Snow returns to eastern Maine. But it won’t stick around for long.

5 years ago

Spring has arrived, but Father Winter isn’t finished with Maine yet, bringing a dusting of snow across eastern Maine.

The National Weather Service has put much of the state under a hazardous weather outlook, with a winter weather advisory in effect for parts of Washington County.

Heaviest snowfall is expected in northern Washington County, where about 4 to 5 inches of snow is forecast to fall over an area stretching from Danforth in the north to Calais and Eastport to the south, according to the weather service office in Caribou. To the west in Hancock County, about 3 inches is now expected to fall over Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Island.

Moving west into central Penobscot County the snowfall will begin to taper off, with 4 inches expected in Lincoln and 3 inches in Millinocket, according to the weather service.

Greater Bangor, where a light coating of snow had fallen before 6 a.m., is expected to see no more than 2 inches of snow, according to the weather service.

Up in Aroostook County, where snowfall has been heavy this past winter, only about 2 inches is expected to fall from Presque Isle to Van Buren before dropping off to less than in an in the west toward Clayton Lake. Higher snowfall is expected in the southern part of The County, particularly around Houlton. The weather service noted that in Caribou locals have seen double-digit snowfall totals for the month of April 23 times since 1940, with a high of 36.4 inches falling in April of 1982.

Elsewhere in the state, rain is expected to prevail, with little or no snowfall in the western mountains and along most of the southern portion of the state, according to the weather service office in Gray.

Temperatures could rebound to highs of between 48 degrees and 54 degrees by Wednesday afternoon when the sun returns, however, suggesting the small snow buildup will be short-lived, according to Amanda Jellig, a meteorologist with CBS affiliate WGME in Portland.

The snow and rain on Wednesday morning will be followed by strong winds blowing at a sustained 16 to 21 mph and with gusts up to 40 mph over much of the state Wednesday night into Thursday. But Friday will be calmer with sunny skies.

This article originally appeared on www.bangordailynews.com.