SnowBrains Forecast: Nor'Easter Will Bring 6+ Inches to Northeast Resorts This Week - SnowBrains
Briefly

SnowBrains Forecast: Nor'Easter Will Bring 6+ Inches to Northeast Resorts This Week - SnowBrains
"Tuesday's storm followed by a sharp midweek arctic front will bring roughly 4″-8″ of new snow to many northern New England mountains and around 4″-6″ to Mt. Bohemia in Michigan, with the highest totals centered on Stowe and Cannon Mountain and solid base-building at the rest of the pack. Behind these systems, cold air locks in with recurring snow shower chances and occasional light waves through the second week of December, favoring the northern Green and White Mountains, the western Maine high country,"
"Temperatures in the upper teens to low 20s from bases near 800 feet up to summits above 4,000 feet keep precipitation all snow, and snow levels near valley floors mean top-to-bottom coverage at every hill. Snow-to-liquid ratios generally run in the 13-16:1 range, so snow quality leans toward lighter, chalky powder rather than heavy, wet snow, especially along the Vermont spine and across the higher New Hampshire and Maine peaks."
"Tuesday's storm delivers around 4″-8″ of fresh snow to most of the northern New England mountains and about 4″-6″ at Mt. Bohemia, setting up the first truly wintry midweek pattern of the season at the operating areas and a solid base-building shot where lifts are still idle. Snow fills in quickly Tuesday morning, peaks through the day, and eases late Tuesday night, with the deepest totals focused on Stowe and Cannon Mountain and healthy coverage as well at Sugarbush, Sugarloaf, Bretton Woods, Killington,"
A Tuesday storm and sharp midweek Arctic front will produce roughly 4–8″ of new snow across many northern New England mountains and about 4–6″ at Mt. Bohemia, with the heaviest totals at Stowe and Cannon Mountain. Snow begins Tuesday morning, peaks during the day, and tapers late Tuesday night, with valley-level snow producing top-to-bottom coverage. Temperatures in the upper teens to low 20s and 13–16:1 snow-to-liquid ratios favor lighter, chalky powder. Breezy ridge gusts can cause drifting. Cold air and periodic light waves persist into mid-December, favoring the northern Greens, Whites, western Maine high country, and the Keweenaw, while open resorts should see improving coverage.
Read at SnowBrains
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]