However, there were healthy coatings in eastern Franklin County, northern Franklin County, the western hills, and about an inch or two (maybe a little more?) in the northern Berkshires, southern VT and southwest NH.
Please post your snow totals and condition reports below!
As mentioned in the headline, our spring mix is on the way out of here, but some slippery travel is still possible in the high terrain, so if you have to travel, watch for that if you’re at elevation.
Highs today will reach the low to mid 40s and we should remain overcast in the afternoon. Lows tonight should hang near 40 degrees as a warm front should bring some pre-dawn rain showers through the region.
Thereafter, warm air floods the region for a day, with highs in the mid to upper 60s, early morning patchy fog, southerly wind gusts over 20mph, and more scattered showers and maybe a downpour in the afternoon.
As we get toward evening, we should see a thin line of convection form ahead of an incoming cold front, and that could produce a downpour or thunderstorm around sunset, so keep an eye out for that. Lows tomorrow night in the low to mid 30s.
Our weekend looks lovely, sunny, but seasonably cold. Highs will only reach the upper 30s to mid 40s with lows in the low 20s. Monday looks similar, though more of a partly sunny day with clouds building in ahead of the next storm system, which may bring another snow changing to rain scenario late Monday night into Tuesday.
Showery conditions may last into Tuesday and Wednesday with highs near 50 degrees and lows near freezing.
Stay healthy and hydrated, and please consider chipping in even small donations (monthly or annually) to support my work here. I still need your help as my Member/Support Drive winds to a close this coming Sunday, March 22… anything helps the cause of sustaining this resource, thank you.
—————————-PLEASE HELP SUSTAIN YOUR COMMUNITY WEATHER RESOURCE… 2020 DRIVE ENDS SUNDAY(Cards, PayPal, Venmo, Check):—————————-