Bay Area weather enthusiasts, brace yourselves as the forecast indicates rapid atmospheric shifts over the coming days, courtesy of the National Weather Service in Cleveland. NWS Cleveland reports a high-pressure ridge will pass through today, granting a brief respite before an incoming low-pressure system stirs up the status quo tonight into Monday. This transition is anticipated to drag a cold front across the region while a persistent trough lodges over the southern Great Lakes until mid-week.
In the near term, we’re eyeing more dynamic conditions as the area emerges from mist and haze into clear skies, thanks to subsiding air from the south, along with slightly milder temperatures as a surface high pivots over the Appalachians, NWS Cleveland details show increased cloud cover and precipitation chances by this evening—a mix that includes potential drizzle or freezing drizzle given a dearth of saturation in the Dendritic Growth Zone, which means we’re not entirely out of the woods; and as the low from the northwest Great Lakes ushers in a stronger jet stream, Monday morning could greet locales in Northeast Ohio and Northwest Pennsylvania with up to an inch of fresh snow, according to the forecast.
Following the light snow will be a surge of Arctic air, fuelling lake-effect snowfall that is likely to impact areas near Lake Erie through Wednesday. The NWS Cleveland forecast adds an interesting note about expanding ice coverage that might tamp down on the snow band’s intensity—something to keep in mind for those in the primary snowbelt. As clear as a bell, the forecast calls for highs today in the low-to-mid 30s, but don’t get too cozy: temperatures are set to tumble into the 20s come Monday…