Syracuse, N.Y. — An early spring snowstorm is dropping heavy, wet snow through Friday in the Adirondacks, where up to 170,000 people could travel to see the total solar eclipse on Monday.
Eight to 10 inches of snow have already fallen in some parts of the Adirondacks, with several more inches possible today and Friday.
The storm is expected to end by Saturday morning, and high pressure should bring mostly clear skies by Sunday. Anyone hoping to hike a mountain trail for a better view of the eclipse might run into heavy snow and slush, however.
โI donโt know that (trails) will be cleared, so those might be snowed over or have some accumulations on them,โ said Abbey Gant, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Albany, which issues forecasts for much of the Adirondacks.
Temperatures will reach only into the upper 30s and maybe low 40s over the weekend, so much of the snow is likely to be on the ground Monday afternoon.
Hiking trails might be slippery and snowy, but roads should be clear, Gant said.
โThere shouldnโt be any significant accumulations on roads,โ she said. โWith snow melting, theyโll be wet, but they shouldnโt be treacherous in any way, shape or form.โ
Thatโs good news for the tens of thousands of people expected to drive into the Adirondack Park this weekend and Monday. The eclipse occurs from about 2:10 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Monday.
State troopers have urged eclipse watchers and residents in the Adirondacks and North Country to prepare for it to take as long as 4 to 12 hours to get out of the region.
The forecast for Monday afternoon calls for mostly clear skies in the Adirondacks, with just a few high clouds during the eclipse, Gant said. The weather service predicts that 15% to 30% of the sky will be covered Monday afternoon, but any clouds will be thin clouds high in the atmosphere.
โThere should be some high clouds, but the percentage of cloud coverage is going to be fairly low,โ Gant said. โWe donโt expect…
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