The Atlantic seems determined not to be entirely walled off... we've hardly managed that at all these past few months.
Still a window for snow showers in a NW flow for many of us on 3rd March, which is not a particularly unusual occurrence what with the seas being at their coldest. What would be unusual would be if any accumulations managed to persist beyond the morning away from high ground.
Timing will be a crucial player as usual. In an ideal world, the more persistent frontal feature would move through at around 7 am, giving the coldest starting point and maximising the potential to block out solar input and keep those temperatures down. Obviously this ideal scenario can't be served up to everyone in any case... but say it crossed the UK between roughly 4am and 8am, that'd be good going.
In a world dominated by sod's law (probably the real world, then...) we would see the frontal feature pass mid-afternoon. In that scenario a rain to snow transition would be the best many of us could hope for, with accumulations depending on whether the ground is cold enough following what could be a sub-zero night with any luck.
Usually, a wintry mix is the end result down in these parts, with no real accumulations to speak of, so that's where I'm going to set the upper limit of my hopes at.
Originally Posted by: Stormchaser