Here is the latest Area Forecast Discussion for Central PA
This text statement is the latest forecast reasoning from the NWS in State College, PA
See the links at the bottom of the page for previous issuances/versions of the statement as well as our other text statements.
|
311 FXUS61 KCTP 250006 AFDCTP Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service State College PA 706 PM EST Tue Feb 24 2026 .WHAT HAS CHANGED... * Added Northern Centre County to Winter Weather Advisory * Extended end time of Winter Weather Advisory from 7AM to 9AM for the north central mountains && .KEY MESSAGES... 1) Quick-hitting minor to plowable snow accumulation for later tonight into the Wednesday morning commute 2) Increased uncertainty with snow/mixed precip potential Thursday 3) Mild end to February/meteorological winter -- but does March come in like a lion with another wintry system early next week? && .DISCUSSION... KEY MESSAGE 1: Quick-hitting minor to plowable snow accumulation for later tonight into the Wednesday morning commute A clipper system tracking across the Upper Great Lakes will bring a quick-hitting shot of snow primarily across the western and northern Alleghenies late tonight through Wednesday morning. Warm advection ahead of the surface low will combine with left exit region jet dynamics into favorable DGZ to produce 1-3" totals over the higher terrain with C-1" southeast of I99/I80. Bulk of the accumulating snowfall will likely fall within a 4-8 hour window with light snow/flurries after 12Z Wed across the Allegheny Plateau and Laurel Highlands. The snow and slippery road conditions will impact the Wednesday morning commute in some areas and may result in travel/school delays. KEY MESSAGE 2: Increased uncertainty with snow/mixed precip potential Thursday Overall, the 2/24 00Z & 12Z model trends have been bearish on the margin concerning snow/mixed precip potential for Thursday. A southeastward QPF shift in the deterministic GFS, NAM, and ECMWF is quite evident in the 12Z runs with NBM QPF matching closer with AIGFS and WPC to AIGEFS. The uncertainty is likely tied to shortwave differences in the fast quasi-zonal flow and strong temperature gradient across the northern half of the CONUS. POPs and snowfall were reduced via baseline foundational NBM which accounts for the bearish trends and implies lower forecaster confidence. It`s not out of the question the southeastward shift reverses in future cycles, but for now the signal is considerably weaker than this time yesterday. KEY MESSAGE 3: Mild end to February/meteorological winter -- but does March come in like a lion with another wintry system early next week? Regardless of the outcome on Thursday, Friday and Saturday continue to shape up quite well as we close out the month of February/meteorological winter on a nice warming trend. Saturday looks like the warmest day with max temps in the low 40s to mid 50s running +5-10 degrees above the historical average. But does March come in like a lion? Uncertainty exists regarding the potential for overrunning winter precip early next week as Pacific energy/moisture catches up to retreating arctic high pressure. Stay tuned. && .AVIATION /00Z WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Widespread VFR conditions prevail as of 25/00Z; however, deterioration is progged by all model guidance at all airfields for at least some portion of the 00Z TAF package. A clipper system will bring gradually lowering ceilings west-to-east over the next couple of hours, with snowfall expected across all of the western terminals (BFD/JST/AOO/UNIV/IPT) with moderate-to- high (~60-80%) confidence. Restrictions at BFD have been brought up slightly to match most recent HREF model guidance, which appears to be tracking slightly better with respect to cloud cover/radar returns at this time. The main uncertainty with respect to snow onset will be across AOO/UNV/IPT where there will be a battle between low-level dry air and mid-to-upper level forcing. At this time, think snow mentions will initially be limited before becoming more favorable after 25/03Z. Recent GLAMP/HREF/NBM model guidance outlines BFD/JST having the most favorable conditions for longer durations of IFR; however, have penciled in mentions at AOO/UNV/IPT for more targeted timing of IFR restrictions. Mentions of restrictions based on visibility have been limited at MDT/LNS based on recent model guidance which outlines there will be a couple hour period of snow; however, visibility restrictions look slightly limited. Winds will begin to increase between 25/00Z and 25/06Z with moderate (~50-60%) confidence. All model guidance points to wind gusts staying below 25kts throughout the TAF period with many terminals resting between 20-25kt peak winds overnight and through 25/18Z before potential for winds to slacken become more plausible. Some LLWS concerns remain at BFD/JST and have retained mentions, while a secondary area across SE PA (MDT/LNS) will be possible (~30-40%) but lower confidence predates mentions in the 00Z TAF package. Outlook... Thu...Low potential (~20-30%) for snow showers across southern Pennsylvania. Elsewhere, dry with VFR conditions probable. Fri-Sat...Dry conditions with VFR probable. Sun...Low potential (~30%) for snow showers across NW PA. Elsewhere, dry with VFR conditions probable. && .CTP WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Winter Weather Advisory until 1 PM EST Wednesday for PAZ004- 005-010-011-017-024-033. Winter Weather Advisory from midnight tonight to 9 AM EST Wednesday for PAZ006-012-018-037-041-042. && $$ WHAT HAS CHANGED...Steinbugl KEY MESSAGES...Steinbugl DISCUSSION...Steinbugl AVIATION...Beaty |
|
All NWS State College Text Statements/Forecasts:
|
|||
CLICK ON THE IMAGE BELOW TO USE THE NWS MOBILE WEB APP |