SNOWZILLA brings US west coast to standstill 2016 SNOWZILLA brings US west coast to standstill 2016 SNOWZILLA brings US west coast to standstill 2016 SNOWZILLA brings US west coast to standstill 2016 Home Page Politics Opinions Sports Local National World Business Tech Lifestyle Entertainment Crosswords Video Photography Washington Post Live Live Chats Real Estate Cars Jobs WP BrandConnect Classifieds Partners washingtonpost.com 1996-2016 The Washington Post Terms of Service Privacy Policy Submissions and Discussion Policy RSS Terms of Service Ad Choices Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google Plus Share via Email More Options Book mark article Read later list Saved to Reading List Capital Weather Gang Snowzilla, biggest snow on record in Baltimore, top 5 in D.C., has ended Snow has ended, except for perhaps an errant flurry or two. Nothing more than a random dusting (good luck noticing!) is expected at this point. With clearing skies, lows are mainly in the near 20 to low 20s range.
Sunday’s going to be a good day for enjoying the leftovers of Snowzilla, and getting the cleanup process in gear. Local hills are likely to be filled with sleds and the weather largely cooperates.
It’s mainly sunny and highs are near 30 or into the low 30s most spots. We definitely won’t see a lot of natural help through melting, just yet. The good news is winds are way down, but they’ll still blow around 10-15 mph early, then dwindle with time.
Sunday night is likely very cold thanks to the fresh snow pack, light winds, and mostly clear skies. Single digits are a good bet north and west where the deepest snow is. In the city and south or east, mainly 10-15 or so.
We’ll have SchoolCast and FedCast along tomorrow. Historically, and given the cold Sunday forecast plus ton of snow to move, it’s a good bet not much will be running normally by Monday.
11:45 p.m. update: Might as well plop a short radar loop of the end of Snowzilla in here. For a while there it seemed it w The last time an "epic" blizzard was supposed to slam New York City almost exactly one year ago, it ended up being an even more epic dud. This time, however, winter storm Jonas was no false alarm as millions of Americans across the Eastern Seaboard woke up this morning to as much as two feet of snow, flooding, blocked roads, no electricity, strong winds, or all of the above.
The storm is expected to affect about 85 million Americans, one quarter of the US population according to AFP. Before it's all over, it could cause more than $1 billion in damage, NWS officials said. New Jersey Governor Chris Christie left the campaign trail in New Hampshire to oversee the emergency response in his snowbound state If the blizzard lea
Be the first to comment