A bulk of the 24 hour temperature falls (as of 8 am Tuesday January 29), which are notable, lie across the central part of the lower 48. Moderation was limited to the Southwest, areas near the Great Lakes, and portions of the East. pic.twitter.com/2qbujpkJn0
— NWS WPC (@NWSWPC) January 29, 2019
Heavy lake effect snow has begun to develop across the Buffalo Metro area and Niagara Frontier. This snow is expected to continue through the day roughly over the same area. Blowing snow and rapidly deteriorating road conditions can be expected in the corridor through the day. pic.twitter.com/XHtTWMftXa
— NWS Buffalo (@NWSBUFFALO) January 29, 2019
Extremely poor travel conditions at times E and NE of the lakes late this afternoon through late Thursday. Conditions will vary, with whiteout conditions in bands of lake effect and blowing snow. Wind chills -20F to -30F for Wednesday afternoon – Thursday morning. pic.twitter.com/iQYKfLxcY3
— NWS Buffalo (@NWSBUFFALO) January 29, 2019
Currently #Buffalo has measured 42.4" of snow this January. A snowy end to the month will push Buffalo into the top 10 snowiest January's on record. pic.twitter.com/43S0AnEioG
— NWS Buffalo (@NWSBUFFALO) January 28, 2019