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Winter Weather Advisories across the Tri-States on Easter Sunday

Clouds will begin to move in overhead very late tonight as a fast-moving system approaches from the west.

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Authorities have issued a no-travel advisory for northwestern and north-central North Dakota due to snow and blowing snow.

The Met Office has predicted that “heavy” snow could fall on Monday morning. When all is said and done, the metro may see 3 or 4 more inches of snow, Beitlich said. “It will be a solid three to six inches but more in spots where heavier bands set up”.

Temperatures are forecast to remain mostly in the 40s and 50s through the middle of next week. At the same time, the average wind is expected to reach 5 m / s, but sometimes possible gusts of up to 9-10 ms, so you should be careful.

A wintry mix of rain and snow is expected to return on Monday afternoon and not depart until Tuesday afternoon or evening. Secondary and back roads certainly stand a higher chance of becoming slippery. Accumulation is unlikely, except maybe a bit on the grass in our north and northwest suburbs.

MONDAY – Wet Snow in the Morning, then Some Afternoon Sunshine. Highs will still be well below normal, only warming up to around 40 degrees.

“The general cold weather is expected to last past the Easter weekend and then into next week”. Our only real dry day continues to be Monday.

Forecaster Helen Roberts said: “The main risk is rain, we have a number of warnings out at the moment, including a fairly large rain warning covering most of the country”. The warming will occur ahead of a cold front which will bring a chance of strong to severe storms on Tuesday afternoon and evening.

The next five days will have a lot of variety – sunny, windy, snowy, stormy and rainy, according to the National Weather Service forecast.

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The color chart to the right of the loop refers to the precipitation rate (mm per hour), not to the total amount of rain or snow.

Winter Weather Advisories across the Tri-States on Easter Sunday