115
FXUS61 KBOX 232312
AFDBOX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Boston/Norton MA
612 PM EST Mon Dec 23 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
A weak low pressure system may bring a dusting to an inch or so
of snow Tuesday morning. Otherwise, dry weather is expected from
Christmas Day through the weekend along with a slow warming
trend.

&&

.NEAR TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY/...
Updated: 2:30 PM

Key Messages:

* Dry and cold tonight - but possible rain/snow showers SE?

Skies will clear out for a time this evening as ocean effect
clouds diminish and mid-level clouds moving through SNE this
afternoon head offshore. This will allow temperatures to drop
off this evening as winds remain light, so most places can
expect their low temperatures in teens/lower 20s to occur
before midnight.

Later tonight, warm advection gets underway and cloud cover
increases across region, causing temperatures to either level
off or rise slowly overnight. While dry weather is expected
overall, there is a very low chance (less than 10%) of seeing
some widely scattered snow or rain showers in RI and SE MA with
increasing SW flow. Forecast soundings are not overly supportive
of this so confidence is not high, but if it does happen it
could leave a coating of snow overnight away from south coast.

&&

.SHORT TERM /TUESDAY NIGHT/...
Updated: 2:30 PM

Key Messages:

* Light snow Tue morning, especially across interior MA/CT, with
  Berkshires and Worcester Hills having best chance at 1-2" of
  new snow.

* A little more questionable for accumulating snow farther south
  and east including Providence and Boston.

Not much change in our thinking for Tuesday. Weak clipper system
tracks through northern New England and exits region Tuesday
afternoon. These systems historically don`t produce much in way
of snow, especially when temperatures are more borderline (near
freezing) as in this case, and often produce the most snow when
an Arctic airmass is present (which is not the case here). HREF
snow probs for 1" or more in 12 hours (10:1 ratio) favors higher
elevations.

Model mass fields suggest best potential for snow is across
western and central MA and western CT where what dynamics are
available come into play. 12z NAM frontogenesis (850 mb) is
strongest in western/north central MA Tue morning but then
weaken as it pushes farther SE toward Boston and Providence. You
can see the result of this on most of the high-res radar
simulations and 1-hour precip, including 12z HREF, which shows
precip shield fragmenting as it exits Worcester Hills. So it`s
entirely possible that areas SE of Worcester see little if any
snow (flurries?) or any rain near Cape Cod/Islands where
boundary layer temps are warmer.

As a result our snowfall forecast has changed little, showing
max of 1-2" near Berkshires and Worcester Hills and less than 1"
elsewhere. Probably just enough to bring a fresh coating of snow
for most.

We should see clearing set in Tue afternoon with subsidence and
drying behind departing system. Temperatures should recover
nicely with highs in 30s, if not around 40 closer to Cape Cod
and Islands.

Christmas Eve (Tue night) is looking dry at this point with
mainly clear skies, but expect bands of ocean effect clouds
near E MA coast given colder northerly winds. Lows drop into
teens and 20s.

&&

.LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH MONDAY/...
Updated: 2:30 PM

Key Messages:

* Chance for light precipitation across Cape Cod on Christmas Day
* Dry conditions through Saturday with slowly moderating temperatures

12z models are fairly consistent with the large scale synoptic
pattern, which shows a building ridge over the western Great Lakes
early Christmas Day morning that will push eastward and be across
the northeastern US by Friday.

Sidetrack to Christmas Day & Cape Cod........ Models all show an
upper trough offshore and fairly robust surface low south of the
Canadian Maritimes Christmas morning, and although that low will be
far to our east, the northerly flow and weak cold air advection on
the backside should result in fairly widespread strato-cumulus that
will move across the Cape. In some of the higher-res models, there
is also a suggestion of a weak west-east oriented surface trof
extending from that low pressure that moves southward late Christmas
Day into early Thursday and skims Cape Cod. This could be enough to
generate very light drizzle or snizzle (small snowflakes). Surface
temperatures across most of the Cape should be just a few degrees
above freezing for much of the day, but if the precipitation does
move a bit further west and get to the upper Cape or coastal
Plymouth County, a spot of freezing drizzle could occur. Looked at a
number of model soundings and given the very marginal moisture
profiles, I did not see anything that screamed that this was
something to really worry about. Overall it will end up being a
cloudy, breezy and perhaps a bit raw of a Christmas Day on the Cape.
Painted in 25-40% PoPs across that region, while basically it`s
sunny, dry and seasonably cool everywhere else.

Rest of the forecast period.....

Accompanying the building ridge will also be increasing temperatures
aloft. Looking at the 850mb temperatures, we will start around -6C
on Christmas, warm to about 0C on Thursday then +4C on Friday into
Saturday.  That said, with surface high pressure also building over
the region, fairly strong subsidence and the low sun angle, the
boundary layer will struggle to mix much, so we will not realize at
the surface the full potential of the warmth aloft. Thus daytime
highs in the 30s on Christmas, upper 30s to lower 40s Thursday and
Friday and finally into the lower 40s for the weekend.

As we get into Sunday and early next week, the models become more
divergent with the upper air pattern. At the very least, the
ensembles suggest the ridge will be pushed offshore and weaken,
allowing upper level troughing to develop to our west.  Such a
pattern would support a southwest flow aloft that would open us up
to seeing warmer/more moist air moving into our area for sometime in
the Sunday to Monday timeframe.  The ECMWF and Canadian based
ensemble members suggest about an 80% chance of precipitation in the
24 hour period from Sunday evening to Monday evening, which the GFS
based ensembles are a bit more conservative with 40-60% showing
precipitation sometime over that period. Stuck with the NBM guidance
at this point for PoPs, which are on the lower end of those ranges.
Probabilities are high that most of the area will just experience
rain, but some low probabilities exist for a spot or two of snow,
sleet or freezing rain at the start of the precipitation across
interior valley locations. However that is greatly dependent on
exact details that are beyond the state of science at this
point. Just put the mention of snow in for those isolated
locations where unknowns exist for determining precip-type.

&&

.AVIATION /23Z MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY/...
Forecast Confidence Levels:

Low - less than 30 percent.
Moderate - 30 to 60 percent.
High - greater than 60 percent.

00Z TAF Update...Moderate confidence, mainly for tonight and
Tue morning.

VFR conditions give way to lowering ceilings later tonight with
spotty areas of -SN and localized MVFR visibilities, especially
in RI and eastern MA.

Steadier area of -SN arrives in western MA and CT toward sunrise
but may fragment as it reaches BOS/PVD and points SE Tue
morning. Nonetheless, MVFR or lower-end VFR ceilings prevail
through midday Tue before improvement to VFR Tue afternoon and
Tue night, but bands of ocean effect clouds could bring MVFR
ceilings near Cape Cod and the islands and just offshore.

Light SW winds increase to 10-15kt Tue morning, then shift to NW
Tue afternoon and become more N Tue night.
kt.

KBOS TAF...Moderate confidence in TAF. Fairly certain on -SN
timing Tue but it`s possible vsby lowers to 4-5SM for a time.

KBDL TAF...High confidence in TAF.

Outlook /Wednesday through Saturday/...

Tuesday Night through Christmas Day: VFR. Breezy.

Wednesday Night through Friday: VFR.

&&

.MARINE...
Forecaster Confidence Levels:
Low - less than 30 percent.
Medium - 30 to 60 percent.
High - greater than 60 percent.

Updated: 2:30 PM

Overall high confidence.

Southerly flow gets underway tonight as high pressure moves
offshore. A weak and fast moving low pressure system will cross
northern New England Tuesday accompanied by increasing SW winds
(but staying below SCA), before winds shift to N/NW later Tue
and Tue night. Gusts could reach 25kt on eastern MA waters late
Tue night but not confident enough yet to raise SCAs.

May be some spotty light rain showers (or snow showers near
shore) Tue, then another round of bands of ocean effect snow
showers Christmas Day near Cape Cod.

Outlook /Wednesday through Saturday/...

Christmas Day: Winds less than 25 kt. Local rough seas. Chance
of rain, slight chance of snow.

Wednesday Night: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of seas
approaching 5 ft. Chance of rain, slight chance of freezing
rain, slight chance of snow.

Thursday: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of seas approaching
5 ft. Slight chance of rain, slight chance of freezing rain.

Thursday Night through Friday: Winds less than 25 kt. Areas of
seas approaching 5 ft.

&&

.BOX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
CT...None.
MA...None.
RI...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...JWD/Nash
NEAR TERM...JWD
SHORT TERM...JWD
LONG TERM...Nash
AVIATION...JWD/Nash
MARINE...JWD/Nash