Massachusetts

Snow Changes to Icy Mix

After round 1, next system on Christmas

The first of two storms to impact New England this holiday weekend is arriving this morning.

Snow continues to spread in from west to east. The snow will continue to fall along and near the Massachusetts Turnpike, along with points to the north, into the evening commute.

By late afternoon and evening, areas south of there will start to change over to plain rain as warmer air moves up from the south.

That warm air will have a hard time making progress, however. It will surge over the top of stubborn cold air near the surface Friday night into Saturday in parts of North Central Massachusetts and Northern and Western New England in particular. That means after the snow most places will see a period of freezing rain. That will create very slippery travel.

The ice is likely to be the bigger issue than the snow, which will only amount to 1-3 inches from the Boston area, back to Worcester and Hartford. Totals ramp up to 3-6 inches for parts of North Central Massachusetts, Southern New Hampshire, much of Maine, and much of Vermont. Totals 6-9 inches will fall in the highest terrain around the Southern Green Mountains, the White Mountains, the mountains of Western Maine.

The freezing rain and ice will linger straight into Saturday across many of the colder communities of Eastern Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, while plain rain falls farther south as temperatures climb into the 40s and even 50s in some cases.

This first storm will finally wrap up and depart Saturday night.

Christmas Eve on Sunday will then be quiet, and fine for travel. Highs will be in the 30s to near 40.

Another system will try to spin up on Christmas morning, clipping New England with another round of precipitation. This looks to be a fast mover, so most of the impacts would be during the morning before seeing afternoon improvements.

Snow is most favored north and west of Boston, with a mix changing to snow closer to the coast. The exact track will be key in determining both what type of precipitation falls, and how much falls.

Regardless, a blast of cold arrives after Christmas. That cold air, with highs only in the teens and 20s, will last pretty much until the New Year.

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