Tuesday snowfall in New Hampshire: How much snow could accumulate in your area

Tuesday snowfall in New Hampshire: How much snow could accumulate in your area



Another round of steady light snow develops late tonight through most of tomorrow. I want to show you an area by airy snow tally as things add up throughout the late night hours of tonight and through most of tomorrow. We'll start you off in southern New Hampshire in the Nashua area, likely looking at a coding to an inch, waking up tomorrow morning. An additional inch or so falls by lunchtime and as the system winds down tomorrow evening, we're likely looking at about three to three inches there in the gate city. This also includes those of you in the greater Manchester and Concord areas as well. Along the coastline will take you to Hampton where there may be a few flakes early tomorrow morning, perhaps a coding on the ground as temperatures warm above freezing during the day. It's going to be hard to see any real significant snowfall accumulations at and near the immediate coastline.

So we're likely looking at a round of about two to three inches of snowfall there at many of the area beaches. How about Lake Sonipi? That region where it's a little bit more hilly over interior New Hampshire, you likely wake up to about an inch of snow tomorrow morning about three or four inches on the ground by lunchtime and as the system winds down tomorrow evening, we're likely looking at about a half foot of snow accumulation there. Same for those of you in Peterborough and the Manadnok region about an inch or two on the ground tomorrow morning and we wind up with close to five to six inches by the end of the storm. We're looking at a few more areas to watch because I think the snow is a lot lighter there and therefore won't accumulate as much as say over the higher terrain, just about 20 or 30 miles east of you. So in Hanover, likely an inch of snow on the ground by lunchtime two to three inches before the storm winds down tomorrow night. The Lakes region, Alton, you're looking at about a coding or so early tomorrow morning, perhaps an inch or two by lunchtime. Most of your steady light snow falls during the storm and winds up with about five inches of snow there by midnight on Wednesday.

The Mount Washington Valley will be one of the spots that winds up with some of the higher snow totals out of this very light snow early tomorrow morning. A couple inches on the ground by lunchtime by late tomorrow evening and tomorrow night about six to eight inches of snow expected especially up in elevation.



Manchester, New Hampshire, forecast, snow, weather

Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post