect
snow for Tuesday.
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3 minutes ago, wolfie09 said:

For Friday morning, there should be a brief transition from ending
synoptic snow moving into Central NY and developing lake effect snow
developing on a WSW flow over the lakes.  The coldest aloft will
still be upstream and poised to move overhead later Friday
afternoon. So there may be a period Friday morning with a meager
lake response before a full-blown lake response takes hold.  As a
result, there`s still quite a bit of uncertainty to both the start
time and placement of lake effect snow.

East of Lake Erie...some models move the band well into the
Northtowns while others place it toward Metro Buffalo Friday
afternoon. Regardless, the coldest airmass should pass overhead
Friday evening and mark the period for the heaviest and most intense
lake effect snow, where 2"/hr and thundersnow will be a possibility
into Friday night as the band settles a little to the south
overnight.

East of Lake Ontario...a similar transition period is expected, with
widespread snow tapering off Friday morning...followed with a lake
response Friday afternoon. The most intense period should be Friday
night and well into Saturday.  Similar to Lake Erie however, there`s
still uncertainty placement at this point through Saturday.  The
best chance will probably be over/north of the Tug Hill Plateau.
Then another shortwave trough will move across the St Lawrence
valley and should push the band south over and eventually south of
the Tug Hill Plateau.

With concerns noted above, the watch will stand for now until
there`s more confidence in timing and placement along with
corresponding snow amounts.

In summary, the synoptic snow should yield 1-4" sloppy heavy snow
for nearly all of WNY, followed by a break or decrease, then
localized lake effect develops.  There`s high confidence for lake
effect downwind of both lakes, but details still need to be ironed
out.

Lighter lake snows will linger into Sunday and eventually fall apart
as warm advection ahead of the next system to affect the area turns
flow southerly and warms temperatures into the start of next week.
Long range guidance in fairly good agreement on a shortwave trough
rounding the base of the Northern Stream on Monday. The associated
cold front crosses the Great Lakes region during the day Monday,
leading to snow shower chances across the area. Daytime heating on
Monday may raise temperatures enough for some rain to mix in with
the snow, but should be all snow again by Monday evening. The large
scale system pushes out of the area by Tuesday morning, but much
cooler air ushering in behind the front may lead to some lake effect
snow for Tuesday.

Can I put multiple likes or “weenie” likes on this? This basically calls this a metro event

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