The main dining room at the new Seafood Grill in Armonk is bright and airy. In the warmer weather, patrons can dine outside on a landscaped patio.
A winter system that will bring a mix of rain, sleet and freezing rain to the area early Tuesday may be just a preview for a much more significant system expected to arrive overnight Wednesday into Thursday. That storm system could result in plowable snow and accumulation of 6 inches or more, the National Weather Service said.
Spotty light freezing rain and light freezing drizzle will occur Monday evening as temperatures across the area drop to near freezing, the National Weather Service warns. Since the overnight low Monday into Tuesday will be right around the freezing mark, it remains uncertain if overnight precipitation could be in the form of freezing rain with the possibility of ice.
The National Weather Service has issued a Special Weather Statement advising Hudson Valley residents to anticipate isolated snow squalls Friday afternoon. The squalls could reduce visibility to a half mile or less and produce a quick coating of snow, the weather service said.
A Nor'easter with the potential to dump anywhere from 10 to 20 inches of snow in parts of New England could impact the Hudson Valley on Thursday. A mix of intermittent rain and snow is expected in the area Thursday morning.
Frigid air from the Arctic will be arriving in the Hudson Valley just as the new week starts, bringing with it a deep dip in temperatures and a chance of snow over the course of several days, starting Monday. Sunday will be a sunny day with a high in the low 40s, but the wind-chill factor will make it feel more like 25 to 35 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.
The North Castle Public Library is receiving a generator for its main branch in Armonk, which it hopes will allow for it to stay open in the event of severe weather.
The most powerful Atlantic storm in nearly a decade now has more of a chance of impacting the area based on new projections that it will take a westward shift in its path. The slow-moving monster Category 4 storm, which is barreling along at just seven miles an hour, is now taking aim at Cuba and Haiti and could impact Florida and the Carolinas by the end of the workweek.