Short-term east
Sunday: Partly sunny. Ventilated high: 56.
Tonight: It’s getting cloudy. Low: 35.
Monday: Cloudy. Some rain and snow. Coating-2 “. High 42.
Teacher: Mostly sunny. High: 36.
Forest Summary
This afternoon, we will have partial sunny skies and highs in the mid-50s. It is the hottest weather we will see for a while.
The sky will be clear tonight from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., which is the beginning of a meteor shower. When the meteor shower peaks at 2 a.m., you’ll see clouds.
We will be cloudy by the end of the night as a small blizzard continues for Monday.
Overall, many of us will see a 2 “coating, but it’s mainly for grass.
For Schweilkill County, Berks County, Lehigh Valley, and Poconoz, the snow will come in early in the morning, and the roads will get wet during rush hour.
The pavement will still be very hot, so it will take some time for snow to collect on the roads in Lehi Valley and Berks County. More than anything, it will make a little movement on the road and sidewalk after the rush.
The snow ends at noon.
Even the Philly area will not see snow from this hurricane. Instead, you’ll just get rain.
As the updated information arrives in the News Storm Center, we’ll update you on WFMZ.com and on our News 69 News Weather app from here, on our 24 Hour Weather Channel, 69.2.
Tuesday is quiet before the big storm.
On Tuesday the sky is mostly sunny, and it starts to feel cold enough for the snow with snow heights in the mid-30s.
On Wednesday, a blizzard will bring us useless snow riding along the shore.
Plan for snowfall that will disrupt your Wednesday afternoons and evenings.
It is clear that many spots will get at least one foot of snow. All weekend long, the future radar we use for forecasting is consistent: they have shown at least one foot of snow in most of our area.
Here’s what future radars show up until Sunday morning (they update twice a day).
American Future Radar wants 12-18 “.
European future wants radar 8-20 “.
Canadian wants future radar 8-14 “.
While all three disagree on a certain amount, it is clear that they all want legs for most places.
We study these future radars from update to update to see trends and disagreements.
Over the weekend, they have adopted a total snowfall trend of up to a foot or more for many locations, so that will be the basis for our total snowfall map on Monday.
Now, see how many of them have colorful cut-offs on the snow map. That’s because there will be relatively sharp cutoffs of snowfall.
This storm is difficult to track because if it were to look further north, there would be some rain and no snow in some places south of Philly. If the rain part of our hurricane moves further north this means less snow for parts of our area. This is the reason we had to study this storm very closely.
So far, the storm track has remained the same from update to update.
We’ll keep you updated on this blizzard right now on WFMZ.com, on the 69 News Weather Channel (69.2), today at WFMZ at 6 and 10 p.m., and on the 69 News Weather app. Trust us.
Watch out for the county-by-county snowfall average starting Monday morning with meteorologist Matt Broderick.
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