Yesterday afternoon, models suggested 1-2″ of snow would accumulate in the Tri-State tonight through Saturday afternoon. The newest model data is more aggressive with the chance for snow, so forecast snow amounts have gone up.<\/p>\n
Recent SREF model runs have shifted heavier snowfall amounts north overnight, and have also increased totals. The risk for 1″+\u00a0 of snow from 10pm to 10pm tonight is on the left; the 4″+ chance is on the right:<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/p>\n Notice a rather high chance for 1″+ in and around Cincinnati in this time period, but a low chance for 4″+. This is the main reason why I am not including 4″+ totals in my forecast for now. An isolated 3.5″ to 4″ amount is possible in our area, but it is not likely at this point.<\/p>\n The latest high-resolution ECMWF model shows generally 2-3″ of snow in the greater Cincinnati area tonight through tomorrow night:<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n These totals look realistic with the exception of the far southern Tri-State, where most models have lower snow amounts.<\/p>\n The National Weather Service has issued a Winter Weather Advisory for all but Mason County, Kentucky from 7pm tonight through 1pm tomorrow:<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n My latest snow forecast calls for 2-3″ for most in the Tri-State tonight through tomorrow afternoon; 1-2″ totals will be confined to parts of Owen, Mason, Robertson, Grant, Bracken, Adams, Brown, and Pendleton County:<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Forecast totals will likely change later today; look for updates this afternoon and evening!<\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Yesterday afternoon, models suggested 1-2″ of snow would accumulate in the Tri-State tonight through Saturday afternoon. The newest model data is more aggressive with the chance for snow, so forecast snow amounts have gone up. Recent SREF model runs have … Continue reading