Massachusetts weather: March comes in like a lion, bringing howling winds and frigid temps
Howling winds whipping across Massachusetts toppled trees into homes and knocked down power lines on Tuesday, leaving tens of thousands in the dark during a bitterly cold day.
The powerful wind gusts peaked at 76 mph in Provincetown and 78 mph on Mount Tom in western Massachusetts, according to the highest wind reports from the National Weather Service.
In Wellesley, gusty winds took down a large tree, which smashed into a home on Francis Road. No one was injured in the incident, according to police.
Trees and power lines were down across the region, including in Wilmington where a fallen large tree blocked the driveway to an apartment complex, police said.
There were widespread gusts of 45 to 55 mph, resulting in about 32,000 power outages across the Bay State early Tuesday morning.
“More than 1,800 field employees and contractors are responding to a wind storm that has toppled trees and knocked down power lines,” National Grid tweeted. “At the peak of the storm, more than 84,000 of our customers in New England were without power.”
An arctic front moving through southern New England produced the strong winds and brought with it frigid temperatures. The wind chills Tuesday morning plummeted to minus 11 in Fitchburg, minus 8 in Worcester and minus 6 in Beverly, according to the National Weather Service.
“Luckily this is only a single-day event,” said National Weather Service meteorologist Bill Simpson, based in NWS Boston’s Norton office.
And hopefully, you weren’t at the top of Mount Washington in New Hampshire. Meteorologists there recorded 100 mph wind gusts and minus 80 wind chill.
After the frigid and blustery weather on Tuesday, Massachusetts residents should expect to enjoy high temps climbing into the mid-40s on Wednesday.
“What a difference 24 hours can make sometimes, especially in early March,” the National Weather Service forecast discussion read on Tuesday. “There will be a bit of a breeze with some westerly gusts between 20 and 25 mph, but certainly nothing like today. That coupled with temperatures around 20 degrees milder will make quite a difference for outdoor activities by Wednesday afternoon.”
Then the temperature roller coaster will continue heading into the weekend with temps diving back into the 30s.
A warm up, however, is looking likely for next week — with temps soaring into the 50s.
from Boston Herald https://ift.tt/3e4MsRE
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