By Alex Sosnowski, Expert Senior Meteorologist
December 23, 2014; 8:57PM,EST
A storm bringing heavy rain, fog, thunderstorms, a swath of snow and travel delays will converge on the Northeast, Midwest and South leading up to Christmas.
The early stages of travel problems for both the roads and at airports due to patchy rain, fog and spotty ice and snow will continue over much of the eastern two-thirds of the nation on Tuesday.
The storm will impact the major airport hubs of New York City, Chicago and Atlanta, as well as the major cross-country routes such as Interstate 95, I-80 and I-10.
The most widespread travel disruptions and the worst weather conditions in terms of windswept rain and travel-impairing snow will be centered on Christmas Eve.
Problems due to snow and wind will continue in the Upper Midwest and central Appalachians into Christmas Day.
Jump to: Fog, Low Clouds to Reduce Visibility in Great Lakes and East | Drenching Rain to Raise Flooding Risk in Northeast | Strong Winds Could be a Snag for Airline Passengers | Snow to Create Hazardous Travel in Midwest
Fog, Low Clouds to Reduce Visibility in Great Lakes and East
As warmer air surges northward with the rain, the risk of travel delays due to fog will increase.
According to AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Elliot Abrams, "Areas and episodes of fog can be a problem for travelers in the Midwest and Northeast into Wednesday night."
RELATED:
The Best and Worst Airports in America
Check AccuWeather MinuteCast® for Your Location
White Christmas Shaping Up for Great Lakes, Midwest, Rockies
Low ceilings and fog could lead to flight delays at times from Atlanta and Pittsburgh to Philadelphia, New York City and Boston.
Drenching Rain to Raise Flooding Risk in East
For many people traveling by ground and air, rain will be an inconvenience. However, enough rain can fall at times to cause poor visibility, while roads are jammed with vehicles. Excess water on the roads will reduce the braking action and increase the distance required between vehicles in an emergency situation.
Pockets of heavy rain in the South along the I-10 and I-20 corridors will increase in size into Wednesday, where locally severe thunderstorms are forecast. Enough rain can fall to cause urban and poor drainage flooding in the I-95 corridor on Wednesday into Wednesday night.
Check the start and stop times of rain, including when the most intense rain will arrive, using AccuWeather MinuteCast® for your location.
According to AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Henry Margusity, "We are concerned about rapidly melting snow, combined with heavy rain leading to a stream and river flooding situation in northern New England during Wednesday night into Christmas Day."
Winds, Turbulence Could be a Snag for Airline Passengers
One of the most common causes of flight delays is wind, especially where it blows perpendicular to runways.
Gusty winds blowing from the south and east may lead to flight delays in the mid-Atlantic, New England and eastern Great Lakes region on Wednesday.
Increasing winds from the west and northwest may cause similar problems throughout the Midwest on Christmas Eve with the risk expanding to the mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Christmas Day.
The strongest winds are likely in the lower Great Lakes and in New England late Wednesday into Thursday, when gusts could reach 50 mph. Some of the gusts in the East and South will occur in thunderstorms. Gusts could approach 40 mph around New York City Wednesday night.
Turbulence during and in the wake of the storm could be a problem on some flights.
A period of onshore winds can also lead to minor coastal flooding from the coast of New Jersey all the way up the coast of Maine.
The storm system will become strong enough to produce a period of drenching rain and severe thunderstorms in the South.
Snow to Create Hazardous Travel in Midwest
While much of the South, mid-Atlantic and New England will be spared travel problems from snow with this storm, significant travel delays and dangers will develop in the Midwest on Christmas Eve.
The greatest risk for snow-related delays will be in portions of Michigan, Illinois, eastern Missouri and northwestern Indiana during the day Wednesday into Wednesday night.
It is during the transition to colder air following rain, when the greatest dangers for travelers may develop.
Chicago will be on the edge of accumulating snow to the east and intermittent, non-accumulating snow to the west from Wednesday afternoon into Wednesday night.
While not a huge amount of snow is forecast for the Ohio Valley states and the lower Great Lakes with the storm itself, snow showers or burst of snow at the tail end could lead to a light, but rapid slippery covering on the highways.
From southeastern Indiana, southeastern lower Michigan to Ohio and Kentucky, motorists should be prepared for rapidly changing weather conditions after dark on Wednesday.
The same conditions could occur late Wednesday night into Christmas morning in parts of the central Appalachians as temperatures fall.
Check AccuWeather MinuteCast® for your location before heading out on the roads. It will show you the start and stop times of precipitation over the next two hours, and it will show you when rain will change over to snow.
Meanwhile, as one storm targets the Midwest and Northeast on Christmas Eve into Christmas Day, another storm will affect a large part of the West with snow around the same time.
On Social Media
Joe
mamba1911
Storm Threatens Christmas Eve Travel Delays From NYC to Chicago, Atlanta accuweather.com/en/weather-new…
Be safe this year people.
Karen
NYCTravelBug
Bad news for US travelers over the next few days. Looks like I'll be hunkering down and getting shopping done early. accuweather.com/en/weather-new…
Trendinalia México
trendinaliaMX
6. Tim Burton y Helena Bonham Carter
7. Gustavo
8. Tomorrow is Christmas Eve
9. Snow Storm
10. Santa
2014/12/23 17:52 CST
DRUDGE REPORT
DRUDGE_REPORT
UPDATE: Holiday Travel Mess... drudge.tw/1AEtfuK
9h- Jeff Wilcox · Top Commenter · Fort Lauderdale, FloridaNo such thing as Global warming. Just Earth spinning in its normal cycles.
- Michael Keefer · Top Commenter · University of WashingtonThe normal cycle right now should be a slow cool down toward the next glacial period. That had been in progress for the last 6,000 years, until it stopped about 150 years ago and then 6,000 years of cool down wiped out, til now the planet is warmer than it was at the peak 8,000 years ago.
Soon the Arctic ocean will be ice free in the summer. The last time that condition was normal was before the on set of the ice age, 2.6 million years ago. When that happens the Milankovitch cycle will not longer be able to return the planet to a glacial period. - Dave Steele · Top Commenter
- John Kaiser · WCCC Police AcademyThey said snow so basically it's going to rain or miss us altogether and they will be wrong once again. Maybe they shouldn't freak everyone out until closer to the day!
- Grant McGuire · Top Commenter · Western Connecticut State University
- Christy Graening · Top Commenter · Grafton, West Virginia
- Lee Bishop · Top Commenter · The Ohio State UniversityThe earth is always getting either cooler or warmer. Pray for warmer. Serious global cooling means a reduction in arable land and growing seasons. Global warming means gently losing some coastal lands and cities (which will simply expand inland over the many decades of rising tides), while allowing for vast increases in food production. Buy an SUV.
- Lee Bishop · Top Commenter · The Ohio State University
- Lee Bishop · Top Commenter · The Ohio State University
- Derrick Cornell Cephas · Top Commenter · Eleanor Roosevelt High SchoolEl Nino shows up just in time for Christmas, there is no Polar Vortex insight.
January 2015 maybe above normal, just as December 2014. - Jeff Kurtz · Kutztown University of Pennsylvaniaanother boring storm in eastern, pa waiting for Big Big Snow...Last one was a fizzle what else is new.....
- Jeff Wilcox · Top Commenter · Fort Lauderdale, Florida20 years on the Cape, always foggy and warm , loved it. Nothing new here. Moody Blues Rider on the storm.
- Paul Berger · Top Commenter · Sheepshead Bay High School
- Grant McGuire · Top Commenter · Western Connecticut State UniversityNo Northeast snow is ALWAYS great for the holidays. 52 & sunny on Christmas :)
- Mike Mullett · United Electronics InstituteI would appreciate some Snow for North Central Ohio on Christmas! It usually rains on Christmas.
- Michael Sokolowski · Top Commenter · Massabesic High School
- Andrew Nagy · Top Commenter · Villanova UniversityDon't worry the Snow and cold will make it's long awaited return at New year's.
- Craig Mills · Top Commenter · Tarot card reader and runespeaker at Tarot card and runespeaking by craiglove the nice temperatures and rain. Come on global warming!
- Andrew Nagy · Top Commenter · Villanova UniversityAll the people who hate winter should move too an island.
- Diane Hernandez · Top CommenterI hope Long Island gets some snow soon. It seems so far it's always been rain but I guess it's early yet in the season. Good detailed forecast here, though. Thanks accu :)
- Steve Adams · Top Commenter · Taipei American SchoolYankees, stay home! (unless you want to bring your money to Florida).
- AnsTin AnTony · Follow · Full Sail UniversityToo strange to see rain on Christmas day instead of snow and its december end over PA & NY.
- William Taylor · Follow · Top Commenter · Atascadero High Schoolforget the storm I want that monitor.
- Nick Piechowiak · Works at Bavarian Inn RestaurantI live in Michigan, and there is no snow on the ground whatsoever
- Teri Slover · Top Commentersame here in east central wisconsin. I'm just not ready for the incoming weather. Have to work monday and tuesday. May have to work wednesday with a doc appointment mixed in (yes they scheduled me a doc appointment on christmas eve of all days). Thankfully I will be traveling a total of 20 miles between all 3 days.
- Ray Pezzi · Top Commenter · Suttons Bay, Michigan
- Brenda J. Graham · Independent Consultant and Distrituror at Self-EmployedLike it or not, believe in it or not, Climate Change is steady and real; there will be a major shift, gradually, over time. It's science. Plain and simple. Get over it, Randy.
No comments:
Post a Comment