UPDATE (10/23): The info I was looking at for NWS snow totals omitted this statement, which, as it turned out, was the only one with over an inch reported. Here are the top 5:
KILLINGTON, VT: 7.0"
ESTCOURT, ME 6.0"
FREEDOM ACRES, ME: 6.0"
FORT KENT, ME: 4.0"
SAINT FRANCIS, ME: 4.0"
SAINT AGATHA, ME: 3.5"
UPDATE (10/23): No snow amounts over 1 inch were reported to the NWS, SkiReport.com, or the SnowMatrix. Mount Washington reported 3 inches. That doesn't mean that other high peaks didn't get 2-4 inches, just that there's no one there to report it. The NOHRSC map shows less than an inch in this coverage area:
Snow is falling over parts of the Northeast this morning, and up to 4 inches could fall at the highest elevations.

Here's a look at the 9:30 AM radar from AccuWeather.com Premium:
I couldn't find many webcams showing the snow on the ground (because of the high elevation) except for (of course) Mount Washington, which has a permanent space to the right of this blog entry. Their "deck cam" showed snow on the ground (and on the cam!) this morning:
There was a little snow on the Whiteface cams and you could see snow falling on the Houlton, Maine webcam. Looking at the actual observations earlier this morning, snow was reported as far south as Clearfield, PA (and was also reported at Johnstown PA last night).

Snow was reported in Pennsylvania and New York on May 24, as viewers looked forward to temperatures in the 20s on Memorial Day Weekend.
The damage from the Moore, Okla., tornado of May 20, 2013, is incredible. These radar loops show the immensity of the tragic storm.
When I saw that Google had created a 30-year satellite time-lapse of Earth, I knew where the most impressive weather-related animations would be.
Whatever you call them -- "Ice Needling," "Ice Surges," or "Ice Shoves," or "Ice Heaves" -- a phenomenon that I first blogged about in 2009 is back -- with a vengeance!
17 years ago on this date, while I was taking my freshman exams at UNCA, a "cut-off" low was rumored to dump 57" of snow at nearby Mount Pisgah... but is that reading reliable?
Tornado reports and warnings are down for 2013 so far, and the last 12 months, but what about severe-thunderstorm-warned areas and lightning strikes?
Jesse Ferrell
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