Lexington, Massachusetts, USA
Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 549 PM EST Sun Feb 08 2026 Valid 00Z Mon Feb 09 2026 - 00Z Wed Feb 11 2026 ...Dangerous Arctic airmass will persist over the eastern Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Mid-Atlantic and Northeast tonight... ...Lower elevation rain and higher elevation snow continues for the Pacific Northwest to the northern Rockies Sunday... ...Warmer-than-average temperatures continue for much of the central to western U.S.... A bitterly cold Arctic airmass that has overspread the eastern Great Lakes, Ohio Valley, Mid-Atlantic, and Northeast following a pair of cold front passages is expected to persist through tonight. Lingering gusty winds will lead to dangerously cold wind chills as low as the negative 30s across the Interior Northeast/New England and the single digits and teens elsewhere, particularly through the morning hours. Conditions are expected to moderate through the early part of the week, with highs Monday and Tuesday increasing by around 10 degrees or so each day. Onshore flow accompanying a Pacific system is spreading precipitation across the Pacific Northwest and into the Rockies and Great Basin Sunday afternoon. Light to moderate rain showers should continue initially for lower elevations/valleys inland through the northern Great Basin/Rockies. Rain may transition to a wintry mix for some lower elevation locations Sunday night into early Monday as cooler air filters in, though accumulations should remain limited. Some precipitation is also expected into adjacent portions of the northern High Plains. Higher elevation mountain ranges from the southern Cascades to the northern Rockies will see moderate to locally heavy snowfall. Precipitation chances will quickly decrease into the day Monday as the influx of moisture ends, with the snow lingering longest for higher elevations of the northern Rockies. Another system looks to bring some moderate lower elevation rainfall and heavy high elevation snow further south into California and the Sierras Tuesday. The northern tier of the country may see some light icing and snow showers as a clipper-like system moving along the U.S./Canadian border. As it reaches the Great Lakes the system will increase in intensity yielding moderate snow for Upstate New York/New England Tuesday. Moisture advecting ahead of a cold front in the Mississippi Valley into the southern Plains will aid in the development of showers and thunderstorms possibly as early as Tuesday morning, but more likely into the day on Tuesday. Warmer-than-average conditions will continue into the early part of the week across much of the central to western U.S. The greatest anomalies remain focused on the northern to central Plains, where highs as warm as the 60s and 70s are upwards of 35-40 degrees above early February averages. Some daily record-tying/breaking highs may be reached Monday across the central Plains. A cold front will bring closer to average conditions for portions of the northern Plains Monday, with highs in the 40s. While not quite as anomalous, conditions still remain above average across much of the Interior West, with highs into the 50s and 60s, and across the southern tier with 70s to low 80s from the southern Plains west through the Southwest to southern California. The incoming Pacific system will keep temperatures closer to average for the Pacific northwest, northern California, and northern Great Basin, with highs in the 40s and 50s. Improving conditions will spread into portions of the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and Southeast Monday, with highs increasing into the 40s and 50s to the north and 60s and 70s to the south. Campbell/Putnam/Roth Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php