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OBS for NYC CP first measurable minor snowfall? 11A Fri 12/20-11A 12/21, embedded with surrounding area periodic minor accumulative snow


wdrag
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Very light snow in Garwood NJ.  About 35 degrees.  Slight patch o' white on the periphery.  Filled in better than I expected, staying mostly snow.  We have a clipper, developing coastal and an inverted trough.  Without models, I expect the developing coastal to pull most of the energy from the clipper.  Even though some say the low was around the outer banks, I think it is much further north than that, and by the time the original source gets here, I would think the coastal will have robbed most of it and "heaviest" snow will be north of suburban NYC?

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8 minutes ago, Dark Star said:

Very light snow in Garwood NJ.  About 35 degrees.  Slight patch o' white on the periphery.  Filled in better than I expected, staying mostly snow.  We have a clipper, developing coastal and an inverted trough.  Without models, I expect the developing coastal to pull most of the energy from the clipper.  Even though some say the low was around the outer banks, I think it is much further north than that, and by the time the original source gets here, I would think the coastal will have robbed most of it and "heaviest" snow will be north of suburban NYC?

The meat of the precip with the coastal low on radar looks like it’ll clip SE Mass. and Boston perhaps. The snow associated with the trough west of the low looks like it’ll favor NJ. Guess I got 0.1 or 0.2” with the snow band earlier but it’s melted now. But generally something to make it wintry for an hour and nothing more here. Boston has a good shot at breaking their 4” snow drought, this is the kind of late bloomer system that can develop in a fast pattern like this and they have the longitude to cash in. 

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13 minutes ago, Dark Star said:

Very light snow in Garwood NJ.  About 35 degrees.  Slight patch o' white on the periphery.  Filled in better than I expected, staying mostly snow.  We have a clipper, developing coastal and an inverted trough.  Without models, I expect the developing coastal to pull most of the energy from the clipper.  Even though some say the low was around the outer banks, I think it is much further north than that, and by the time the original source gets here, I would think the coastal will have robbed most of it and "heaviest" snow will be north of suburban NYC?

“Heaviest” snows will be north and west of NYC.  The coastal was expected to move out quickly from our area this afternoon making room for the trough and IVT to approach from the west.

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2 minutes ago, the_other_guy said:

But how far N and W is the big question

Take a look at high resolution radar.  I use the site weather.cod.edu.   If you look closely at the elements you can plainly see echos coming west from the Jersey Shore while other echos come east from central PA.  They are meeting along the Delaware River.  This is where the IVT is currently set up.  Where these echoes meet the accompanying moisture is lifted higher into the atmosphere and then precipitates back down mainly in the form of snow in this instance.  This matches where the models are calling for the higher snow accumulations.  Later tonight as the trough moves in the feature will weaken and push out to the east.  

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5 minutes ago, Tatamy said:

Take a look at high resolution radar.  I use the site weather.cod.edu.   If you look closely at the elements you can plainly see echos coming west from the Jersey Shore while other echos come east from central PA.  They are meeting along the Delaware River.  This is where the IVT is currently set up.  Where these echoes meet the accompanying moisture is lifted higher into the atmosphere and then precipitates back down mainly in the form of snow in this instance.  This matches where the models are calling for the higher snow accumulations.  Later tonight as the trough moves in the feature will weaken and push out to the east.  

 

IMG_3421.jpeg

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Had occasional very light snow/rain mix from about 10 am to 2 pm with no accumulation at 36-37F, but we've had more light-to-moderate snow since then and temps are down to 34F and we're getting some stickage on cars/grass and I was even able to make a snowball, lol.  Maybe 1/8" so far.  I'm assuming this will continue without much accumulation until at least early evening when temps drop a bit more, plus there won't be any indirect sunlight impact (much less on the shortest day of the year, but not zero, especially with temps above 32F and lighter intensity).  Sticking with my 1.25" snowfall guesstimate for the event.  

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