Winds remain gusty on the mountain, but they've lessened some and skies are very blue as an area of low pressure gathers strength well to our south. As expected, no storm late this week for us and not much one for anyone in the northeast. One has to travel to the unusual spot of Norfolk, VA to find fresh powder and this is not a place that often sees any. There's some light snow indicated for the mountains Thursday night with a dusting the most likely accumulation amount. During the day Thursday, we should see more sunshine early and an increase in clouds later in the day. Winds will remain gusty Thursday and diminish somewhat for Friday under at least some sunshine.
The polar jet and associated cold air is expected to relax considerably beginning this weekend, but don't be fooled, winter isn't done nor are outbreaks of some bitterly cold air. This weekend will be quiet however. Winds will continue to diminish on what looks to be an outstanding weather day on Saturday where sunshine will warm readings from near zero to 20 degrees. Clouds and some light snow are expected to return for Sunday and temperatures are expected to continue to moderate, reaching the high 20's on the mountain and 30's in valley locations.
Relative to what we've seen for much of this month and the entire 2025 calendar year so far, the early part of next week looks pretty mild. In actual temperatures, it won't be too big of a deal. Some sunshine on Monday will boost temperatures up close to the freezing mark Monday and clouds Monday night are likely to keep temperatures pretty steady Monday night. The clouds are from a clipper system that is expected to drop a bit of snow over the mountains both during the overnight and on Tuesday. I don't like forecasting a lot of snow for MRG when the prevailing flow is southwesterly and unless the nature of this weak weather system changes, accumulations should be on the lighter side, though it won't be zero and we we shouldn't expect mixed precipitation or rain on the mountain. Temperatures are expected to remain within range of the freezing mark Wednesday and Thursday and then the stars appear to be aligning for what could be our next significant event on the final day of the month. Much could go wrong with this potential storm as it appears to be a clipper that needs to catch some coastal dynamite or some close iteration of that. A surge of cold air can be expected for the first full weekend of March, whatever happens with Friday and away we go into March.
The biggest feature driving the weather pattern for the early part of March is a beautiful looking ridge near the Alaskan/Yukon border. This feature will make things very interesting for the first 10 days of the month with the continued presence of arctic cold a virtual certainty and while ensembles hint at the presence of more storminess. This is the first time in a while we can go into March with cold weather feedbacks blowing in our direction. The persistent cold air has put a lot of ice on the Great Lakes, might freeze Lake Champlain in the coming days and has placed an area of colder water in the coastal waters of the northeast. Barring a big overwhelming pattern shift, it should be a slow spring or at least that's what I would expect.