On Wednesday at 6:46 a.m. the NWS Eureka CA issued a winter storm watch valid from Thursday 10 p.m. until Saturday 4 a.m.
Winter Storm Enzo was not your typical winter storm, but its rain and snow were caused by a classic setup. Enzo never truly had a robust low pressure system, but instead was a large overlap between the coldest air of the season, abundant moisture and the tail end of a deep upper-level trough.
This incoming storm is tied to the remnants of the same system that is bringing beneficial, yet threatening, widespread rain to Southern California starting Sunday.
The system brought heavy rain to wildfire-ravaged areas of Southern California after months without precipitation
The recent winter storm that impacted Texas left residents wondering if colder temperatures would persist. However, Houston's current weather suggests a return to
The nation's capital is expected to see mostly sunny skies with increasing winds over the next few days; gusts may hit 47 mph on January 29.
A winter storm expected to hit southern Colorado on Wednesday could drop more than a foot of snow in the mountains and up to six inches in the southern metro area.
Seasonably warm temperatures continue this afternoon. A backdoor cold front will move through eastern New Mexico tomorrow as the winter storm moves into the state. Our next winter storm has settled over central Arizona this afternoon.
After a historic winter storm swept through the Southeast, agricultural experts are cautiously optimistic that there was not widespread damage done to crops and other harvest. Some crops such as blueberries and peaches need periods of cold weather to help enhance flavors.
Southern California has had a dry start to the state's wet season, but a recent winter storm brought snow to the region.
A winter weather advisory from the Weather Service at the same time predicts 3 to 7 inches of snow in Monroe, Ontario, Livingston, Genesee, Orleans, Erie and Niagara counties, 4 to 8 inches of snow in Wayne and Cayuga counties and 5 to 9 inches of snow in Wyoming, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and southern Erie counties.
The winter storm brought the heaviest snowfall in the state’s history and primarily impacted growers and producers in north Florida.