Virginias Snowstorm Sunday
A larger version of this map is available on AccuWeather.com's Winter Weather Center.
Soon after clobbering portions of Kentucky and Tennessee with snow, a snowstorm will take aim on a large part of Virginia, West Virginia and portions of North Carolina and southern Maryland.
For much of this area, the snowfall is likely to be the biggest of the winter season thus far. The snow will be heavy and wet in most locations.
The heart of the snowstorm in the mid-Atlantic states is aiming for areas from Beckley, W.Va., to Charlottesville and Winchester, Va. In these areas, most and perhaps all of the precipitation with the storm will fall as snow with the potential for a foot and locally more. The storm will get an early start in these locations, beginning late Saturday night or early Sunday morning.
RELATED:
Snowstorm to Reach Tennessee, Kentucky
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Good Rain, Bad Rain for the South
However, substantial accumulating snow is likely to stay south of the Baltimore-Washington area. The track of the storm is expected to be far enough south that accumulating snow will only make it as far north as northern Virginia.
The concern is that colder air will invade the storm Sunday evening, turning rain over to accumulating snow, or allowing prior melting snow to stick.
Folks venturing out on the roadways Sunday evening may see roads turn from wet to slushy to very slippery in a matter of minutes as the sun's effect diminishes and temperatures drop a few degrees.
As a result, in addition to a stretch of I-95, other major highways that will impacted by the snowstorm include I-64, I-66, I-77, I-79 and I-81
The storm track as well as intensity of the precipitation is still a bit of a concern.
Unless the storm tracks much farther north than now anticipated, the snowfall would avoid much of New England, New York, Delaware, Indiana, Pennsylvania and Ohio.
This storm is likely to have a rather sharp northern edge to the accumulating snow area. A person driving south may go from no snow to several inches of snow in a matter of a dozen miles.
A northward or southward shift in the storm by 50 to 100 miles can have a dramatic effect on the northern extent of the snow area. The maps within this storm represent the consensus of AccuWeather.com meteorologists.
Light snow falling during the day will struggle to accumulate with the temperatures forecast.
We wish to remind people that high temperatures forecast for a particular area in this situation may occur prior to the storm's arrival. Once precipitation begins to fall in earnest, temperatures can fall dramatically even during the middle of the day, unlike that of a sunny day.
A storm that brought rain and snow to California at midweek will reorganize along the western Gulf Coast early this weekend and will take aim at the Southeast, the mid-South and mid-Atlantic Saturday night, Sunday into Sunday night.
The same high pressure keeping the storm out of the Great Lakes and New England will provide just enough cold air on the northern fringe of the storm for accumulating wet snow.
With this being Presidents Day weekend, snowfall of this sort would be a tremendous boon for ski resorts in part of the central Appalachians.
The storm will also bring substantial rain and the risk of severe weather to the Southeast this weekend. While the rain will be very beneficial falling on drought-stricken areas, this has the potential to be a very dangerous outbreak of violent thunderstorms and tornadoes, along with a flash flooding risk.
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Daily U.S. Extremes
past 24 hours
| Extreme | Location | |
|---|---|---|
| High | 100° | Smyrna, TN |
| Low | 15° | Sunset Crater, AZ |
| Precip | 3.99" | Wadena, MN |
WeatherWhys®
Hail is much more common during the months of May and June compared to July and August. The main reason is the fact that the freezing level is usually higher during July and August as pockets of cold air in the upper atmosphere are less common as the jet stream weakens and retreats farther north.
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