Photos: 3rd nor'easter in 2 weeks blankets New England in snow, leaves thousands without power
The third nor'easter in two weeks slammed the northeastern United States on Tuesday, leaving tens of thousands of homes and businesses without power.
The bomb cyclone brought blizzard conditions, more than two feet of snow and wind gusts over 70 mph to some communities in eastern New England.
Downed trees and branches felled power lines, which caused a significant number of power outages. There were over 100 reports of downed trees and wires from National Weather Service spotters in New England.
On Tuesday evening, over 200,000 electric customers were without power in Massachusetts, including more than 65 percent of customers in Barnstable County.
The blizzard brought travel to a halt in Boston as fierce winds and heavy snow limited visibility to just several hundred feet during the height of the storm. Hundreds of flights were canceled at Boston's Logan International Airport on Tuesday, helping to send nation-wide flight cancellations to nearly 2,000.
Some of the highest snow totals were seen along a narrow zone stretching from southern Maine through Rhode Island after a band of intense snow stalled over this area for several hours on Tuesday afternoon.
Boston and Worcester, Massachusetts, and Providence, Rhode Island, all broke daily snowfall records which were previously set during the Blizzard of '93.
Snowfall rates exceeded 3 inches an hour under this band with Manchester, New Hampshire, recording 3.5 inches of snow in just one hour. That is almost as much snow as Washington, D.C., has received all winter (3.7 inches).
Accumulations topped 20 inches in some of the hardest-hit areas with a National Weather Service trained spotter measuring 25 inches of snow near Derry, New Hampshire.
The powerful nor'easter as seen by NOAA's GOES-16 weather satellite on Tuesday afternoon. (Image/CIRA/RAMMB)
The trio of nor'easters that have blasted the Northeast this month have left behind a significant amount of snow to the benefit of some ski resorts.
Mount Snow, a ski resort in West Dover, Vermont, has picked up over 50 inches of snow in just seven days, accounting for one-third of the resort's typical snowfall for an entire season.
The official start to spring is just days away; however, the weather pattern will continue to favor colder-than-normal weather across the Northeast during the second half of March with the continued chance for major snowstorms.
Workers remove a fallen tree from a road and repair power lines during a winter storm, Tuesday, March 13, 2018, in Norwell, Mass. The nor'easter is expected to deliver up to 2 feet of snow to some areas of New England. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
A tractor trailer collided with a snow plow on the Maine Turnpike at mile marker 23 on Tuesday afternoon. There were no injuries and the road was opened to traffic several hours later. (Photo/Maine State Police)
Falmouth Police Department
Menauhant Road pic.twitter.com/YPmYTvaVgs— Terry Eliasen (@TerryWBZ) March 13, 2018
#CTtraffic: 4am- 9:15am troopers responded to 27 minor or no injury crashes and 64 spin-outs & stuck motorists. If you must travel, reduce speed. The roads may not be snow-covered but they still may be slick or icy. This crash: earlier on I91 nb x14 Wallingford. pic.twitter.com/WfoDNkBH60
— CT State Police (@CT_STATE_POLICE) March 13, 2018
Pics from @auburnmassfire, Mass Pike east near exit 10, multi-vehicle crash, looks like a real mess out there.. @boston25 pic.twitter.com/wZ0dUUWQDP
— Bill Sheerin (@AssignGuy) March 13, 2018
Part of Interstate 90 westbound was closed on Tuesday afternoon after a tractor trailer rolled off the road. (Photo/Massachusetts State Police)
Images coming in from @boston25 viewers. Big tree down on Winchester Street in Malden. Fortunately, no one was hurt. pic.twitter.com/3IarofFbzy
— Kerry Kavanaugh (@KerryKavanaugh) March 13, 2018
Two people cross country skiing in Somerville, Massachusetts, on Tuesday morning. (Photo/Michele J Martin)
#MAtraffic: 3,495 #MAsnow crews continue clearing state roads. Pavements slush, snow-covered. Stay safe, avoid travel is possible this evening. pic.twitter.com/IikXhrMB0r
— Mass. Transportation (@MassDOT) March 13, 2018
MBTA bus blocking Springs Road just North if the VA Hospital. Springs Road is closed. pic.twitter.com/GJw0DZwZnp
— Bedford, MA Police (@bedfordpd) March 13, 2018
Over 12 inches of snow fell in Dartmouth, Massachusetts, on Tuesday. (Photo/@newenglandwx1)
Snow covered New England...getting up to 16", here in Boston. #blizzard #noreaster #storm #StormWatch #boston #SnowStorm #massachusetts #newengland #winter #snow #weather #mothernature #snowday2018 #SNOWMAGGEDDON #snowday #SnowMan pic.twitter.com/is4KApgM0d
— Moonspun Whimsy (@MoonspunWhimsy) March 13, 2018
Blizzard: large branches down by strong winds in Plymouth, MA with concrete-like snow sticking to everything, winds gusting over 50 mph. Numerous power outages @breakingweather #blizzard #mawx #noreaster pic.twitter.com/JvoXENWZBw
— Reed Timmer (@ReedTimmerAccu) March 13, 2018
A post shared by COGdesign (@cogdesignlandscape) on Mar 13, 2018 at 2:14pm PDT
The Upper Valley of #Vermont right now.... This is state route 5. Hard and heavy snow, wind, and poor road conditions everywhere. Some secondary roads not even plowed. Measuring 7" right now. #DriveSafe if you have to be out! @NWSBurlington @wcax @WVNYWFFF @MyNBC5 #vtwx pic.twitter.com/JUomP1cggb
— Jennifer Hannux (@VermontJen) March 13, 2018
(Photo/Mount Snow)
The snow fell in torrents... pic.twitter.com/Nu9FGsyf9x
— Gillette Stadium (@GilletteStadium) March 13, 2018