It looks like the models are still looking at a huge coastal storm for Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. The Canadian and American model have the storm east, but that's not really a big deal. The Euro has the storm more to the west, closer to the shore. Why is this important? The Euro model is better equipped to handle Nor'easters than any other model. So while the other two models agree on a storm, but further east, the takeaway here is that all three see a HUGE storm, and that the Euro has the storm trending eastward with each model run.
So what's that mean for being five days out of the potential storm? Nothing solid, really. Things can always change. But (and it's a
big but), things are setting up for a large storm that is going to possibly affect a large portion of the MA and NE. The models have this thing bombing out and riding the coast, which means places like Boston could get buried in a Spring snow event.
No snowfall totals yet, obviously. And don't trust any from anyone saying they have totals. What can be said is that this storm has the potential to dump snow that will be measured in feet and not inches.
I still think that the way things are setting up, tomorrow afternoon will be a very telling day for how this system plays out.
JetMaxx said:
Just saw this:
up my way in northwest Chester County.
Hello neighbor!