- First we have the storm with a very dangerous tornado potential in the deep south today into tonight with possible long-track EF3+ tornadoes (see 1st image)! The storm will be a cutter with very mild temperatures in the northeast and a period of moderate to heavy rain and windy conditions from late Sunday into Monday from southwest to northeast.
- Then we have the New Year's storm, which the Euro led the way on, as there will be a secondary storm forming along the coast, so it will be rain for Long Island and the New England coast, but there will be some in the higher elevations inland (see 2nd image). Also, it will be VERY windy behind the storm Wednesday night into Friday with the potential for wind gusts up to 45 mph.
- Colder air returns behind the New Years storm and sets the stage for snow chances. The main time period to watch initially is January 6th to 10th. The Euro has 2 systems with snow, but it's too early to tell exactly how it will play out, but the ensembles show the snow potential (see 5th and 6th images). Stay tuned as I will continue to update!
- Even colder air arrives behind any potential storm around January 9th/10th with a true Arctic blast (see 3rd image) as the Euro shows wind chills of -50 degrees in the upper MidWest and in the single digits in northern Florida with wind chills of -15 degrees in NYC with temperatures near zero degrees there. The potential is there, but these values aren't a forecast right now.
- 1st image: Info on the tornadoes for the deep south
- 2nd image: Model Blend snow map for the next 7 days
- 3rd image: Wind chill temperatures from the Euro on the morning of January 11th
- 4th image: Upper air pattern on January 9th
- 5th and 6th images: 15-day snow maps from all 50 Euro ensemble members
- 7th image: Snow matrix for Long Island from the Euro ensembles
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