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A nor’easter blanketed Vermont with snow reaching up to two feet in places Thursday, downing power lines and cutting power to tens of thousands of people across the state.
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Spring isn't quite here yet, despite a deceiving stretch of warm weather. Vermonters could see up to 15 inches of snow this weekend.
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A majority of Vermont will sit in the path of totality for April's solar eclipse. Mark Breen, Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium’s senior meteorologist and planetarium director, shares important information about eclipse glasses, and the potential for clouds.
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According to the National Weather Service in Burlington, this was the cloudiest January on record in the area since 1951.
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A wind storm in early January had gusts over 80 miles per hour west of the Green Mountains, including in the town of Bristol, where farmers and sugarmakers suffered major damage.
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Parts of the state will get freezing rain, making roadways susceptible to black ice during morning and evening commutes.
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As of Sunday night, no households were reporting power loss according to VTOutages.
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Snowfall will begin tonight at 10 p.m., with 2 to 6 inches expected throughout the state. That should transition to rainfall tomorrow morning.
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At the peak of outages around 7 a.m. Wednesday, over 29,000 households had lost power, and utilities say outages could last several days in some areas.
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A winter storm headed for the state could bring strong gusts and wet snow that turns to rain heading into Wednesday morning.