Brace yourselves. What's likely to be the coldest weather of the season will roll into Southern New England early next week.
A coastal storm system approaching New England Sunday afternoon is forecast to drop 3 to 6 inches of snow across the Boston area through early Monday, with higher accumulations of around 4 to 8 inches expected the farther inland you go. A few isolated areas, especially from Springfield to the Berkshires, could see nearly a foot stack up.
Heavy snow and frigid temps put 70 million in the U.S
A storm bringing snow Sunday will be followed by an arctic outbreak dropping temperatures into the 'single digits.'
While a weekend winter storm still remains uncertain, forecasters believe a cold air mass could bring temperatures down to between 10 and 15 degrees early next week.
Forecasters have an idea of how much snow could fall between Sunday night and Monday, but while plowable, uncertainty looms as to exactly how much.
After a week of biting cold temperatures and strong winds, this weekend will bring a light covering of snow across New England, including New Hampshire. This weekend's snowfall will be calm, bringing showers with little to no accumulation across the state on both Thursday night and Saturday into Sunday.
A NWS forecaster said Massachusetts will see at most two inches of snowfall from the storm this weekend. Most parts of the state, including Worcester, Boston and the South Shore, are expected to get less than an inch of snow.
Residents across the country from the Northern Plains to the tip of Maine are bracing for dangerously low temperatures
On Saturday, a cold front will sweep through the area, bringing mainly rain to coastal areas and the Interstate 95 corridor. Some light snow will sweep through interior sections of the Northeast, northern New England and the Ohio Valley. A soggy Saturday is expected across much of the Southeast.
Tens of millions of residents along the East Coast are bracing for several inches of snow Sunday followed by dangerously cold temperatures that will take
A deep and powerful trough of cold air will drop south from Canada this week, sending temperatures plummeting from the western United States to the eastern seaboard and as far south as the Florida panhandle.