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The Rest of the Snow

10:21 am in Forecast Discussion by Ted Keller

Radar at 10:00 am

The heaviest snow has already targeted north central Arkansas a will continue to do so throughout the day.

Reports of 2-4″ have come in from Searcy Co. AR with general 1-2″ amounts in most of the rest of northern Arkansas.  Cherokee Village reported 3.5″ early this morning.  The radar image above shows that the northern edge of the very obvious heavy precipitation area will pass over these same areas today, dumping another 4-6″, bringing storm totals in the 8-10″ range for some.

Missouri had 2″+  totals north of Springfield overnight.  Most areas received a dusting to almost 1″.  Another band of snow will affect this area today with a 2-3″ additional potential.  Snow will last into the evening in many areas, not ending to the east of Springfield until midnight.

Snow Update

10:25 am in Forecast Discussion by Ted Keller

It still looks as if the Ozarks will experience a pretty good snow beginning later tonight.  While light snow will likely affect everybody through early Tuesday morning, there appear to be a few more intense bands.

Tonight, snow will spread in and will target areas north of Springfield first with broad 1-3″ totals.  Then late Monday morning, another batch will begin in the MO/ARK border area and northern Arkansas which will be the heaviest and all interests in that area should watch this closely for snow exceeding 4″!  Finally a more general snow will affect the area well into Monday evening.  This will dump another several inches in Springfield and much of southwest Missouri.

“Upstream” will broadcast at 4 pm and 11:30 pm today, Sunday.

 

Latest on Next Storm

12:53 pm in Forecast Discussion by Ted Keller

Today, large flakes fell but amounts will be held back by melting and a weaker, northward-tracking system.

All attention will now be placed on the late Sunday and Monday storm.  One computer model is colder and supports nearly pure snow starting Sunday night and prints out heavier snow, certainly over six inches.

Another model used a lot shows an initial snow heading into west central Missouri Sunday night and a trend toward a warmer atmosphere early Monday in the southern Ozarks.

Both models seem to target a swath from southeastern Kansas northeast into the northern viewing area as the heaviest snow accumulation area.

The entire area should be on the lookout for heavy snow accumulation during this period!

“Upstream”

Extended today 4-6:30 pm, 6:30-7 pm and 11 pm to ??.  I will also do a special show Sunday sometime.

A Little of Everything then Snow, then SNOW

10:46 am in Forecast Discussion by Ted Keller

Radar @ 10:25 am

Drivers in Springfield should watch out for slightly slick conditions beginning around 11 am and lasting into the afternoon!

Today, the atmosphere can support just about any winter precipitation type.

The radar image included is one of light snow, sleet and freezing rain.  Rain would also be possible today.  Surface temperatures are just a touch above freezing outside of the precipitation and drop to around and just below in the core of radar echoes.

In the upper atmosphere, temperatures are actually warm enough for rain but once again, in the core of the precipitation areas, enough cooling is taking place to mix it up a bit.

While accumulations are expected to be light, traveling south of Springfield and into portions of northern Arkansas might be slick!

An accumulating snow is still expected starting overnight tonight as the atmosphere cools overall and all precipitation converts to snow.

A broad area of 1-3 inches of snow can be expected before in tapers off Friday evening.

A bigger snow is still expected late Sunday and Monday.

The live webshow “Upstream” will be on again today and tomorrow at special times:

4-6:30 pm              Live chat and images, limited audio

6:30 – 7:00 pm      Full live show

11:00 – ? pm           Full live show

Next Two Storms

11:08 am in Forecast Discussion by Ted Keller

GFS Model's Idea for Snow Through Friday


Two winter weather systems are coming our way.

My live webcast “Upstream” will be going into extended coverage mode because of this.  The live chat with limited audio will be available from 4 pm to 7 pm each day this week.  I will have a full audio map discussion at 6:30 pm and at the usual time at 11 pm.  It looks likely that I will be doing special shows this weekend too as the stronger of the two storms approaches.

A storm system will thicken clouds over the area Thursday with rain following Thursday night.  The northern and northwestern edge of that rain will have to be watched for snow that night.  During the day Friday, winds will shift around to support more pure snow over the area accompanied by a small disturbance will likely lay down a several inches of snow.  I’ll post a snow projection map on the news tonight.

A more robust storm will affect the area beginning Sunday evening and lasting through Monday evening.  This looks to be leaning toward all snow again especially on Monday.  It is too early to project totals with confidence on this storm yet.

A Winter Storm: A Forecasters View

7:14 am in Storm Summaries, Weather Education by Ted Keller

NWS Snow Total Map for Missouri

Well, the storm from last week is a few days behind us.  Temperatures have warmed, the thaw has begun. 

It was an interesting storm, first tracked about five to six days before it occurred.  For days, it looked consistently like a Thursday evening and overnight snow.  Then, a intense “cold side” portion of the storm began to take shape which was clearly targeting Friday.

As Thursday evening rolled around, the precipitation started surging northward. Arkansas, at least the portion within the KOLR/KSFX viewing area, started getting light freezing rain followed by sleet and eventually snow.  I sat and watched the radar loops and noticed that the precipitation was “stuck”; it just wasn’t advancing northward into Missouri that evening.  A check of was was going on directly overhead in Springfield via a “balloon launch” at 6 pm showed that the precipitation was trying to fall through an extremely dry layer of air.  As a result, it wasn’t reaching the ground.

This caused me to revise my snowfall projections downward (pictured below) between the 6 pm KOLR show and the 9 pm KSFX show.  The real kick in the head and part of the sweet irony which often accompanies weather forecasting decisions is that if I had left the early projection alone, it would have been closer to what actually happened!  This is because the second wave of snow on Friday exceeded expectations.  It would have been a classic case of “right for the wrong reasons!”

That second wave really started to look interesting on Thursday afternoon.

Everyone was expecting a lot more snow in Springfield Friday morning than what actually occurred of course with 1 to 1.5 inches instead of the 4-6 I reasoned we would end up with.  The above mentioned dry air is to blame.  It didn’t just magically appear; I saw it, it was one reason why, if I can hang my hat on this at all really, my snow projections tended to lean on the conservative side.  That and questions about precipiatation type and changeover times.  When it came down to it, the dry air was just a little drier and the “surge” of moisture both couldn’t overcome it as quickly and was being directed a bit more to the southeast of Springfield specifically. (note that by Friday morning, Mtn. Home, Arkansas had indeed picked up about 4 inches, just the start of a winter wonderland for those folks!)

Despite the failure of the Friday morning snow to be as heavy, I think the storm as a whole was forecast very well.  Everyone had at least 5 days to prepare.  Changes and updates to the forecast were handled quickly and accurately.  The second surge was handled very well.

If some people thought that Springfield would wake up Friday to a foot of snow or that it wouldn’t be snowing into Friday evening, I don’t know what to say except to listen carefully to what meteorologists are saying.  I also strongly suggest checking this blog and other social networking sites.  For instance, I knew shortly after the measurement was taken at about 7 pm Thursday evening that the morning totals would have to be scaled back. 

Tuesday 10 pm Snow Projection

Wednesday 10 pm Snow Projection

Thursday 6 pm Snow Projection

Thursday 10 pm Snow Projection

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