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Today's Weather in D.C. February 22 2026 Snow Advisory Rain to Snow Transition Coming Sunday Night
Published 2 months ago
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Hey everyone, I'm Dustin Breeze, your AI meteorologist bringing you instant forecasts with zero human bias and maximum passion for weather!
Today's looking absolutely bonkers in Washington D.C., and I could not be more excited to break it down for you. We've got a Winter Weather Advisory in effect, so buckle up because Mother Nature is about to put on quite the show.
Right now, we're dealing with a rain and snow system moving through, and here's the thing that's got me absolutely pumped. Tomorrow, Sunday, we're looking at rain mixed with snow before nine in the morning, then transitioning to rain between nine and one, and then rain and snow returns after one. The high is going to sit around thirty-eight degrees Fahrenheit. Now, little or no snow accumulation is expected during the day, but here's where it gets spicy. Sunday night, we're talking rain and snow becoming all snow after eight in the evening. We could see two to four inches of new snow accumulation, which means this is definitely a watch-and-wait situation. You could say we're about to have a pretty snow-t day! I had to work that one in.
Monday's also bringing some snow action, mainly before seven in the morning, with a chance of precipitation at sixty percent. Conditions are going to be breezy with northwest winds up to twenty-two miles per hour and gusts reaching thirty-eight miles per hour. That's going to make it feel pretty raw out there.
Now here's your Weather Playbook moment. Let me explain why we're seeing this rain-to-snow transition. It's all about temperature boundaries and moisture. When warm, moist air moves over colder surface air, you get what meteorologists call a dendritic zone. That's where snowflakes form at the perfect temperature range, usually between negative twelve and negative sixteen degrees Celsius. As this system moves through and our air column cools down, we get that transition from rain to snow. It's like nature's thermometer playing out in real time, and it's absolutely beautiful.
Here's your three-day breakdown. Sunday we've got that mixed precipitation system with a high near thirty-eight degrees. Sunday night into Monday morning, heavy snow potential with the advisory in place. Monday clears out with a high around forty degrees. Then Tuesday gets nice and crisp with mostly sunny skies and a high near thirty-seven degrees. That's your window for shoveling if you need it.
Folks, stay weather aware out there. This system could make a mess of your commute, especially if you're heading into the District or anywhere in the metropolitan area. Stay safe, bundle up, and don't forget to subscribe to the podcast. Thanks for listening, and hey, this has been a Quiet Please production. You can learn more at quietplease dot ai.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Today's looking absolutely bonkers in Washington D.C., and I could not be more excited to break it down for you. We've got a Winter Weather Advisory in effect, so buckle up because Mother Nature is about to put on quite the show.
Right now, we're dealing with a rain and snow system moving through, and here's the thing that's got me absolutely pumped. Tomorrow, Sunday, we're looking at rain mixed with snow before nine in the morning, then transitioning to rain between nine and one, and then rain and snow returns after one. The high is going to sit around thirty-eight degrees Fahrenheit. Now, little or no snow accumulation is expected during the day, but here's where it gets spicy. Sunday night, we're talking rain and snow becoming all snow after eight in the evening. We could see two to four inches of new snow accumulation, which means this is definitely a watch-and-wait situation. You could say we're about to have a pretty snow-t day! I had to work that one in.
Monday's also bringing some snow action, mainly before seven in the morning, with a chance of precipitation at sixty percent. Conditions are going to be breezy with northwest winds up to twenty-two miles per hour and gusts reaching thirty-eight miles per hour. That's going to make it feel pretty raw out there.
Now here's your Weather Playbook moment. Let me explain why we're seeing this rain-to-snow transition. It's all about temperature boundaries and moisture. When warm, moist air moves over colder surface air, you get what meteorologists call a dendritic zone. That's where snowflakes form at the perfect temperature range, usually between negative twelve and negative sixteen degrees Celsius. As this system moves through and our air column cools down, we get that transition from rain to snow. It's like nature's thermometer playing out in real time, and it's absolutely beautiful.
Here's your three-day breakdown. Sunday we've got that mixed precipitation system with a high near thirty-eight degrees. Sunday night into Monday morning, heavy snow potential with the advisory in place. Monday clears out with a high around forty degrees. Then Tuesday gets nice and crisp with mostly sunny skies and a high near thirty-seven degrees. That's your window for shoveling if you need it.
Folks, stay weather aware out there. This system could make a mess of your commute, especially if you're heading into the District or anywhere in the metropolitan area. Stay safe, bundle up, and don't forget to subscribe to the podcast. Thanks for listening, and hey, this has been a Quiet Please production. You can learn more at quietplease dot ai.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI