Shower clouds billowed upward Sunday as warm March sun caused updrafts into chilly air aloft, forming numerous, but scattered showers of rain, snow and graupel. |
The sky on Sunday bore signs of spring, even as temperatures began to drop as wintry air approached New England.
It was in the clouds. Cold air had moved in aloft. At the same time, as we head toward spring, the sun is getting stronger and stronger. That sun was able to heat up what is snow-free ground in many areas of Vermont.
This, in turn caused updrafts that hit the chilly air a few thousand feet overhead. That forced the updraft to condense into sort of those billowy clouds you see in the summer.
It wasn't pure spring. Some of those billowy clouds yielded snow and graupel mixed with the rain, so they weren't exactly pleasant summertime showers.
Still, Sunday was a welcome change of sorts. During the heart of winter, the sun is usually too weak to cause much in the way of updrafts, so clouds more often than not have that bland, flat overcast look. In the spring and summer the sky begins to look more interesting, as it did Sunday.
So, spring!
Maybe not so fast. On top of the wintry showers these clouds produced, their gust fronts caused by the downdrafts in these tall clouds, would chill the air abruptly. Sunshine and relative warmth would disappear into instant chill whenever and wherever these showers showers arrived Sunday.
OUTLOOK
The forecast still calls for more winter than spring for the next week or so. Spring, despite the signs we saw Sunday, is on hold.
Today, we'll probably see similar weather to Sunday, with those convective clouds and scattered rain, snow and graupel showers. They might be fewer and further between than Sunday. Between now and Tuesday morning, a few inches of snow might pile up in the central and northern Green Mountains.
The next little system coming in Wednesday looks like it will have a little more oomph that previous forecasts told us. It will by no means be a big storm, but it'll be responsible for yet another few inches of snow in the mountains, and a dusting to a couple inches down in the valleys.
It'll stay cold through the weekend, with the chilliest days being Thursday and Sunday. Many of us won't make it above freezing those two days.
Meanwhile, we a look forward to the prettier skies of later spring and summer.
As we go further into spring and into summer, the contrast between the heated air near the ground and colder air aloft will grow. On some days, anyway.
By summer, the mini-billowy, vertical clouds you saw Sunday will grow into those tall thunderstorms that occasionally create torrential downpours, lightning strikes and strong wind gusts. In contrast to the mini-me showers we had Sunday.
Thunderstorms are perversely my favorite kind of weather. Sunday's clouds happily told me the season of lightning is coming soon. I'll just have to bundle up and wait, at least during this week.
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