️ 2024 dining trends

Jan. 14—By Dillon Mullan — dmullan@baltsun.com

PUBLISHED:January 14, 2024 at 8:31 a.m.| UPDATED:January 18, 2024 at 12:13 a.m.

More snow is forecast for Central Maryland.

Thursday will be cloudy but dry with temperatures around freezing before snow starts falling again early Friday morning.

There is a 60% chance of snow after 1 a.m. Friday which increases to 70% before 1 p.m. as 1 to 3 inches are expected to fall around Baltimore. There is a 20% chance of snow Friday night until 1 a.m. Saturday morning.

Winter Storm Watches have been issued west of the Allegheny Front where 4-8"+ of snow is expected through Saturday. Elsewhere 1-4" of snow is expected with the bulk of the accumulation Friday morning into Friday afternoon. More at: https://t.co/ZOlvEShgSf. #MDwx #VAwx #WVwx #DCwx pic.twitter.com/SZe0hub0Rx

— NWS Baltimore-Washington (@NWS_BaltWash) January 18, 2024

Saturday will be mostly sunny with a high temperature of 27 degrees and blustery winds as the Ravens host the Texans at 4:30 p.m. in an AFC divisional round game. The low temperature at night will be around 18.

The start of 2024 is the first time the Baltimore area has seen significant amounts of snow in nearly two years. BWI Marshall Airport broke a more than 700-day streak without an inch of snow Monday, National Weather Service meteorologist Cody Ledbetter said, and ended up with 4.9 inches of snow by 7:30 a.m.Tuesday, according to the service. Norrisville in Harford County got 6.1 inches.

Anthony Nizamoff sleds below the pagoda at Patterson Park Tuesday morning after an overnight storm dropped several inches of snow on the region. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

The Patterson Park Pagoda, still decorated in holiday lights, glows early Tuesday morning after an overnight storm dropped several inches of snow on the region. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

Kumba Mankutima, right, brushes off her car as residents of N. Potomac Street clear snow Tuesday morning after an overnight storm dropped several inches of snow on the region. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

Fallon Jones, Stella Jones, Andrew Tibbetts and Dave Nizamoff sled below the pagoda at Patterson Park Tuesday morning after an overnight storm dropped several inches of snow on the region. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

Rosalia Scalia cleans off her car in Little Italy early Tuesday after an overnight storm dropped several inches of snow on the region. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

Josh Stokes cleans off his car in the 300 block of E. Belvedere Ave. to help get his son to a doctor\xe2\x80\x99s appointment. Monday night\xe2\x80\x99s snowstorm, the first significant snow in Baltimore in two years, has caused the cancellation of schools in the region. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)

Sledders got an early start at Patterson Park Tuesday morning after an overnight storm dropped several inches of snow on the region. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

Tessa Urbonowicz, 7, sleds below the pagoda at Patterson Park Tuesday morning after an overnight storm dropped several inches of snow on the region. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

Cars slide off the road as snow builds up Monday evening on Walker Avenue in Baltimore County. One of the cars ran into the back of a county salt truck. (Jerry Jackson/Staff photo)

Tameca Coleman cleans off her car in the 500 block of Edmondson Avenue so that she can pick up some food before settling in to watch football on the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. More snow is expected overnight into Tuesday morning. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)

A pedestrian walks along the south waterfront promenade as light sleet softens the outline of the Inner Harbor skyline. More snow is expected overnight into Tuesday morning. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)

Pedestrians walk by the Marble Hill District mural honoring Black leaders from this West Baltimore neighborhood on a sleet-filled and quiet Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday. The annual MLK parade was called off because of snow predictions, and the city and Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts are examining options for the potential to reschedule it. The civil rights pioneers depicted in the Laurens Street mural designed by Jason Dohanish are, clockwise from upper left, Thurgood Marshall, Lillie Jackson, Teakle W. Lansey, John H. Murphy, Clarence Mitchell Jr. and Harry S. Cummings. (Amy Davis/Staff)

A man waits at a bus stop on W. North Avenue in the Walbrook neighborhood on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The Baltimore region woke up to a dusting of snow on the holiday, followed by sleety weather and the prediction of more snow overnight into Tuesday morning. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)

William Smith of Towson and his son Isaiah, 6, are not deterred by snow flurries as they arrive at the Falls Road Light Rail Station for an afternoon of riding the rails. Smith explained that his son is a train buff and that riding the light rail and subway are his favorite activities. Jan. 14, 2024. (Amy Davis/Staff photo)

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Baltimore Sun reporter Dillon Mullan contributed to this article.

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