It's been a warm year in Vermont. Not only has every month been above normal up until now, the winter of 2023-24 saw about one subzero morning. Temperatures early Monday, which are as low as -10 in some areas, are easily the coldest of the calendar year and the month has an outside chance of seeing the coldest average temperatures of the year, exceeding that of January which is a statistical rarity. I love a cold bluebird day with a low wind so I am a little bummed to seek clouds making a rapid eastward advance and spoil a portion of this. Still, we expect temperatures to moderate and reach the teens in spite of less sunshine and those clouds are poised to bring snow Monday evening into early Tuesday. We tend to do well on these type of events, even with a lack of moisture, and my expectation is for a fluffy, low density 4-7 inches of by mid morning Tuesday.
The rest of the holiday week is expected to be dry and just like we had hoped, the lack of strong ambient flow combined with the low December sun angle will slow the temperature moderation even as arctic air makes its North American retreat. We can also expect decent amounts of sunshine along the relatively calm winds and temperatures should generally stay below freezing except for maybe an hour this coming Friday. Not bad considering much of central Canada, including areas deep in the remote north will see a round of thawing temperatures.
This home plate umpire is giving the safe sign for the last full weekend of 2024 with some of the same themes from the holiday week, carrying over to the weekend. Temperatures will continue to moderate, very slowly with readings touching or exceeding the freezing mark only during the afternoons. An increase in cloudiness should keep Saturday night considerably milder than the 7 days prior to it. It's a close call as to whether or not precipitation makes it to Vermont by Sunday, but it seems unlikely to reach northern Vermont by the end of the ski day. Maybe instant replay can overturn my call in a few days but I like my odds and I certainly think temperatures will stay sub-40 through the 29th on the mountain, something I would not have set 3-5 days ago.
As more model data continues to stream in, the notion we are destined to receive rain during this New Year's mild period no longer seems to be a certainty and a mild rain all rain event isn't even the most likely scenario anymore. Though the jet stream blocking and extreme relative warmth will continue in eastern Canada, storminess appears like it wants to undercut much of this blocking creating all kinds of intrigue around the New Year's holiday. Sure, some wet weather is possible, but if a large storm undergoes some sort of occlusion within our vicinity, which several models have indicated, significant snow totals are entirely possible and could quite possibly mark an epic start to 2025. This situation certainly has my attention and although temperatures still look mild relative to average, not all mild weather is created equal.
Beyond holiday, the pattern appears to have much better cold weather support with split flow developing in the eastern Pacific, large amounts of ridging in western North America and arctic cold working its way back southward in North America. Though above average temperatures are likely to continue through January 5th, it's less likely that readings are above freezing on the mountain. After January 5th, temperatures could more closely resemble a typical January and may even drop below normal for the first full week of the month.