USA TODAY US Edition

Holiday week’s big storms may bring travel trouble

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Doyle Rice

Thanksgivi­ng travel troubles are likely this week as two storms track across the nation, bringing a miserable mix of rain, snow and wind from coast to coast.

“We’ve got a very active pattern this week, with the potential for some travel disruption­s,” National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Bob Oravec said.

The first storm will dump heavy snow, as much as 6 to 12 inches, across portions of the western and central USA on Tuesday and into Wednesday, Oravec said.

Wind-driven snow will spread from Colorado to Michigan from Tuesday into Tuesday night, AccuWeathe­r meteorolog­ist Paul Walker said. Low visibility and slick roads will create dangerous travel conditions in these areas, according to the Weather Channel.

Denver could see more than a foot of snow Tuesday, the weather service said, potentiall­y wreaking havoc for road and air travelers.

Blizzard conditions will be possible from far northeaste­rn Colorado through central Nebraska, AccuWeathe­r predicted, because of the strong winds that accompany the storm.

The same storm will bring rain and thundersto­rms from the Great Lakes states to the Gulf Coast on Tuesday. Roadways will be soaked from Ohio to Louisiana, as opposed to slippery and snow-covered, and drivers should expect disruption­s through these states, AccuWeathe­r said.

After the storm moves through the East late Wednesday, howling winds will be the main issue across portions of the Midwest and Northeast into Thanksgivi­ng Day. This could cause problems for the balloons at Macy’s Thanksgivi­ng Day parade in New York City.

Another strong storm will roar ashore into the West Coast Tuesday and Wednesday, Oravec said. Hurricanef­orce wind gusts will batter the coasts of Oregon and Northern California.

This storm threatens to bring rain to much of California, including San Francisco and Sacramento, places that were largely spared by last week’s rain.

Air- and road-travel delays are possible in San Francisco and Los Angeles, the Weather Channel predicted. Dangerous

driving conditions could develop as snow falls from California’s Sierra Nevada into the Rockies.

Heavy mountain snow will be measured in feet in the Sierra, according to AccuWeathe­r.

The storm will bring snow to portions of Nevada, Utah, Idaho and Arizona on Wednesday and Thanksgivi­ng Day.

The storm is expected to move east during the final days of November and cause still more travel disruption­s for those in the Plains and East heading home after the Thanksgivi­ng holiday, AccuWeathe­r said.

 ?? WATCHARA PHOMICINDA/AP ?? A man shovels snow in an attempt to free his car after it got stuck at Jensen's grocery store parking lot during a snowstorm in Running Springs, Calif., on Wednesday.
WATCHARA PHOMICINDA/AP A man shovels snow in an attempt to free his car after it got stuck at Jensen's grocery store parking lot during a snowstorm in Running Springs, Calif., on Wednesday.
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