ss_blog_claim=b223ac461596a919716b9bb9bf1ded3f

Thanksgiving Weekend Thankfully Not Too Chilly

The pattern will be going into a brief state of reloading and relaxation for the last weekend of November, Thanksgiving weekend, and for the first five days of December.  As a result, the storm track I’m expecting will run from the Mississippi Valley to over the coastal plain and into interior New England.  In other words, the center of the cold air will move back towards the Plains, which places the boundary between the warm and cold air over the forecast area through this period, thus the storm track.  

The upper low will lift out of the forecast area on Thanksgiving Thursday with a few isolated snow showers followed by clearing skies.  Temperatures will remain in the near to slight below normal range with the maximum below normal of 4 degrees expected over isolated locations.  

Meanwhile, an area of low pressure will develop along an old cold front boundary over the Mississippi Valley.  I took a blend of the GFS, which is too far east, and the ECMWF which is slightly too far west in my opinion, for the forecast.  This will place the storm track right over the forecast area.  

With a lack of high pressure to the north, any type of cold air in place ahead of this low pressure system will exit the region.  I expect this low pressure system to produce rain for most locations with the possible except of the higher elevations of northeastern Pennsylvania and the Hudson Valley.  However, even in these locations I expect a mix of rain, sleet, and snow.  The accumulating snowfall can be expected over western New York and New England.  Why?  Look at the upper level pattern.  There is no hint (yet) of a negative NAO blocking pattern, which means cold air can not lock in.  

My gift to you for Thanksgiving is a word of advice.  Don’t bother looking at the medium range guidance for potential snow events until around December 4th-6th and beyond.  It is in that time period where I think we will see a negative NAO return as the pattern returns to a cold centered in the East and increased potential for Miller A and Miller B type storms for the rest of December.

-- Weather When Posted --

  • Temperature: 28°F;
  • Humidity: 68%;
  • Heat Index: 28°F;
  • Wind Chill: 22°F;
  • Pressure: 30.33 in.;

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