Snow squalls are possible Wednesday... what it means for us and travelling
Snow squalls are short-lived, isolated bursts of heavy snowfall, near-zero visibility, and gusty winds that can drop a small amount of accumulating snow quickly.
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Snow squalls are short-lived, isolated bursts of heavy snowfall, near-zero visibility, and gusty winds that can drop a small amount of accumulating snow quickly.
On an average year from July 1 to December 8, Dayton has about 240 total hours of feels like temperatures below 26 degrees. This year has had a 30% increase as compared to last year’s hours!
We’ve had a stretch of consistent days below average since Thanksgiving and the cold air isn’t letting up.
If you didn’t get the snow you were hoping for over the weekend, more snow is likely this week.
Another blast of winter-like cold air is moving in right time for Thanksgiving.
If you can remember from our winter forecast, snow extent in Siberia and Canada can impact our winter season. How do we compare to this time last year?
The second half of this weekend is noticeably cooler as we now wait for our next system.
If you are a fan of the warm, soaking up the Saturday warmth may not be a bad idea.
A powerful geomagnetic storm rated G4 out of 5 could make for a possibility for Northern Lights viewing Tuesday night.
Who’s ready for fall to come back and for all the snow to melt?!