The National Weather Service issued advisories for the Boston area, forecasting overnight snow that could reach 3 inches.
Boston will see another round of winter weather in the coming week, with some snow, frosty winds and a short cold snap mid-week, according to National Weather Service forecasts. “Monday will probably feel the warmest,
The National Weather Service issued a Winter Storm Warning for much of the state including Boston starting Sunday afternoon into Monday morning for difficult travel conditions and heavy snow. This is where we are expecting the most snow with 5-10 inches ...
Boston is in for a bout of intense winter weather this week, according to National Weather Service forecasts, starting with a dump of snow through Monday morning and continuing with a period of extreme cold beginning Tuesday.
Boston Mayor Michelle Wu has declared a cold weather advisory in the city through Thursday due to arctic temperatures in the forecast.
Snow is expected to begin around midnight tonight and continue into Wednesday morning, according to the NWS. "The highest snow totals will be in northern MA along the Route 2 corridor, where 1-3 inches is likely, with localized 4-5 possible in high terrain," NWS meteorologists wrote in the latest area forecast Tuesday.
Quick snow shower tomorrow morning, but a more significant batch of snow tomorrow night (after midnight) and early Wed. AM. Fluffy snow…likely to melt by Wed. PM as highs reach the low 40s. pic ...
The National Weather Service warns that snow squalls can be extremely hazardous because of their sudden onset.
Hardly any Bostonians soaking up the rare January warmth believed that what’s expected to be the biggest winter storm this season will make landfall later this afternoon.
A jet carrying 60 passengers and four crew members collided Wednesday with an Army helicopter while landing at Ronald Reagan National Airport near Washington, prompting a large search-and-rescue
“It looks like it’s going to be a light system, but some of the snow may occur during Wednesday’s morning commute,” said Francis Tarasiewicz, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service.