The Weather Man Podcast, I talk about weather!
SCROLL DOWN FOR THE LATEST !...Weekly news on relevant and interesting weather topics, news and personalities. We explain and discuss Tornadoes, Hurricanes, winter snow and ice storms, heat waves, cold waves, regular rainstorms, and how it matters to our homes, cities, states, country and the world. We'll talk about weather all around the world and the people who work 24/7/365 to warn, report, forecast, and archive all that happens weather-wise! Hosted by Certified Consulting and Broadcast Meteorologist Steve Pellettiere in the New York/Northeast region. The "Jersey Weatherman" will entertain, inform and amaze you with factual information, not only about the weather but about everything "UP" that he has experienced in over 45 years of weather and science casting.
The Weather Man Podcast, I talk about weather!
Snow Clears, Cold Follows
Hi, this is Bidi Roger, Steve Pellethiri. I am the Weatherman. Thanks for checking into the WeathermanPond.com on your Sundays, 14th day of the month of December, reaching mid-month, and much across the mid-Atlantic, the Northeast Carter, what we call from D.C. up to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City, and even up to the Boston area. Areas of snow, the heaviest probably was between Wilmington, Philly, and New Brunswick, New Jersey, as hairy areas of snow were with us during the overnight hours. There was a winter storm warning down for the Philly area and uh winter weather advisories for elsewhere across New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, and central and northern Maryland. It even extended a little bit into southeast New York State and southern sections of Connecticut, where between one as much as five, in some places even six inches of snowfall fell very quickly, but it's all ending now. And we're getting into a clearing trend with clearing during the afternoon for the Northeast Carter. Look for high temperatures to range between 30 and 35 with a gradual clearing trend, windy conditions during the afternoon. All the snow moving off to the east now. At night is going to be mostly clear. Overnight low temperatures back into the mid to upper teens, and look for a sunny day to start on Monday, then an increase in clouds. And it looks like high temperatures generally up to about 30 for a high by Tuesday. It'll range between 30 and 35. Wednesday, lower 40s, Thursday, lower 50s, and maybe some rain. Rain will be moving into the northeast for Thursday night and Friday of this upcoming work week. Today it looks like the snow all moving off to the east. And it looks like that first uh accumulating snow for New York City and Philadelphia now in the books for the month of December. Now, if you're traveling by air today, check with your airline as far as any delays are concerned because with the snow moving in at night and any early going, especially with uh winter weather advisories and storm warnings in effect. Uh airlines tend to flight, cancel those flights and rebook things throughout the daytime on Sunday. So it could be quite tough. So really check in with your airline, make sure everything is in order at this time. But weather-wise, an improving trend in the New York area. It's not a lot of snow, so the airlines and the airports take good care of it. In the Boston area, just some snow showers, then clearing D.C., Baltimore, about the same. Looking at dry weather in Atlanta on a northeast wind, dry in Charlotte as well, some showers in central and south Florida, south of Okeechobee down from Fort Myers to Miami and West Palm. Looks like those uh showers will be with us during the afternoon hours there. Houston and Dallas, Fort Worth clearing out, clearing out and cold in Chicago and cold weather in Minneapolis, St. Paul. But looks like dry weather for LA and San Francisco. Rain moving back in. Unfortunately, those folks have way too much rainfall in uh Western Oregon and Washington, Tacoma, and Portland with rainy weather again today. I'm in your Steve Fellatier. I am the weatherman. Hope you have a great day today. Talk to your first thing on Monday. See you then.