No active alerts and only low precipitation chances (≤14%) with light winds make general driving feasible today; however very cold temperatures (single digits to low 30s °F) create a risk of icy/black-ice patches, especially during the early morning and again after sunset.
- 01 No active weather alerts in the provided data.
- 02 Probability of precipitation is low (mostly 8–14%), so widespread snow/freezing rain is unlikely based on this dataset.
- 03 Temperatures are well below freezing early (around 5–6 °F from 06:00–08:00) and remain at/near freezing (mid-to-upper 20s to low 30s °F) the rest of the day — this increases risk of ice on road surfaces if any moisture or melt/refreeze is present.
- 04 Winds are light (1–8 mph), so high-wind hazards are not a concern.
- 05 Key observational fields are missing (visibility, precipitation type, road-surface conditions), creating uncertainty about localized fog, blowing snow, or black ice potential.
Travel is generally feasible, but exercise caution: avoid nonessential driving during the coldest window 06:00–09:00 (local time) when temperatures are in the single digits and humidity is elevated—bridges and shaded spots are most likely to have black ice. Also be cautious after sunset (roughly 18:00 onward) as temperatures fall back toward the upper 20s–30°F and refreeze could occur. Reduce speed, increase following distance, watch for slick spots, and carry a winter kit. If you need greater certainty for a specific route or visibility, seek local observations before departing.