Wet,
messy weather to hit eastern U.S
It
will be a messy weekend in the Northeast and the Deep South as the
massive weather system that walloped 20 states with a snowstorm rolls
off toward the Atlantic Ocean.
CNN,
23
February, 2013
A
winter storm is expected to deposit up to 10 inches of snow in
isolated pockets of western Massachusetts, and 6 inches to a foot in
parts of southern Vermont and New Hampshire, and central Maine.
This
is not the same storm that blanketed the Great Plains, said CNN
Meteorologist Pedram Javaheri, although it is part of the same
overall system that spans the country from north to south.
It
will be much less intense, he said, and it should not affect the
places hardest hit by the blizzard that plastered the Northeast two
weeks ago, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands of customers.
Millions in Midwest clean
up after storm KC Mayor: City recovering after snow 'Thundersnow'
caught on video
Boston
will likely see a slushy mix of rain and snow that could lead to
downed branches and power lines, Javaheri said.
Track
severe weather
Rain
will continue to soak the eastern United States from Washington,
D.C., on down, especially Sunday, according to the National Weather
Service.
"Across
the Southeast, some of the rainfall totals are going to be
staggering," said CNN Meteorologist Karen McGinnis. Parts of the
central Southeast should get 4 to 6 inches of rainfall.
Some
snow records
The
outgoing system will have made its mark on virtually the entire
country from the southwest corner of California to central Maine,
leaving its deepest imprint on Kansas.
The
town of Russell in the state's middle lay under a 22 inch layer of
white by the time the storm roared by.
Missouri
was not far behind, with accumulations of around a foot in some
places.
The
snow set a record at Kansas City International Airport, with 9 inches
falling in a single day. The old record was 5.1 inches set in 2010.
Some
businesses and universities shut down Thursday as state officials
urged residents to stay off the roads.
.
Silver
lining
The
snowstorm turned out to be a welcome one to many Kansans and many
others throughout the Great Plains, who have been suffering a drought
for a third straight year.
Kansas,
Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri and a host of other farm-heavy states have
seen crop losses as a result.
The
Kansas Department of Agriculture expects those conditions to continue
into April, but near-record levels of snowfall will ease the problem
and could accelerate the drought's end.
"It
snows so infrequently here. Now we've been in a really bad drought
for several years; really, really hot summer and just no moisture. So
we're thrilled to see snow or ice -- whatever moisture we can get,"
Wichita resident Kristen Woodburn said.
Ranchers
embraced the storm, even though bitter cold snow can be deadly during
calving season.
Frank
Harper, a Kansas rancher from Sedgwick and the immediate past
president of the Kansas Livestock Association, said the storm caused
more work for him because he had to bring his calves inside to warm
them up.
But
he called the snowstorm a blessing for bringing good moisture to the
winter wheat.
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