The heavy snow showers on Wednesday combined with the over-performance snow Tuesday evening has created some of the best skiing of the season and we finally can enjoy it without -20 to -40 degree wind chills. Still chilly for Friday, especially in the morning with temperatures not far from zero. Then the February sunshine goes to work and temperatures recover into the 20's with tolerable wind speeds to go along with some terrific visibility.
Weekend weather has come better into focus this Thursday so we can drill into some finer details and stop speculating as to unlikely possibilities. Clouds and some snow showers appear likely for early Saturday and a dusting up to 2 inches is our expected outcome. Temperatures are expected to remain in the 20's with gusty yet manageable wind speeds. Those clouds should decrease as the day progresses leading to a colorful sunset and a chilly yet seasonable overnight. Sunday appears outstanding with some sunshine, less wind and temperatures recovering to the high 20's. The storm on Monday appears far enough south to keep its cloud shield away from northern Vermont though some warm advection cloudiness is possible as the day progresses. Readings of near 30 degrees Monday will make it feel almost balmy.
I rather like the direction next week appears to be headed right now. We've handed in our resignation on cold weather which is fine, but there are varying forms of mild weather and if it's the kind that produces temperatures near the freezing mark with snow falling, we'd certainly sign up for that. Storminess will get rather consolidated across the Rocky Mountain west early next week with much needed snowfall in the northern Rocky Mountains while arctic cold is bottled up over western Canada. MRG will have that aforementioned 30-degree day on President's Day Monday followed by what I think will be a milder day on Tuesday with readings testing the freezing mark. We haven't done that on the mountain since January 14th and if we do it with dry weather and low dewpoints, it will prove rather inconsequential. More cloudiness should then accompany another mild day on Wednesday as an organized storm system approaches. This system does not appear headed deep into Quebec. It's eventual track might actually end up south of Vermont with a push of colder Canadian air providing support for wintry precipitation. Some rainfall remains probable while the prospects for some substantial snowfall has gained some steam with this low level push of cold appearing more robust. Remember in these types of cold years, with ice covering the Great Lakes aggregate at about 50 percent, threatening thaws can suddenly become substantial snows. The time frame on this would be in the Wednesday/Thursday period with weather conditions drying out for the last full weekend of February.
It appears the EPO will hold steady in a slightly positive state for the rest of the month while the big feature will be a high latitude block expected to set up in the extreme northeast portion of the Eurasian continent. This will position cold in North America but mostly western North America while New England mostly stays out of the bitter chill. Late February does have a tendency to produce a mild day even in a general period of relatively seasonable weather so I would expect that in the last week of the month along with some sort of additional snowfall.