Which is actually a little surprising given how easily the forecast could have been wrong. Subtle shifts in the position of the the weather front would make a big difference.
It's been all snow roughly north of Route 2. There will be very little ice up there today. Accumulations so far include 9 inches in Jeffersonville 8 inches in Fairfax, Georgia and Westford and 7 inches in Morrisville.
Here in St. Albans, Vermont I had 5.8 inches of new snow as of 7:30 this morning.
Snow was tapering off north, so it looks like the forecast of five to nine inches was pretty accurate.
The record for the most snow in Burlington today today is 7.0 inches in 1954. It's iffy as to whether they'll get there.
There's already freezing rain in a band across central Vermont, and that's the area I'm most worried about. Between what happens today and then again tonight and early Sunday, some areas in the central and southern Green Mountains risk a lot of tree and power line damage from this storm.
Green Mountain Power tells us they have a full crew on deck ready to help restore power, and they're getting some help on standby from other areas as well.
I noticed as of 7 a.m. Vermont traffic cameras showed trees along Route 7 in Brandon, Route 4 on Mendon Mountain and Interstate 89 near Bethel and along Interstate 91 in southeastern Vermont beginning to sag under the weight of ice from freezing rain.
![]() |
Traffic cam image from Route 103 in Mount Holly, Vermont shows freezing rain already accumulating on trees and power lines. |
There were already some outages as of 7:30 this morning, amounting to about 1,000 customers, mostly around Brandon and Leicester.
Far southern Vermont was getting rain or nothing at all early this morning.
Needless to say, road conditions in central and northern Vermont are atrocious this morning.
THE REST OF TODAY
Near and north of Route 2, the main action at least for now was this morning. The worst of the snow for today is over up there. It looks like those areas will get a bit of a break this afternoon and evening.
A weak wave of low pressure riding along the stalled west to east weather front will go by to our east, and the front will slowly start to sink southward. Both those facts mean the heavy snow this morning will turn into just cloudy skies and maybe a little patchy light snow or freezing drizzle at times.
The fact the break will happen during the day is good. The strong spring sun should work through the clouds a bit. It won't melt all that snow we got early today, but it will at least help road crews get the highways in better shape. It might even briefly get above freezing in spots.
Precipitation should continue today in central and southern Vermont, but even there, it will be lighter than it is this morning. Still, a little more freezing rain will continue to slowly weigh down trees and power lines in some spots.
By late afternoon, most of the precipitation will be focused in far southern Vermont.
After that, the front will stall again, then slowly start to lift northward again
TONIGHT
As the front slowly goes north, rain and freezing rain will start to move north with it. This is where things start to get bad in central Vermont. There could be a lot of freezing rain tonight and the first half of Sunday.
Broader valleys west will probably go to a cold rain fairly quickly on Sunday morning, but the the freezing rain will continue in the Green Mountains and valleys east of those mountains.
Remember yesterday, I mentioned that you start to get a little tree damage and power line problems when you get a quarter inch of ice. You get to a half inch and the power lines and trees really get in trouble.
The latest ice accumulation maps from the National Weather Service depict a half inch or more of ice in the hills and valleys either side of Route 100 between about Weston and Rochester. There's even spot on the map northeast of Manchester drawn as having 0.75 inches of ice.
If you live in these areas especially, charge your devices today. You could be in for some lengthy power outages.
The rain and freezing rain will continue north overnight and Sunday morning. In the Champlain Valley, it could be pretty icy early Sunday morning, but then we'll transition to a cold rain for the rest of the day. That rain will tend to taper off again during the afternoon and evening
In the colder hollows east of the Green Mountains all the way to the Canadian border, freezing rain could be a problem most of the day, though again, precipitation will tend to taper off during the later part of the day.
SUNDAY NIGHT/MONDAY
Temperatures will continue to slowly warm Sunday night as scattered light showers linger.
Warm air still looks like it will surge across Vermont Monday, bringing us all well into the 50s and 60s for highs.
It probably won't rain much until later in the day, when a cold front approaches. There could even some thunderstorms mixed in with this. In fact, on Monday, NOAA's Storm Prediction Center predicts severe thunderstorms up and down the east coast, and a marginal (very slight) risk of a severe storm extends all the way up into southwest Vermont.
It still looks like the rapidly melting snow and ice and the renewed rains Monday will bring river levels up, but so far it's still looking like if we get any flooding at all, it will be pretty minor.
Stay tuned for more updates on this storm as we get 'em!