We saw a little mixed precipitation with the wet snow that fell on New Year's Day and since then we've seen persistent cold and a lot over-performing nickle and dime events. It's added up to some fantastic mid-January skiing which will carry right though the MLK holiday period. The weather situation for the weekend has evolved a bit and now includes some likely additional snow on Sunday though the same general theme holds with milder weather at the start and eventually a bitterly cold finish on Monday.
Winds are expected to become southerly on Saturday and in certain circumstances, those can really rip through the valley and warm temperatures beyond expectations. It's possible we could see temperatures up toward 40 on the valley floor with a little early sunshine. Across the higher ski areas though readings are expected to stay close to or below freezing with snow developing around midday. I try not to get too optimistic in these type of setups since the moisture and initial storm to the north appear disorganized and wind isn't favorable. In spite of that, we could score 2-4 inches with much of it falling right near the end of the ski day Saturday. The warmer valley floor is more likely to see 1-2 inches of wet snow and there are models out there predicting a little rain at low elevations Saturday night as precipitation lightens up. Temperatures Sunday morning will fall back into the teens with arctic air building across the region. The story however relates to an area of low pressure expected to strengthen along the east coast Sunday. The expected track of this storm, east of Cape Cod, does not put any part of northern Vermont in the heaviest snow but their remains a rather broad range of model scenarios that do include a decent period of snowfall late Sunday. The Canadian model has the storm tracking the furthest west and indicates a foot or more of snow for MLK Monday. The consensus and my expectation, is for a period of light snow and 1-4 inch accumulation for will be a cold and blustery Monday with temperatures near zero for much of the day. Interestingly, the formation of the storm should help keep the winds lower for Sunday but could then help make them worse as the storm continues to strengthen downstream of us Monday. The situation with the snow needs to be watched as models have a notoriously difficult time with a good polar jet present. I wouldn't totally dismiss the Canadian model scenario or one that would have us receiving very little snow Sunday night.
The arctic air blast expected to peak in the Monday-Wednesday period is likely to be the strongest for eastern North America collectively though we may see a stronger one more focused on us later in the season. It appears shallow and stable enough to cut down on potential new snowfall through January 23rd and even bring the sun out for a few decent stretches in this same time frame. More clouds and some warm advection snowfall will then become likely later in the week. There have been indications of a more organized storm system taking a run up the coast at us later in the week, but as of late Friday, that action appears suppressed to the south.
Over the past few days, I've seen a wide range of scenarios painted for the last week of January and some of those have included mixed precipitation, above freezing temperatures and even some rainfall. I would certainly be inclined to believe the more general idea that cold and more unsettled weather will shift its focus to the western U.S. in this period since ensembles are clearly indicating a loss in PNA support. It's been a very cold month so far across the southern U.S. and those folks will certainly get a reprieve by the 26th or 27th. Across New England, their appears to be enough evidence, at least to me, that we stay cold and this is anchored by the continued support of a tame jet stream in the Pacific. Even if we get some slight tightening or a neutralization in the EPO, it won't be enough to scour the cold out of southern Canada and parts of New England. Additionally, this places us in the line of fire for storms and my guess is we get some sort of impact from one between the 27th and 31st of the month. A dry January means different things to different people and if you have a goal based on the traditional definition then you more than half way there. The no-rain definition is the one I am thinking about and the dream, for now, is still alive in that regard.