It is not yet time to put snow digging away.
Winter storm warnings were issued Saturday morning stretching from northeastern Georgia to southern New England. But central Pennsylvania is only under winter weather advice.
An advice was issued because meteorologists predict that there will be 2 to 4 inches of snow falling on Sunday. Cities in the area – Baltimore, Washington, DC, Philadelphia and New York City – are included in the winter storm warnings, according to AccuWeather.
“This blizzard that is on its way this weekend will be a lightning strike, but still a striking storm from the middle of the Atlantic to the Northeast,” said Bernie Rayno, meteorologist at AccuWeather.
It will not be a “stormy storm that shattered snowfall records in parts of the East in early February,” AccuWeather forecasters said.
Due to the offshore orbit, the heaviest snow will also move further east compared to the previous storm.
“It’s a storm moving fast,” Rayno added. “It will be a quick hit, and it will sustain the snow yields.”
AccuWeather meteorologists forecast 3-6 inches of snow along the Interstate 95 corridor from Washington, DC, to Philadelphia and New York City.
According to the National Weather Service at State College, the most likely snow will occur southeast of Interstate 81. The highs on Sunday should be close to 35.
The winter weather advice is valid from Sunday 1am to 1pm in the counties of Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Fulton, Lebanon, Perry and Schuylkill.
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