11/9/14, "Suddenly Ski Season in New England," necn.com, Tim Kelley
Wildcat Mt., NH, right |
"As peak foliage time continues in Greater Boston, ski areas are spinning lifts in Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine."
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"Sunday, Nov. 9, in Newton, Massachusetts, it's peak foliage time. But in our mountains, the leaves are down and it's been snowy and cold....
Mother Nature sent New England's first snowfall the morning after
Halloween. Snow was so heavy the first two days of November that more
than 100,000 lost electricity in the State of Maine.
Then, six days later, we saw another six-inch snowfall in Maine. The snow in the Pine Tree State broke records.
The National Weather Service issued the following statement on Sunday:
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NORTHERN AND EASTERN MAINE OFF TO A SNOWY START THIS NOVEMBER...
NORTHERN AND EASTERN MAINE OFF TO A SNOWY START THIS NOVEMBER...
SO FAR THIS NOVEMBER A TOTAL OF 15.8 INCHES OF SNOW HAS BEEN OBSERVED AT CARIBOU. THIS IS 14.2 INCHES ABOVE NORMAL...AND IS BY FAR THE SNOWIEST START TO THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER ON RECORD.
PRIOR TO THIS NOVEMBER 2004 HAD THE SNOWIEST START TO THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER WITH 11.1 INCHES DURING THE FIRST 8 DAYS OF THE MONTH.
THE ALL-TIME SNOWIEST NOVEMBER AT CARIBOU WAS IN 1974 WHEN THERE WAS A TOTAL OF 34.9 INCHES OF SNOW. BY COMPARISON...THE AVERAGE SNOWFALL FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH OF NOVEMBER AT CARIBOU IS 10.5 INCHES.
AT BANGOR...A TOTAL OF 12 INCHES OF SNOW HAS BEEN OBSERVED SO FAR THIS NOVEMBER...WHICH IS 11.9 INCHES ABOVE NORMAL. IT IS ALSO BY FAR THE SNOWIEST START TO THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER
ON RECORD. PRIOR TO THIS NOVEMBER...1968 HAD THE SNOWIEST START TO THE
MONTH OF NOVEMBER WITH 4.7 INCHES OF SNOW DURING THE FIRST 8 DAYS OF THE
MONTH. THE ALL-TIME SNOWIEST NOVEMBER AT BANGOR WAS IN 1962 WHEN THERE WAS A TOTAL OF 24.6 INCHES OF SNOW. BY COMPARISON...THE AVERAGE SNOWFALL FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH OF NOVEMBER AT BANGOR IS ONLY 2.3 INCHES. CB
There has been
less snow in New Hampshire and Vermont, but it's been plenty cold for
snow-making. The five areas open Sunday were Sugarloaf, Sunday River,
Killington, Bretton Woods and here at Wildcat Mountain.
With 2,000 feet top to bottom, Wildcat may have the most vertical in the entire nation.
Only Killington and Sunday River are
open for the season right now. Others are day-to-day for a while....
Our current
weather map features the much-talked-about powerful upper low from 90
degrees north latitude that has meandered to southern Ontario, bringing
with it some of the coldest air on earth right now. But for how close
that system is to New England, we are very warm (it's all relative).
Temperatures are running five to 10 degrees above the climatological
north for Nov. 10-12.
Obviously, it is a very tight
gradient between the warm and the cold. That means we have a tremendous
Jet Stream, the wind high in the sky is moving 100 mph and faster. The
shape of the upper low is such that systems race by with the most minor
perturbations able to generate heavy bursts of snow. The main action the
first part of the week focuses from western Canada, down the Rockies to
Texas, then lifting through the Great Lakes into eastern Canada.
New England gets
into this next batch of 'pre-winter' winter storminess, beginning
Friday. Due to the fast flow and high sensitivity of each short wave
coming around the long wave powerhouse upper low from 90 degrees north
latitude, we are not able to deliver a high-confidence forecast beyond a
day or two.
The stakes are high - snow will come with the cold by
Friday, but it is difficult to say where and how much. This cold
outbreak may rival the most early expansive winter as we have seen in
decades (thinking 1976). It appears the heart of this cold outbreak for
New England is Nov. 15-25.
But if I had to lay odds, my guess is most
New England snow plow operators will be put to work before Thanksgiving,
when we may be playing ice hockey on the bogs near Cape Cod."... via Drudge
Image above by Tim Kelley, NECN: "Even as I took this photo here in our NECN Parking Lot, five ski areas were spinning lifts in Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine." Right photo, "Wildcat Mountain," New Hampshire
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