Mattl
New member
Yesterday, the models jumped back to having a strong low come up the coast following a frontal boundary. The storm will tap heavy atlantic moisture and really bomb off the Cape Cod coast. It will be for all intensive purposes a nor'easter. Everyone will start as rain, but as the storm travels into western Maine, it will tap the coldest air of the season in and change the rain to snow from the mountains down to the valleys Tuesday night. For valleys, the farther west, the more snow you will get. Vermont will change to snow first, then NH. I dont think any snow will accumulate south of Concord, NH, as I think a dry slot will work in. Since most of this will occur on Tuesday night, it will be able to accumulate if it comes down hard enough because the sun angle isn't playing a part. For the mountains of Vermont and the Whites, I think 6-14 inches will fall, this will be above 2000 feet in elevation. For the valleys of Vermont, western and northern NH, I think 1-8 inches will fall, as it will really depend on where you are. 1-8 is a huge range, but thats how it works this time of year. If you are a little higher up you get the upper end. On Wednesday look for the coldest day of the year, with snow showers and strong north winds. Not a day to hike above treeline. Thursday and Friday look to be better so lets get some pictures on here! If the storm track changes it could alter all of this, but at this point this is how it looks. Bring on winter! -Mattl
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