News

Accuweather predicts winter’s worst is now behind the region

Accuweather predicts winter’s worst is now behind the region

Mountain of plowed snow at Barracks Road Shopping Center Photo: Saga Communications/Jay Hart Cville Right Now


CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (CVILLE RIGHT NOW) – With temperatures well into the 50s the last couple of days in the Charlottsville area, Accuweather long-range forecasters predict the worst of the winter cold is now left behind.

“As we have progressed with a higher sun angle and more hours of daylight, even if we do see a disruption of the polar vortex, I think these will be more glancing blows and won’t be as extreme as we enter into the back half of winter,” Accuweather meteorologist Brandon Buckingham told Cville Right Now.

Buckingham said there’s potential for Valentine’s weekend storm bringing snow to the Appalachians and points west and northward, “But at least for the next week or ten days temperatures definitely trend toward average.”

With weekend highs in the mid-40s, any precipitation that falls in our area would be rain.

“We will be keeping an eye as we heard toward March if there is a disruption of the polar vortex for maybe a couple of days, as well as the ocean temperature for potential of any cold air damming events,” Buckingham said. “That’s when we might see that chilly, gray, cloudy skies that occasionally sop in east of the Appalachians for a few days.”

“This will likely be the most expensive winter in years for millions of people across the eastern half of the country. In some areas, this was the costliest and most disruptive winter in at least the last decade or longer,” Accuweather long-range forecaster Paul Pastelok explained in a release. “The combination of higher heating costs, inflated energy bills, snow and ice removal, travel disruptions, lost work and school days, and childcare challenges created real financial strain for millions of families across the eastern U.S.”

An AccuWeather analysis found that heating demand increased 115 to 150 percent across the eastern and central U.S. from Jan. 15 to Feb. 8.

AccuWeather experts estimate the deep freeze that reached parts of central and South Florida earlier this month likely damaged or destroyed 8 to 10 percent of the citrus crop that was on the trees.

A historic winter storm that impacted more than 200 million people with snow, ice and dangerous cold impacts across more than two dozen states in January resulted in total damage and economic loss of $105 billion to $115 billion, according to a preliminary estimate from AccuWeather experts.

Widespread cold and a bomb cyclone that brought more than a foot of snow to parts of the Southeast and mid-Atlantic resulted in total damage and economic loss of $13 billion to $15 billion, according to a preliminary estimate from AccuWeather experts.

Latest Stories

3 hours ago in Sports

Kyrie Irving won’t play this season for the Mavericks as he continues recovery from knee injury

Kyrie Irving won't play this season as the star guard for the Dallas Mavericks continues his recovery from a knee injury sustained almost a year ago. The nine-time All-Star and the team made the announcement Wednesday, two days before the Mavericks return from the All-Star break.

3 hours ago in Entertainment

A movie that takes liberties with ‘Wuthering Heights’? Scholars are OK with that

If you're looking for someone to debate the new "Wuthering Heights" movie with, you might want to start with Lucasta Miller. She's a British author, editor and critic who has published an acclaimed study of the Brontë sisters and wrote the preface for the Penguin Classics edition of "Wuthering Heights."

3 hours ago in National

Eight backcountry skiers found dead and 1 still missing after California avalanche

Crews found the bodies of eight backcountry skiers and are searching for one more who remains missing after an avalanche in the mountains near Lake Tahoe, authorities said Wednesday, making it the deadliest U.S. avalanche in nearly half a century.