
I'm leaning toward the (lesser) NAM solution, a few inches of snow Sunday into Monday morning during the last half of the storm, a significant percentage of precipitation falling as rain, freezing rain and sleet, keeping ultimate, final amounts down. A few stormy headlines that are top of mind:
1). The farther west you live in the great state of Minnesota the heavier the final snow amounts. I still think parts of far western Minnesota, from Windom to Wheaton to Detroit Lakes and Moorhead could wind up with 6-12" of snow by the time the flakes stop flying Monday.
2). Rain and ice. A southerly surge of unusually mild air aloft should switch snow/ice over to mostly rain much of Saturday over all of southern and central Minnesota. The only problem? Ground temperatures may still hold below freezing, causing rain to freeze on contact with cold surfaces: trees, powerlines and highways. A period of significant icing is very possible from southwestern Minnesota (where there is still 15-22" of snow on the ground) into parts of central Minnesota Saturday. The farther north/west you travel, away from St. Cloud on Saturday, the better the odds of running into some icy patches.
3). By Sunday most of the precipitation will fall as snow, and travel conditions will get progressively worse as the day goes on. I'm nervous about all those Viking playoff games scheduled for late Sunday. Getting to the party will be tough enough, getting home could be a real mess. Leave extra time to get around, especially Sunday PM hours.
4). Final snowfall tallies are very much up in the air, but one thing is inevitable & unavoidable: colder air will get sucked back into Minnesota on the backside of the storm; we'll all be shivering and complaining about the (%$&#*%@#!!) wind chill by the middle of next week. Our 30-degree party has a definite shelf-life, within 72 hours it will feel like an old fashioned Minnesota January.
5). Temperatures run a few degrees below average from Jan. 26-31, about 4-5 numbing days (but NOT as cold as early January was). Long-range models are hinting at more 20s and 30s by the first week of February, just in time for Groundhog Day!



We'll get a (minor) break today, a little freezing drizzle leaking out of a slate-gray sky at times, but with temperatures in the upper 20s to near 30 major roads (certainly all the freeways) should be mostly-wet, the commute not too terrible out there. A surge of heavier precipitation arrives Friday night, and it may start as a mix of wet snow, sleet (ice pellets) and some freezing rain - changing over to rain during the day Saturday as temperatures edge past 32 F. south of a line from St. Cloud to Princeton, some mid 30s are possible from the Twin Cities to Rochester and Winona, keeping roads mostly-wet. If your Saturday travels take you to Brainerd, Wadena or even Willmar, the odds of running into patchy ice will increase the farther north & west you drive. You have been forewarned. At least by Sunday precipitation will be snow - and traction on snow is an order of magnitude more manageable than trying to slip and slide around on glaze ice.
It sounds like cheap, promotional hype (not above that, btw) but we scan 4 new computer runs/day. If the storm zigs farther west more warm air will get wrapped into the storm's circulation - we'll wind up with more rain, less snow. But if the storm zags 50-100 miles farther east, then the surge of warm air will be focused on southeastern MN and Wisconsin, keeping more of our precipitation falling as snow, and suddenly the (much snowier) GFS solution could wind up verifying. Insert deep sigh here. The bottom line: prepare for a very sloppy weekend. I'd recommend zipping out to the store, getting errands done today, because I have a hunch travel conditions will slowly deteriorate as the weekend goes on. Mostly rain & ice Saturday, turning over to mostly snow on Sunday as temperatures fall through the low 30s into the 20s. Best case scenario (for snow lovers): far western Minnesota gets plastered with a foot of snow. Worst case: the storm is strong enough (and far enough west) for warm air to reach western counties, keeping amounts in the 4-8" range by Monday morning.
Check back often, the one thing that seems certain: the forecast will change as the (final) storm track crystallizes. Looks like a good weekend to hibernate, maybe watch a little football Sunday? Be careful out there...
* Icy conditions for the U.S. Pond Hockey Championship today and Saturday, changing to mostly rain for a time Saturday, before changing back to snow Sunday. Leave extra time to get between events.
* St. Paul Winter Carnival: temperatures rise above 32 by 10 am Saturday, some melting of snow/ice sculptures is probably inevitable the first half of the weekend, but the mercury should drop below freezing again by the breakfast hour on Sunday morning. No problem next week as temperatures tumble through the 20s into the teens. Yes, Boreas will kick some serious butt next week.
Paul's Outlook for the Twin Cities
Today: Overcast (windy) with patchy fog, drizzle and freezing drizzle. Roads may be icy in the outlying suburbs. Winds: East 10-20, gusty. High: near 30
Tonight: Steadier winter mix moves in, wet snow, sleet and freezing rain. Very icy conditions possible, especially in the outlying suburbs. Low: 28
Saturday: Ice quickly changes over to mostly rain - freeways/major highways become wet, but roads from southwest through central counties may be very icy in spots. High: 35
Saturday night: Mostly rain, mixing with wet snow late. Low: 33
Sunday: A changeover to snow, potentially heavy at times - accumulating by PM hours. High: 33 (falling into the 20s by evening).
Monday: Light snow tapers to flurries, total accumulations of 2-4"+ possible (a half foot possible near St. Cloud, with some 8-14" amounts possible far western MN). High: 23
Tuesday: Sunshine reappears - much better travel conditions. High: 18
Wednesday: Subzero start, bright sun. High: 17
Thursday: Partly cloudy, a few degrees cooler than average. High: 16
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