Tuesday will be a blustery day in New Jersey with wind gusts of up to 35 mph expected and a slight chance of snow showers or isolated snow squalls in far northern areas.
This week, the National Weather Service issued a new type of alert to better inform the public about the conditions we are experiencing.
This new type of weather warning was activated because of the dangerously cold temperatures and wind-chill readings in northeastern Pennsylvania.
New Jersey will experience the coldest conditions of the winter so far over the next couple of days with temperatures below freezing until Friday, forecasters say. Highs will only reach the upper teens and low 20s on Tuesday and Wednesday before plunging into the single digits overnight with widespread wind chill values between 5 and -5 degrees,
The National Weather Service (NWS) in Mount Holly has expanded Winter Storm Warnings to include all of southeastern Pennsylvania and portions of central New Jersey. The forecast has trended colder and snowier,
An unusual weather phenomenon known as thundersnow was reported near Essex County Sunday evening, according to the National Weather Service. The rare weather event was reported around 6:17 p.m. Thundersnow is what happens when lightning can occur within snowstorms and is possible when there is a relatively strong instability and
The quick moving snowstorm brought frigid temperatures to New Jersey, with wind making it feel like single digits. The cold is expected to last all week.
Temperatures are expected to hit single digits, with wind chills in the negatives, after a Jan. 19 storm dumps snow across much of New Jersey.
Part of New Jersey could see a dusting of snow Thursday, but Sunday has more snow potential especially for the North Jersey region.
The NWS extends a Cold Weather Advisory for the region including parts of Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and southeast Pennsylvania.
Temperatures rise, temperatures drop. The sun is out. Snow and rain will fall. Looking for stability in the forecast? You've come to the wrong place.
It wouldn't be January in New Jersey without unpredictable winter weather, with snow squalls, rain, high winds and fluctuating temperatures expected.