I am not going to throw lipstick on this pig. We are in the midst of a horrible melt-off that isn't done yet. We fought against this warm onslaught valiantly, yet once the southwest winds arrived late on Saturday, followed by the rain, the snowpack in the valley folded like a cheap suit. There were in fact some serious ice jams on the Mad River on Sunday resulting in some minor flooding and even with drier weather and some blue sky, the balmy temperatures continue and more rain is expected in the middle of the week. Remarkably, the Mt Mansfield snow stake is now below average for the first time this season and its certainly possible that it may not totally recover. It is amazing when you compare the damaging warmth right now to the more innocuous mild weather in March of 2024. Statistically, March 2 years ago might go down as a warmer month than the current one, yet the mild weather never got especially excessive for any one period, never featured high winds, high dewpoints or substantial rain and in spite of the steady stream of 40 and even 50-plus days, we had terrain sensitive snow events that continued to add depth on our upper mountains. It all culminated into an an amazing early April snow event just prior to the solar eclipse on April 8th.
Though I can tell you all about some snow in the forecast and some colder weather, the outlook overall leaves something to be desired and it will be hard to manufacture the kind of recovery I know some of us were hoping for. You never know about the end of the month and it's always unwise to count out storm potential during this part of the winter season, but the part that is visible looks very up and down. Low level cooler air is trying to push south Tuesday and will finally reach a good chunk of the state Tuesday night, effectively putting the brakes on the melting though readings are expected to remain above freezing (about 40) throughout Wednesday with clouds and much lower visibility. Rain is also expected to arrive in the middle of the ski day. It's a legitimate storm system tracking up north of the St Lawrence Valley and we are probably fortunate that expectations for rainfall are less than a half an inch. The tricky part of the forecast for Wednesday night into early Thursday is whether the storm can produce another temporary spike in temperatures. If we can avoid that and the wind that is likely to accompany such a spike, we would limit the additional damage somewhat. Models are split as to whether this happens with some data indicating a spike to 60 degrees early Thursday while the alternative would have readings holding closer to 40. Temps return to more seasonable levels Thursday evening which means below freezing and near 20 for Friday morning.
Early blue sky Friday will be quickly erased with clouds and snow from a clipper system arriving in the midday or early afternoon hours. This is a halfway decent looking upper air feature and would be a really nice addition to a healthier snowpack. An old school weather map analysis puts us and northern Vermont, more generally, in to the most favored quadrant for decent snowfall and we should a dose of it with 2-5 inches falling Friday, some very light snow Friday night and then some additional snow showers Saturday, especially as winds turn and become more northwesterly. We should be able to squeeze a partially bluebird out of Sunday with seasonable temperatures and a lesser wind.
I think the real disappointment has to do with a potential storm early next week. It's got a big jet amplification working for it and it all comes together too far west which is strange considering the record heat currently being expected in California. It's cold enough across interior New England for some mixed precipitation including some sleet and ice (maybe both together) while a big snow event appears unlikely. Rain is possible yet again before a cold front puts an end to it and we turn sharply colder for the middle of the week.
It's a changeable weather pattern after that. The cold should carry us through the rest of next week while modifying and the weekend of the spring equinox appears to be relatively seasonable Ensembles confine the strongest dose of mild weather to the middle and southern portions of the North American continent. That said, teleconnections continue to look at least slightly unfavorable extending out through March 25th or so. It's not impossible to envision a snow event in this setup and operational models do show some even though the pattern overall, does not appear especially wintry.