Call the murky air a sign that portends a weather forecast for the week that has a lot of unknowns.
So I can give you the broad brush, and the changes in what we can expect:
1. Heat Muted
It's still going to be awfully warm for the beginning of March in Vermont, but clouds and rain chances are taking the oomph out of what had been expected to be wildly toasty weather.
Today, those clouds are stubborn. Even if and when the fog diminishes, it will stay mostly to completely cloudy. That will hold temperatures to within a few degrees of 50. Again, balmy for the beginning of March, but not record breaking.
Monday gives us the best chances of record highs. Original forecasts had called for a lot of sun, which would have boosted us into the 60s, which is ridiculous for March 4. However, we don't know how much the clouds will clear out, so meteorologists are now calling for highs in the 50s to around 60. That still might be good enough to break record highs.
A weak storm Tuesday that we didn't think would encompass most of Vermont now looks like it might. That would hold daytime temperatures down to a still mild 50 degrees. Wednesday looks unseasonably mild, too, but I'm unsure how much sun we'll get.
By the way, night times will be super warm, too, staying well above freezing most areas. That will help turn back roads into serious mud bogs again
2. Storminess
I've already hinted above about a change in the overall weather. We had a quiet February with no real storms until the final couple days of the month. Now, a spray of frequent low pressure systems has started passing over us, or nearby. The storms might not be blockbusters, but they will keep meteorologists on their toes, Especially since something will be coming through every other day, or close to that.
The first in the series went through yesterday and last night. We have the next one Tuesday, with that light rain. The best chances of rain are in the southeastern two thirds of Vermont with that one.
Other bouts of precipitation are quite possible again Thursday and over next weekend. How much precipitative falls and where is still an open question. Overall, it seems like the odds are the more south and east you go in the Green Mountain State, the more you'll get.
The weather pattern will probably stay active after next weekend, too.
3. Snow Comes Back?
Notice that after Tuesday, I keep referring to "precipitation" and not just rain. It's only March, after all, and Vermont is still prone to doozies for snowstorms.
The biggest snowstorm on record for Vermont hit the far southern parts of the state in 1947. And seven of Burlington's top 20 biggest snowstorms hit in March.
Don't worry, I don't anticipate snowmaggedon, or anything like California's Sierra Nevada mountains are currently getting.
However, as temperatures drift downward later in the week, these storms could produce snow. There's not a big supply of cold air to work with later in the week. And it is March, so it's a little warmer than it would be mid-winter anyway.
Which means we could get snow, or rain, or both with these systems. If it does snow, the best chances are up in the mountains. Which is OK, because Vermont's suffering ski areas could use a bit of a late season boost.
No comments:
Post a Comment