In Search of Snow!

2018-02-23 16:19:03.000 – Tom Padham, Weather Observer/Education Specialist

 

With current snow depth reported at zero as of this writing, pretty much all of the summit staff (maybe not Marty) are wishing for some snow! Taking a very extended look out at the beginning of March it does look like there’s some hope ahead for snow lovers, at least up here on the summit of Mount Washington.

 
Sunrise on Thursday morning, with only patches of snow currently on the summit 

In the near term, tonight snow and light mixed precipitation will fall across the higher elevations lasting into the early morning hours Saturday, with roughly an inch of snow and ice accumulation expected. A more significant system will follow quickly on the heels of the first storm. Enough cold air will be “dammed” or wedged up against the east side of the White Mountains to keep precipitation all snow initially during the day Sunday, with an eventual changeover to sleet, freezing rain, and even plain rain as precipitation tapers off around midnight.

 
Expected snowfall totals through Sunday night from the National Weather Service in Gray, Maine. 

Beyond this things start getting trickier to forecast, and are likely to change at least slightly going forward, but with that said we’ll take a look! Prior to next Thursday high pressure will stay in control of our weather across northern New England, with no significant snow on Mount Washington outside of a flurry or two. Thursday a strong storm system will track through the western Great Lakes, pushing a moist air mass and heavy precipitation into New England by late in the day. Once again as of this model run enough cold air remains locked in place across the White Mountains for snow initially, then things get a bet more interesting.

The past few model runs have been a little more consistent in redeveloping the storm in the Gulf of Maine, where it then stalls out from Friday through Sunday, March 4th. The cold air is marginal, especially for the lower elevations, but on the summit at this time precipitation would likely stay snow, with heavy snow Friday and Saturday becoming lighter but still not totally tapering off until potentially Monday morning (March 5th). If this did pan out it would be a very welcome sight for us up here, with a few feet of new snow bringing our snowpack up to a more reasonable level. Here’s hoping March comes in like a lion, and gives us some much-needed snow!

 
Total snowfall from February 23rd through March 5th. Could we really see 3+ feet of snow on the summit?!
Image courtesy of Tropical Tidbits

 

Tom Padham, Weather Observer/Education Specialist

Septem-burrr!

September 25th, 2022|Comments Off on Septem-burrr!

Septem-burrr! 2022-09-25 20:07:59.000 - Ryan Knapp, Weather Observer/Staff Meteorologist The summit of Mount Washington has experienced freezing temperatures and rime/glaze ice three times (so far) this month. And with the recent cold snap, the

Meteorological Awe-tumn

September 20th, 2022|Comments Off on Meteorological Awe-tumn

Meteorological Awe-tumn 2022-09-20 15:08:56.000 - Sam Robinson, Weather Observer/Engineer September marks the beginning of meteorological autumn, which is my favorite season, especially on the summit. Variety is the theme for this season with a

No Granite on the Top of The Granite State?

September 9th, 2022|Comments Off on No Granite on the Top of The Granite State?

No Granite on the Top of The Granite State? 2022-09-09 12:33:54.000 - Hayden Pearson, Weather Observer & Research Specialist While New Hampshire is known as The Granite State, there is actually no granite to