Snowfall Update: Everything on Track for a Historic Thumping Today

As of this morning, everything is on track for a historic system to impact our region today and tomorrow. Snow should begin overspreading the area by early this afternoon and continue through tomorrow morning. By the time it ends, I expect most of us to see at least 20″ of accumulation. I wouldn’t be shocked if localized areas received over 25″, but that is impossible to predict right now as it all depends on where the heavy banding sets up. The other notable feature of this event will be the wind; at the height of the storm overnight, gusts will exceed 50 mph. This will undoubtedly be an event we remember for a long time.

While you’re safely inside riding out the weather, make sure to tune in and support Team USA this morning against Canada!

Storm Update: This Is the Real Deal — February 22-23

With the runs over night, the models have locked in. What was a highly uncertain situation just 24 hours ago has come into much clearer focus, and the picture they’re painting is significant. This will be the most impactful snowstorm our area has seen in years. Our whole area is now under Blizzard Warnings that take effect tomorrow morning. 

TLDR: Expect 15–20″ of snow area-wide, blizzard conditions for several hours, and wind gusts exceeding 50 mph. HEAVY snow develops Sunday afternoon and continues through Monday morning.

What the Models Are Saying

The model spread has tightened considerably, though there’s still a meaningful range. Here’s where things stand for Long Island, with notes on neighboring areas below:

Model LI Snowfall
GFS 28″
NAM 26″
SREF 18″
ICON 16″
NWS Blend 14″
Euro 12″

The Euro remains the lone holdout on the conservative end. That said, it’s worth remembering the Euro was insisting this storm would go out to sea as recently as Friday night — so take its 12″ with a grain of salt. The GFS and NAM are clearly on the aggressive end and may still be overdoing it, but the middle of the pack is firmly in the significant storm category.

For our readers further north and west,  totals fall off a bit as you head north toward the Hudson Valley and into Connecticut.

Snowfall totals alone don’t tell the full story here. Wind gusts are expected to exceed 50 mph, combine that with heavy snow rates, you get blowing and drifting snow, whiteout conditions, and potentially zero visibility for periods during the storm. Blizzard conditions appear likely for much of the area. Do not plan to be on the roads Sunday evening or overnight into Monday.

Timing

Some light snow may arrive as early as late Sunday morning, but the core of the storm kicks in Sunday afternoon. Heavy snow and peak winds continue through the overnight hours, with the storm winding down by Monday morning.

As of now, my forecast is for 15–20″ area-wide, acknowledging that the GFS and NAM are suggesting the potential for more. If those models verify, totals above 20″ are entirely possible, particularly across Long Island and the metro. The Euro’s 12″ keeps the lower end in play, but at this point the weight of the evidence supports a major storm.

Storm Update for Sunday into Monday: A Major Shift and a Growing Threat

I know many of you have been wondering why I haven’t posted an update about the storm that will impact our area on Sunday into Monday. To be honest, this one caught me by surprise. As recently as last night, only the GFS was signaling a major storm for our region. Every other model had this tracking out to sea, so I held off. Overnight, that changed dramatically.

The model consensus has done a dramatic about-face, and now the GFS is no longer the odd one out.

TLDR; Expect 8-14″ of snow area-wide with the potential for far more if the NAM and GFS are correct. Snow develops Sunday afternoon and continues through the overnight hours, winding down by Monday morning.

Here’s where things sit as of the latest runs:

GFS / NAM: The aggressive camp. The NAM just came in showing 24 inches, which is an eye-popping number that demands attention. The GFS has been the drummer beating this storm into existence all along and continues to support a major event.

Euro / CMC: More conservative, both sitting around 9 inches. The Euro in particular has a strong track record with systems like this, so that number keeps the high-end scenario from being a sure thing. BUT the Euro also was insisting on this going out to sea as recently as last night. So it may be VERY wrong on this one. 

The spread between 9″ and 24″ tells you everything you need to know about confidence levels right now: this is a rapidly evolving, low-confidence forecast. Trends are moving in the higher direction, but we’re not there yet.

Snowfall totals are only part of the story here. Models are in solid agreement that wind gusts will exceed 50 mph during this event, which opens the door to blizzard conditions for a period of several hours. Blowing and drifting snow, near-zero visibility at times, and the kind of conditions that make travel not just difficult but dangerous. This is worth taking seriously even if you end up in the lower end of the snow range.

Given the aggressive model trends but the still-meaningful Euro/CMC signal, I’m going with 8 to 14 inches area-wide for now, with the possibility that the higher end of the NAM/GFS scenario is entirely possible if that solution verifies.

Right now this is a very low-confidence forecast and I’ll be updating as new runs come in. Do not finalize your plans or prep around these numbers just yet — watch for updates over the next 24 hours as the picture sharpens.

Bottom line: there’s a real storm coming. How big? Still being decided. Stay tuned.