All posts by Ryan_R

February 16-17, 2015: Southern Slider Storm?

It appears that a potentially potent system will develop in the lower Midwest and slide east Monday, impacting Richmond from Monday night into Tuesday morning. As of Sunday morning, no watches or warnings are posted for the Wakefield area. Models are already depicting heavy snowfall totals for central Virginia, with 6″ or more of snow being depicted. TWC and Channel 12 are already saying that a 8-12″ storm could be possible. TWC has named the storm “Octavia”.

NWS Forecast, 2/15/15
NWS Forecast, 2/15/15

 

NWS Snowfall Forecast
NWS Forecast

Update: Afternoon of 2/15/2015

 

 

Winter Storm Watch

URGENT - WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WAKEFIELD VA
440 PM EST SUN FEB 15 2015

VAZ048-049-060>064-067>074-080>083-160545-
/O.NEW.KAKQ.WS.A.0002.150216T2100Z-150217T1700Z/
FLUVANNA-LOUISA-PRINCE EDWARD-CUMBERLAND-GOOCHLAND-HANOVER-
CAROLINE-NOTTOWAY-AMELIA-POWHATAN-CHESTERFIELD-HENRICO-
KING WILLIAM-KING AND QUEEN-ESSEX-DINWIDDIE-PRINCE GEORGE-
CHARLES CITY-NEW KENT-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF...LOUISA...FARMVILLE...GOOCHLAND...
ASHLAND...CREWE...COLONIAL HEIGHTS...RICHMOND...TAPPAHANNOCK...
PETERSBURG...HOPEWELL
440 PM EST SUN FEB 15 2015

...WINTER STORM WATCH IN EFFECT FROM MONDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH
TUESDAY MORNING...

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN WAKEFIELD HAS ISSUED A WINTER
STORM WATCH...WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM MONDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH
TUESDAY MORNING.

* AREAS AFFECTED: CENTRAL AND EASTERN VIRGINIA.

* HAZARDS: HEAVY SNOW.

* ACCUMULATION: SNOW ACCUMULATION IS EXPECTED TO RANGE FROM 6 TO 8
  INCHES. HIGHER AMOUNTS ARE POSSIBLE OVER THE PIEDMONT.

* TEMPERATURES: UPPER TEENS TO LOW 20S.

* TIMING: SNOW IS EXPECTED TO SPREAD INTO THE EASTERN VIRGINIA
  PIEDMONT LATE MONDAY AFTERNOON AND INTO THE INTERSTATE 95
  CORRIDOR BY EARLY MONDAY EVENING. SNOW WILL CONTINUE MONDAY
  NIGHT AND TAPER OFF TUESDAY MORNING.

* IMPACTS: SNOW WILL REDUCE VISIBILITY AND RESULT IN
  HAZARDOUS...SNOW COVERED ROADS. EVEN PRIMARY ROADS AND HIGHWAYS
  WILL LIKELY BECOME SNOW COVERED DUE TO THE COLD TEMPERATURES.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

A WINTER STORM WATCH MEANS THERE IS A POTENTIAL FOR SIGNIFICANT
SNOW...SLEET...OR ICE ACCUMULATIONS THAT MAY IMPACT TRAVEL.
CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE LATEST FORECASTS.

&&

$$

Afternoon NWS Forecast, 2/15/15
Afternoon NWS Forecast, 2/15/15

February 14, 2015: Observation

Church Hill Storm Observation Summary:
* Place – Time: Church Hill, (2/14/2015)
* Temperature: 31-44, During Event
* Winter Weather Watch/Warning/Advisory: None.
* Closings: None.
* Predicted Totals: Little to no accumulation was predicted for the event.
* Road Conditions: Slight impact to local roads, during heavy snowfall.
* Precipitation Description: Snow; which began around 8 PM and ended by 9 PM.
* Total Precipitation: Approximately 0.1″ of snow on most surfaces. A trace of snow/sleet or ice was reported at the Richmond airport.
* Comments: This was a short but intense event that accompanied the passage of an arctic front. Heavy snowfall rates coupled with gusts in the 45-50 MPH range (gust to 52 MPH at RIC airport) made for a dramatic snowfall event. Observations of lightening and thunder were observed in Church Hill. Overnight temperatures fell to 14 degrees on the 15th. Most of the accumulations evaporated by the morning of the 15th.

Photos:

February 10, 2015: Observations

Church Hill Storm Observation Summary:
* Place – Time: Church Hill, (2/10/2015)
* Temperature: 33-34, During Event
* Winter Weather Watch/Warning/Advisory: None.
* Closings: None.
* Predicted Totals: No accumulations were predicted for the event.
* Road Conditions: No impacts to local roads.
* Precipitation Description: Sleet and sleet/rain mix, which began during the early morning hours on Tuesday (3 AM) and ended by mid-morning Tuesday (9 AM).
* Total Precipitation: Approximately 0.1″ of sleet. A trace of snow/sleet or ice was reported at the Richmond airport. More accumulation was present in Chesterfield along my commute route into work.
* Comments: This was a low impact system with accumulations mainly on elevated (car tops), grassy and mulch surfaces.

NWS Radar from 2/10/15
NWS Radar from 2/10/15

Photos:

 

January 27, 2015: Observations

Church Hill Storm Observation Summary:
* Place – Time: Church Hill, (1/27/2015)
* Temperature: 29-34, During Event
* Winter Weather Watch/Warning/Advisory: Advisory, which was issued the day before the event for a dusting to 2”
* Closings: All local school districts closed, Chesterfield County Government had no delayed opening.
* Predicted Totals: Between a dusting and 2” the day before the event. On the evening of the 26th, precipitation totals were cut back to ½” at most for metro Richmond.
* Road Conditions: All roads had varying amounts of snow accumulation on them. Local streets were covered during the first few hours in the morning.
* Precipitation Description: Snow, which began at 10 AM on Monday and ended around 5 PM on Tuesday.
* Total Precipitation: Approximately 0.6″ of snow. 0.2″ of snow was reported at the Richmond airport. Locally heavier snow to the south and west of Richmond (1.8” at Chesterfield Government Center).
* Comments: A potent Miller B system, dubbed “Juno”, developed off the Delmarva coast on Monday evening and produced a period of snow showers over metro Richmond during Monday evening with little accumulation. As the low strengthened and moved to the northeast, a band of heavier snow showers redeveloped during the morning hours on Tuesday 1/27. The heaviest snow and accumulation occurred before 9 AM. Snow showers and flurries occurred during the rest of the day until sunset. Impacts from snow and ice to the Richmond area were moderate from this storm.

Snowfall Totals:

NWS Snow Totals Map
NWS Snow Totals Map

Photos:

January 26, 2015: Snow from a Manitoba Mauler?

A potent upper level system originating from Manitoba may bring the first accumulating snowfall to Metro Richmond on Monday into Monday night. The NWS service seems to think that there could be some accumulating snow.

NWS Forecast on 1/24/15
NWS Forecast on 1/24/15

 

NWS Forecast from 1/25/15
NWS Forecast from 1/25/15

520 AM EST SAT JAN 24 2015

THIS HAZARDOUS WEATHER OUTLOOK IS FOR THE LOWER EASTERN SHORE OF
MARYLAND…CENTRAL VIRGINIA…EAST CENTRAL VIRGINIA…SOUTH CENTRAL
VIRGINIA…THE EASTERN SHORE OF VIRGINIA…THE MIDDLE PENINSULA OF
VIRGINIA…THE NORTHERN NECK OF VIRGINIA…THE PENINSULA OF
SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND THE PIEDMONT OF CENTRAL VIRGINIA.

.DAY ONE…TODAY AND TONIGHT.

HAZARDOUS WEATHER IS NOT EXPECTED AT THIS TIME.

.DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN…SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY.

A COLDER STORM SYSTEM WILL BRING THE POTENTIAL FOR ACCUMULATING
SNOW MONDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH MONDAY NIGHT.

.SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT…

SPOTTER ACTIVATION IS NOT EXPECTED AT THIS TIME.

 

(1/25/15): NWS HWO - RAIN WILL MIX WITH AND EVENTUALLY CHANGE TO SNOW ACROSS THE
OUTLOOK AREA MONDAY EVENING...AS AN AREA OF LOW PRESSURE
INTENSIFIES OFF THE NORTHERN MID-ATLANTIC COAST. A LIGHT
ACCUMULATION OF SNOW IS POSSIBLE LATE MONDAY NIGHT INTO TUESDAY
MORNING.
NWS Snow Forecast
NWS Snow Forecast

 

NWS Snow Forecast, 1/25/15
NWS Snow Forecast, 1/25/15

January 15, 2015: Light Snow Observation

Church Hill Storm Observation Summary:
* Place – Time: Church Hill, (1/15/2015)
* Temperature: 30-32, During Event
* Winter Weather Watch/Warning/Advisory: None
* Closings: All local school districts had a delayed opening or were closed, Chesterfield County Government had a delayed opening for 10:00 AM.
* Predicted Totals: Dusting of snow.
* Road Conditions: All roads had varying amounts of snow, mostly in areas where previous ice from the 14th had not melted. Streets cleared by 10 AM.
* Precipitation Description: Snow.
* Total Precipitation: Trace of snow accumulation (light dusting). Snow on most surfaces. 0.00″ of liquid equivalent was reported at the Richmond airport.
* Comments: Low-level moisture from a surprise system overnight (12 AM – 3 AM) left a layer of light snow on most surfaces. The chance of snow was not discussed in the forecast.

January 14, 2015: Observations

Church Hill Storm Observation Summary:
* Place – Time: Church Hill, (1/14/2015)
* Temperature: 27-28, During Event
* Winter Weather Watch/Warning/Advisory: Advisory, which was issued towards end of the event
* Closings: All local school districts closed, Chesterfield County Government had a delayed opening for 10:30 AM. Government closed for the day at 10:00 AM.
* Predicted Totals: Very light accumulation of freezing rain and sleet.
* Road Conditions: All roads had varying amounts of ice and sleet that accumulated on them. Local streets were very poor most of the day.
* Precipitation Description: A mix of freezing drizzle, freezing rain and brief periods of sleet from 12 AM to 6 AM.
* Total Precipitation: Approximately 0.14″ of sleet and ice accumulation. Sleet and freezing rain accumulated on all surfaces. 0.21″ of liquid equivalent was reported at the Richmond airport. It took an extensive amount of time to melt the ice from my car.
* Comments: A low developed off the Florida coast and quickly bypassed the area off the Carolina coast. A fresh wave of cold air provided more than adequate temperatures to support sleet and freezing rain at the surface. Periods of sleet and freezing rain occurred during the early morning hours, before tapering off by sunrise. Impacts from snow and ice to the Richmond area were moderate from this storm.

Snowfall Totals:

Mixed Precipitation Totals
Mixed Precipitation Totals

Photos:

January 14, 2015: Light Snow/Sleet/Freezing Rain

A quick moving storm system may provide some overnight snow, sleet and freezing rain in Metro Richmond. This appears to be a very low-impact storm in terms of accumulation. I’ll update any accumulations tomorrow afternoon. As of the time of this posting, a trace amount (0.01″) of freezing rain has accumulated.

NWS Forecast from 1/13/2015
NWS Forecast from 1/13/2015
NWS Snow Forecast
NWS Snow Forecast
Radar the evening of 1/13/2015
Radar the evening of 1/13/2015

NWS Forecast discussion:

000
FXUS61 KAKQ 140257
AFDAKQ

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WAKEFIELD VA
957 PM EST TUE JAN 13 2015

.SYNOPSIS…
HIGH PRESSURE SITS OVER NEW ENGLAND OVERNIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY…AS
LOW PRESSURE DEVELOPING OFF THE FLORIDA COAST THIS EVENING…TRACKS
NORTHEAST JUST OFF THE CAROLINA COAST ON WEDNESDAY. HIGH PRESSURE
RETURNS FOR THE REST OF THE WEEK…BRINGING A RETURN TO MORE DRY
AND SEASONAL CONDITIONS.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH WEDNESDAY NIGHT/…
LATE THIS EVENG…INITIAL WEAK SHRTWV/LIFT IN SW FLO ALOFT WAS
PRODUCING MAINLY -RA…WITH PATCHY -IP AND -ZR ACRS SE VA AND NE
NC. BUT…NEXT STRONGER SHRTWV/ENHANCED VERTICAL MOTION/PCPN AREA
STARTING TO DEVELOP OVR CNTRL/ERN NC…WILL LIFT NE INTO AND ACRS
THE REGION OVRNGT INTO MIDDAY WED. BASED ON LATEST OBS AND 00Z WAL
SOUNDING…HAVE ADDED SLEET TO THE VA ERN SHR COUNTIES FOR OVRNGT
INTO WED MORNG. ONLY MINOR CHANGES TO TEMPS.

PREVIOUS DISCUSSION:
FOCUS TURNS TO A LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM DEVELOPING OFF THE FL COAST
TONIGHT THAT TRACKS NE OFF THE CAROLINA COAST ON WED. THE
INTERACTION BTWN COLD/DRY AIR FROM THE HIGH AND AN INFLUX OF MORE
MOIST/WARM AIR FROM THE SE WILL SET THE STAGE FOR WINTRY
PRECIPITATION OVER THE AREA LATE TONIGHT THROUGH WED.

AFTER EVALUATING CURRENT WX FEATURES/OBS VS 12Z MODEL DATA…HAVE
DETERMINED THAT THE GFS IS THE MODEL OF CHOICE. THIS IS ALSO THE
PREFERRED MODEL OF CHOICE BY WPC AND IS REFLECTED IN THEIR QPF
ANALYSIS. 12Z GFS/ECMWF MODEL SOLUTIONS KEEP A JET STREAK ACROSS THE
DEEP SOUTH TONIGHT…SHIFTING SLIGHTLY NWD ACROSS THE CAROLINAS ON
WED. WITH THE JET STAYING FARTHER SOUTH…THE REMNANT ARCTIC COLD
FRONT (CURRENTLY AROUND 150-250 MILES OFF THE CAROLINA COAST) IS
EXPECTED TO SLOWLY PUSH ESE TONIGHT THROUGH WED. THIS WILL KEEP
INCOMING PRECIPITATION CLOSER TO THE COASTAL AREAS (60-100 PERCENT
POPS) WITH LESSER CHANCES FARTHER INLAND (15-50 PERCENT POPS) AS THE
CENTRAL LOW PRESSURE CENTER STAYS WELL SOUTHEAST OF THE MID ATLANTIC
COAST. SOUNDING AND CROSS SECTION ANALYSES KEEPS AREAS WITHIN
CURRENT WINTER WX ADVISORY INTACT. FOR AREAS WITHIN THE CURRENT
WINTER WX ADVISORY…PRECIP WILL START AS ALL RAIN AND THEN
TRANSITION TO FREEZING RAIN OR A MIX OF FREEZING RAIN/SLEET AFTER
MIDNIGHT TONIGHT. THIS WINTRY MIX WILL PERSIST THROUGH WED MORNING
BEFORE TRANSITIONING BACK TO LIGHT SLEET (POSSIBLY MIXING WITH RAIN)
LATE WED MORNING INTO AFTN. THE MAIN IMPACT TIMING OF FREEZING RAIN
WILL BE FROM ROUGHLY 4-10 AM EARLY WED MORNING. LIGHT ICE
ACCUMULATIONS OF ONE TENTH OF AN INCH OR LESS ARE EXPECTED.
DANGEROUS TRAVEL CONDITIONS SHOULD BE ANTICIPATED LATE TONIGHT
THROUGH EARLY WED MORNING…ESPECIALLY ON UNTREATED ROADS AND
OVERPASSES. SEE WBCWSWAKQ FOR ADDITIONAL DETAILS AND UPDATES.

NORTHWEST OF THE WINTER WX ADVISORY AREA…A WINTRY MIX OF SNOW
AND SLEET IS EXPECTED AS LIQUID PRECIP OVERRUNS THE COLDER/DRIER
AIRMASS IN PLACE AT THE SFC. IT IS ANTICIPATED THAT MORE SLEET
THAN SNOW SHOULD FALL SINCE THERE IS NOT MUCH LIFT OR AMPLE
MOISTURE WITHIN THE DENDRITIC GROWTH ZONE TO SUPPORT ALL SNOW.
SNOW/SLEET ACCUMULATIONS WILL BE LIGHT…LESS THAN ONE HALF INCH
IN ANY 6 HOUR PERIOD AND LESS THAN ONE INCH OVERALL. A DEFORMATION
ZONE SETS UP OVER THE MD/VA EASTERN SHORE CENTERED ON 12Z…WHICH
MEANS THAT THERE COULD BE A QUICK BURST OF SNOW/SLEET BTWN 4-7 AM
ACROSS THE NRN NECK AND THE MD LOWER EASTERN SHORE. ANY
ACCUMULATIONS DURING THIS POSSIBLE BURST SHOULD STILL AMOUNT TO
ONE HALF INCH OR LESS.

AT THE COAST…PRECIPITATION WILL REMAIN AS ALL RAIN SINCE
TEMPERATURES AND DEWPOINTS WILL BE TOO WARM TO SUPPORT FROZEN
PRECIPITATION AT THE SFC. HOWEVER…WILL NEED TO KEEP A CLOSE EYE ON
DEWPOINTS FARTHER INLAND ACROSS THE SRN TIDEWATER AND NE NC AREAS
(AWAY FROM THE OCEAN AND ALBEMARLE SOUND). IF THEY DROP INTO THE MID
20S…THIS WILL CAUSE WET BULB TEMPERATURES TO FALL BELOW FREEZING
AND THEN FREEZING RAIN COULD BE POSSIBLE. CONFIDENCE IS NOT HIGH
ENOUGH AT THE TIME TO SUPPORT AN EXPANSION OF THE CURRENT WINTER WX
ADVISORY BUT IT IS WORTH NOTING WITHIN THIS FORECAST DISCUSSION.

FOR ALL AREAS…PRECIPITATION EXITS THE COAST LATE WED AFTN/EARLY
EVENING. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF COASTAL AREAS FROM THE VA EASTERN
SHORE TO THE TIDEWATER AREA TO COASTAL NE NC…PRECIP TYPE SHOULD
TRANSITION TO A MIX OF LIGHT SNOW/SLEET. THE AFOREMENTIONED COASTAL
AREAS WILL REMAIN AS ALL RAIN. A FEW LINGERING SHOWERS WILL BE
POSSIBLE OVER FAR SE COASTAL AREAS INTO THE EVENING AS THE SFC LOW
OFF THE CAROLINA COAST TRACKS FARTHER NE OUT TO SEA.

TEMPERATURES WILL BE A BIT TRICKY TONIGHT THROUGH WED NIGHT. TEMPS
SHOULD FALL NICELY ACROSS THE NORTH WHERE CLOUDS CLEARED DURING THE
DAY…BUT HOW FAR THEY DROP WILL BE DETERMINED BY THE INCOMING
CLOUDS FROM THE SW. LOWS WILL BE EVEN MORE TRICKY ACROSS THE SRN
HALF OF THE AREA WHERE PERSISTENT CLOUD COVER HAS HELD TEMPERATURES
STEADY WITH SLOW FALLS EARLY THIS EVENING. WINTER PRECIP POTENTIAL
WILL BE HIGHLY DEPENDENT ON SFC TEMPS AS WELL AS THE AFOREMENTIONED
DEWPOINTS. FOR NOW…LOWS ARE FORECAST IN THE LOW-MID 20S NORTH TO
UPPER 20S-LOWER 30S SOUTH (35-40 SE COAST). HIGHS WED WILL ALSO BE
TRICKY AS TEMPS SHOULD RISE SEVERAL DEGREES AFTER PRECIP COMES TO AN
END FROM WEST TO EAST WED AFTN. HIGHS WED GENERALLY IN THE MID-UPPER
30S (40-45 SE COAST). CLOUDS NOT EXPECTED TO CLEAR WED NIGHT AS HIGH
PRESSURE BUILDS ACROSS THE OHIO VALLEY…HOWEVER LIGHT NORTH WINDS
AND LINGERING EVAPORATIVE COOLING FROM RECENT PRECIP SHOULD RESULT
IN OVERNIGHT LOWS IN THE MID-UPPER 20S NW TO LOW-MID 30S SE.

November 26, 2014: Rain to Snow?

A low-pressure system is expected to develop off the Florida coast Tuesday that will run up the eastern seaboard on Wednesday, causing a wide variety of precipitation types in Virginia. The precipitation could end as a period of rain/snow or even snow. At this point, there is no expected accumulation.

NWS Forecast from 11/24/2104
NWS Forecast from 11/24/2104

 

NWS Forecast for Snow: 11/24/2014
NWS Forecast for Snow: 11/24/2014

Observation Update: A changeover to some snow and rain occurred for about an hour on 11/26/14 from 3-4 PM. No measurable precipitation fell.