Piggybacking off the last update, I am going to savor the moment on our snowfall. We are in 10th place at the Mt Mansfield snowstake with terrific snow quality and the west has been hurting for most of the season. I had mentioned the snowiest spots in Colorado and Utah as a reference point. Another would be Tahoe, a place that has also struggled this year and one of the highest resorts there, Mt Rose, is roughly even with MRG on seasonal snowfall. The EPO is now expected to a big turn however and spend a good chunk of February in positive territory. We saw this trend commence over the weekend and it has been validated in a decisive way in the subsequent modeling. After an intense blast of cold this weekend, most of the rest of this month won't feature too much arctic cold. We still have some supportive blocking in the Davis Strait region which will help with storm trajectory, but the pattern will certainly allow for sporadic milder days and little extreme cold after Monday morning.
Residual cold weather following the recent polar vortex drop continues to deliver cold weather for Vermont. As opposed to the wind that we dealt with much of last week, the weather now would be more comparable to western ski areas with the magnificent blue skies, great visibility, cold overnights and comfortable afternoons. Clouds and light snow return for very early Wednesday with 1-3 inches of fluff around first tracks time. Blue skies are then expected to return later in the day and we should expect that to continue into Thursday with readings again in the teens and a bit more wind than what we had early this week.
We have a bit more clarity now with weekend weather and there is quite a bit of it. A potent clipper system will drop southeastward and bring with it a very intense and very direct shot of arctic cold. We also have some snowfall though the ski day on Friday appears dry. Friday will actually start out sunny and subzero with temperatures again moderating to the middle teens with increasing cloudiness and tolerable wind speeds. Snow then begins late Friday evening. Limited moisture from the clipper will get enhanced by a very favorable wind off the mostly but not entirely frozen Lake Champlain. I would expect 4-8 inches of windblown powder on Saturday with challenging elements. Temperatures are likely to spend all of Saturday below zero with sustained winds of up to 30 mph with higher gusts. Clouds should break for sunshine on Sunday with temperatures close to -15 in the morning and recovering to about 5 above in the afternoon.
I've spent a considerable amount of time analyzing the very fluid weather situation next week. We are losing the support of a friendly Pacific jet stream and the coldest core of arctic air will recede northward and westward. There are models suggesting we torch for a day next week though the consensus indication is that winter will hold its ground across Vermont and other portions of northern New England. We have the continued support of downstream blocking and we have the added benefit of some cold feedback mechanisms given the amount of ice covering the Great Lakes aggregate (for one). It's the most since 2015. I've been interested in watching the performance of the European AI model, a close, new relative of the OG European model and though it suggests temperatures get up close to freezing a few times, we get a snowy week out of htis whole deal. I like that scenario obviously, but it's early. We know Monday will remain chilly with temperatures moderating into the teens following the weekend blast of arctic cold. The middle part of next week is then likely to be cloudy with temperatures just below the freezing mark and a good chance for some accumulating snowfall. A more organized storm system is then likely to approach around the beginning of the holiday weekend. We won't have the benefit of arctic cold and I still like our odds that we can score some snow out of whatever happens.
I've been downplayed the risk of a thaw through the first half of February and I although I think this holds, I lose confidence as we move into the 2nd half of the month. We can't fight an angry Pacific forever and eventually it's likely to get us. We also begin to move temperature climatology in a significantly upward direction for the 2nd half of the month. Nothing wrong with a little warm weather if we can keep the wind and dewpoint temperature down and needless to say, the rain away.