cheesy 1967 song "Windy" by the Association, mostly because, well, the wind was howling outside my house and I think weirdly.
We've got a windy 24 hours or so to get through as the storminess that gave us our freezing rain and freezing drizzle, and this morning, plain rain, is headed up into Canada.
The storm is to our north and strengthening. There's a strong high pressure system to the west. We are in the squeeze play in the middle, and that means a windy Vermont today, tonight and Saturday.
The wind early this morning was ahead of the storm's cold front and is funneling up the Champlain Valley. Mountains to the west and east of the valley are helping channel and strengthen that wind. The rest of the Vermont and surrounding areas weren't that breezy - yet - as of early morning.
Still, even as of 6:30 a.m., there were already a handful of power outages in southern Vermont.
The cold front will bluster through with its showers, and temperatures will start to fall this afternoon. That's when the wind kicks in. It'll blow in from the west, and gust to or even past 50 mph in many locations.
This won't be the Strongest Wind Storm Ever. Not even close. But I've been surprised in some cases by this type of set up. The wind can gain momentum as it descends the east slope of the Green Mountains. It's possible things ould get fairly ugly at times east of the Greens.
Which means places like Ludlow, Waitsfield, Stowe and Newport, along with other parts of the Northeast Kingdom and lower Connecticut River Valley could get some particularly strong gusts, as the National Weather Service in South Burlington pointed out last evening. Again, nothing devastating, but enough to put a few trees and power lines at risk.
For now, most of Vermont and New York is under a wind advisory for gusts up to 50 mph today, tonight and Saturday morning. I'm thinking some gusts could be stronger than that in some of the places I've outlined.
The Champlain Valley is not under the wind advisory because gusts won't be quite as strong. We're too far east of the Adirondacks to feel those downslope rushes of wind. But still, the expected 40 to 45 mph gusts are nothing to ignore.
The bottom line is - to remind you again - there is a risk of downed trees and power lines today into Saturday. Most of us will have our lights stay on and our trees stay upright. But a few of us won't. So it's something to keep an eye on. A few of us will need flashlights and battery operated LED candles. (No real flame candles, please. Those are a fire risk.)
Speaking of keeping an eye on things, there's hope for winter enthusiasts who don't like this rain and freezing rain we've been getting. No guarantees, but there's hope for a possible decent snowfall around this coming Tuesday.
It might or might not happen, but things are starting to come together that could make it happen. Stay tuned.
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