From Reuters:
"Thanksgiving travel: wicked
weather, 'nothing worse than Wednesday'”
A trio of wintry storms headed
across the United States during the busy Thanksgiving travel period could mean
jitters or joy for more than 55 million people on the roads, rails, waterways
and in the air. The first of three storms predicted for the holiday week was
headed for the U.S. Northeast on Sunday, with overnight accumulations of 4 to 7
inches of snow expected to make driving hazardous in northern New Hampshire and
central and northern Maine, said National Weather Service meteorologist Patrick
Burke at the Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland. That storm
was expected to end by early Monday. A second, smaller storm was predicted to
aim a snowball at the Midwest on Tuesday, where 3 to 6 inches of snow was
expected to pile up in Denver, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Des Moines, as well as
parts of Wisconsin. The third is a massive soggy system set to drench the
parched West Coast, making its way on Wednesday from the Pacific Northwest to
southern California, where it will sit until Friday, lolling like an
over-stuffed holiday guest. "This is a pretty powerful one, right over the
holiday," Burke said. This year is expected to mark the second-highest
travel volume for America's busiest holiday, trailing the record set in 2005,
said the American Automobile Association (AAA). Airports will see 26.8 million
passengers traveling through security screening checkpoints nationwide, said
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officials. "Nothing worse
than Wednesday," AAA said, expecting a travel crush on Nov. 27, the day
before the federal holiday that has taken place on the fourth Thursday in
November since 1942. Wicked weather for travelers could mean snowy slopes for
outdoor enthusiasts, however. "It's going to deliver quite a bit of snow
to some of the ski resorts," Burke said of the storm system headed for the
West Coast. "Once it gets into southern California, it just really sets up
there for a prolonged period of widespread rainfall and heavy mountain snow
affecting not just California but much of the southwestern U.S., including
parts of Arizona, Nevada, Utah."
^ We got the first storm yesterday/today
with: freezing rain, sleet, ice and snow. I have just enough time to shovel the
snow, put dirt on the ice and take a breath before the second storm starts on
Wednesday and going into Thanksgiving. The news said that my area can expect
very strong winds on Thursday so the power will most likely go out while people
make their Thanksgiving food. I am not driving or flying anywhere for the
holiday so at least I don’t have to worry about all the crowds on the roads or
airports. ^
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