New Hampshire
Not Quite Spring Yet: A Snow And Rain Mix Are Coming To New Hampshire
CONCORD, NH — Forecasters at the National Weather Service issued a “hazardous weather outlook” alert on Wednesday morning, warning of light snow during the evening and Thursday morning.
Light snow will move into the southern part of the state around midnight, putting a slight pause on the pre-spring temperatures much of the state has been enjoying this week. The alert stated “an inch or so of accumulation” is expected before the Thursday morning commute. The snow will then turn to rain by late morning.
The rain will end later in the day. Highs are expected to be in the upper 30s, with lows in the upper 20s.
It will be mostly sunny on Friday, with highs near 40 again. Temperatures will drop into the teens as snow moves into the state between 10 p.m. Friday and 4 a.m. Saturday in Concord and the capital region. The snow is expected to start in Nashua and surrounding communities at 9 p.m. Friday and last until 1 p.m. Saturday. The Seacoast should see snow from midnight to 10 a.m. on Saturday.
The snow will dissipate as temps rise into the lower 40s on Saturday.
On Sunday, expect mostly sunny skies with highs in the mid-20s and single digits during the evening and overnight hours.
Similar weather is expected on Monday, but Tuesday should return to the 40s.
The most up-to-date weather is available on every Patch.com site in the United States. This includes 13 of the 14 New Hampshire Patch news and community websites for Amherst, Bedford, Concord, Exeter, Hampton, Londonderry, Manchester, Merrimack, Milford, Nashua, North Hampton, Portsmouth, Salem, and Windham. Patch posts local weather reports for New Hampshire every Sunday and Wednesday and publishes alerts as needed.
New Hampshire
2 killed, 1 seriously injured in NH crash
Two people are dead and another person has serious injuries following a crash Friday in Rumney, New Hampshire.
The Rumney Fire Department says it responded to Route 25 just after 1:30 p.m. for a motor vehicle crash with entrapment. Crews, including from Plymouth-Fire Rescue and the Wentworth Fire Department, arrived on scene to find two vehicles in the road that appeared to have been involved in a head-on collision.
The driver from one vehicle was taken to a local hospital with serious injuries, the fire department said. The driver and a passenger in the second vehicle were both pronounced dead on scene.
The victims’ names have not been released at this time.
Route 25 was closed for approximately five hours for an on-scene investigation and clean up, the fire department said.
It’s unclear what caused the fatal crash. The Rumney Police Department is investigating.
New Hampshire
Fireball spotted streaking over towns in southeast New Hampshire: video
An eagle-eyed photographer captured the moment a shining fireball cut across the sky in southeast New Hampshire early Saturday evening.
Rob Wright, a professional photographer based in New Hampshire, shared dash camera footage of the suspected meteor — which he called a “bright green boldie” — blazing straight downwards while he was cruising through Portsmouth.
“That was one of the best I’ve seen and likely the best I’ve ever caught on camera,” Wright boasted on Facebook.
Wright was approaching a traffic circle in the coastal town when a pulsing yellow light appeared in the sky. It tracked downwards in a straight line and released a brighter spurt of light before disappearing entirely, all in the span of eight seconds, according to the video.
Others in Nashua and Londonderry, both located southwest of Portsmouth and closer to the Massachusetts border, told WMUR that they also saw the suspected meteor.
Several other highlighted sightings around the same time in Dover, Bedford, Rindge, Hooksett and Jaffrey, which are all within a 90-mile radius of Portsmouth, according to the American Meteor Society.
Locals who follow Wright’s work reported seeing the fireball, too. One woman who also lives in Portsmouth commented that she “thought it must have been a firework.”
It’s unclear what exactly the fireball was.
Meteorites present similarly to a fireball when they’re plummeting from orbit — but leave a more obvious impact.
In August, a 3-foot meteor splintered in the air while it was flying over Georgia and left fragments scattered all over Newton County. The explosion caused a sonic boom equivalent to 20 tons of TNT exploding at once.
Pieces of the meteor were found all over the county, including one that crashed through the roof of a home.
Over the summer in 2024, a meteor disintegrated about 30 miles above Midtown Manhattan. The force shook parts of New York City, rattling midday commuters.
New Hampshire
Firefighters battle large blaze at home near NH’s Loon Mountain
Firefighters from multiple northern New Hampshire communities helped battle a blaze at a home near Loon Mountain on Saturday night.
Campton-Thornton Fire Rescue said in a Facebook post Sunday morning that they responded to the fire on Crooked Mountain Road in Lincoln around 7 p.m. Several other area departments also responded and helped shuttle water to the scene from a site in nearby Woodstock.
No one was home at the time and no firefighters were injured battling the blaze. Fire crews cleared the scene around 4 a.m.
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