Bomb Cyclone Target Locked: Who Gets Buried or a Bust from the Blizzard of 2026?
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About this listen
A rapidly intensifying nor’easter is targeting the Northeast with blizzard conditions and up to 2 feet of snow. But one small shift could change everything. Meteorology Matters by Meteorologist Rob Jones breaks down who gets lots and who gets little.
A major winter storm is taking aim at the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, with blizzard warnings, heavy snow, and coastal flooding all on the table.
In this episode of Meteorology Matters, Rob Jones analyzes the developing bomb cyclone, the critical storm track that will determine snowfall winners and losers, and why forecasters are watching this system so closely.
Nearly 100 million people could feel impacts as heavy snow bands set up from Washington, D.C. to Boston. Some areas could see snowfall rates of 1 to 3 inches per hour, wind gusts over 50 mph, and dangerous whiteout conditions.
🔴 WHAT WE COVER:
• Why this is a classic high-impact nor’easter
• The narrow snow jackpot zone along the I-95 corridor
• Blizzard conditions and power outage risks
• Coastal flooding concerns
• The ONE track shift that could change everything
• Why people panic-buy milk and bread before storms
❄️ SNOWFALL EXPECTATIONS (Current Range):
WASHINGTON, D.C.
• 1 to 5 inches possible
• Mix changing to snow
• Lower confidence on higher totals
BALTIMORE
• 3 to 6 inches likely
• Localized higher totals possible
PHILADELPHIA
• 8 to 16 inches possible
• High-impact heavy snow bands
NEW JERSEY
• Widespread 12 to 18 inches
• Locally up to 24 inches
• Blizzard conditions likely near the coast
NEW YORK CITY & LONG ISLAND
• 8 to 18 inches expected
• Up to 2 feet possible in jackpot zones
• Whiteout conditions possible
CONNECTICUT / RHODE ISLAND
• 10 to 20 inches likely
• Strong wind and drifting snow
BOSTON & EASTERN MASSACHUSETTS
• 10 to 20 inches expected
• Isolated higher amounts Cape Cod
• Wind gusts up to 70 mph possible
⚠️ BOTTOM LINE:
If the storm tracks just 50 to 100 miles closer to the coast, snowfall totals could spike dramatically along the I-95 corridor.
If you live anywhere along the East Coast, this is the forecast you need to hear.
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