New York Daily News

So you wanted snow?

OK, now you’ve got it, for the second time in a week

- BY JESSICA SCHLADEBEC­K

After nearly two years without any major snowfall, New Yorkers for the second time in a week woke up to a wintry-white scene Saturday.

The precipitat­ion began overnight Friday, coating Central Park with more than 2 inches of snow by 7 a.m., the National Weather Service said. It continued into Saturday morning, with a few flurries still falling into the early afternoon.

The bands of snow from there pushed away from the city and further east, along the South Shore of Long Island, where residents faced threats of snow squalls early Saturday evening.

According to the National Weather Service, snow squalls are “quick intense bursts of snow accompanie­d by strong gusty winds.” While squalls are short-lived, they come on quick, meaning that conditions can deteriorat­e rapidly.

Ahead of the weekend snowfall, the weather service issued a winter weather advisory for all of New England, New Jersey, southern Westcheste­r County and Long Island an well as New York City. It urged residents to use caution while driving and to keep an eye out for slippery sidewalks before the notice expired about 10 a.m. on Saturday.

“A huge THANK YOU to everyone who heeded the Travel Advisory and kept our city safe, and to the crews who worked tirelessly through the night and this morning,” the NYC Emergency Management said in a post to X.

Temperatur­es hovered in the low-to-mid 30s throughout the day Saturday, before plummeting overnight and freezing over the snow-slicked sidewalks.

Temperatur­es with windchills in the upper teens were forecast for Sunday morning, but things are slated to warm up slightly as the week progresses.

Snow from Tuesday’s nor’easter didn’t even have a chance to fully melt before the latest round of winter weather.

The storm earlier in the week, which came after a weekend of balmy, springlike weather, hit the Big Apple with nearly 4 inches of snow. The snowfall in the city Saturday was part of a bigger storm sweeping across the East Coast, which tracked a bit more south than the one that struck earlier in the week.

The fast-moving weather event dumped a ton of snow on Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and southern Pennsylvan­ia, where a winter storm warning was issued late Friday through Saturday morning, according to the National Weather Service. In parts of Maryland and West Virginia, up to 10 inches of snow were in the forecast, with snowfall rates of up to 2 inches an hour at times, the agency said.

In Philadelph­ia, residents could see as much as 6 inches of snow, while D.C. was slated to get between 2 and 5 inches.

Parts of New Jersey were walloped by winter weather, with as much as a foot of snow blanketing central parts of the Garden State.

The weather service warned of snow-covered roads and visibility as low as a half mile to 1 mile, emphasizin­g the conditions could be dangerous for those traveling.

 ?? ?? While Saturday’s 2 inches of snow was about half of Tuesday’s nearly 4 inches, New Yorkers still had to dig out in Brooklyn (main) and Rosedale, Queens (below), among other spots.
While Saturday’s 2 inches of snow was about half of Tuesday’s nearly 4 inches, New Yorkers still had to dig out in Brooklyn (main) and Rosedale, Queens (below), among other spots.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States