|
|
Search
You searched for the word(s):
Showing page 1 of 2 (14 total posts)
< 1 second(s)
-
My sister in Falmouth is reporting a sleet/rain mix. The rain is not freezing on the cars but is freezing on the pavement.
-
My sister just told me that in Falmouth there is a rain/sleet mix. Rain is freezing on contact with the pavement.
-
The board is awfully quiet. Calm before the storm? Here in southern Northern Kentucky (I work in Pendleton County) it seems from what I've been seeing that this could possibly be a mostly (if not entirely) ''plain rain'' event. Is this so?
-
As a math teacher, I prefer ''negative'' or ''below zero.'' Minus means subtract and you're not subtracting a temperature below zero.
-
So, Steve, what about the Falmouth area? Are you expecting more of a rain/icing event there?
-
John, I do not envy you guys. With the range in this model going from a dusting of snow in Owen County (which I know means more rain/sleet/ice) to up to 25 inches in Franklin County this one looks like it would be a nightmare to pinpoint. I know it's early. And I also know that you guys live for this stuff. :-)
-
Got it. Thank you for answering my question.
-
Yes, that makes sense. So the map you posted below is measuring snow depth as of 06Z 14 Feb??? And not new snow from this storm???
-
James, I'm curious as to what ''New Snow or Snow Depth'' means? Does that mean that by very early Wednesday Cincinnati could have 10-12'' just from this new storm? Or 10-12'' total on the ground. (Not that it makes a HUGE difference at this point)
-
THE POTENTIAL EXISTS FOR A SIGNIFICANT SNOWFALL OF FOUR TO EIGHTINCHES NORTH OF THE OHIO RIVER...WITH SIGNIFICANT SNOW AND ICEACCUMULATIONS POSSIBLE SOUTH OF THE OHIO RIVER FROM MONDAY NIGHTTHROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT. THE EXACT AMOUNT OF SNOW AND ICE WILLDEPEND ON THE TRACK OF THE STORM SYSTEM.
I do not like the ''ice'' word in there.
1
|
|