Winter storm bids farewell to the snow-covered Northeast, blast of cold air is next

Following the snow, a bitter blast of cold air is expected mid-week.

— -- So long, snow.

Final snow totals in northern Georgia approached nearly one foot, while more than 10 inches of snowfall was reported in western North Carolina.

While the storm may have left the South and East Coast, as of Sunday morning, 40,000 customers were still without power from Georgia to New Jersey. This is an improvement, though, from thenearly 275,000 outages on Saturday afternoon.

The South was hit with the first measurable snowfall to the region. In fact, there's more snow on the ground in parts of the South than Minnesota's Twin Cities have seen all season. There's only been 3.1 inches to date in the Twin Cities.

Now, back to the Northeast. The storm is pulling away from the Northeast Sunday morning. Snow will continue to taper off from west to east through the morning hours with much calmer weather expected through Sunday.

The main concern Sunday will be patches of ice from melting and refreezing of snow. Behind this storm, lake-effect snow will continue again Sunday across the Great Lakes region.

Upstate New York, from Buffalo to Watertown, may experience significant lake-effect snow, with up to 18 inches in the forecast. Travel delays in parts of New York State and Michigan are possible as a result.

Cold air is locked in place for much of the eastern U.S. Sunday morning. The most notable area of cold air is Florida, where wind chills in the central part of the state over the next few mornings will be in the 30s.

Expect a significant blast of cold air right behind the Clipper. Wind Chills spanning an area from the Midwest to the Northeast will be the coldest so far this season, with it feeling like the temperature is in the low teens in the I-95 corridor by Wednesday morning.

Gusts locally will exceed 50 mph through the hillsides and mountains. Relative humidity will be as low as 3 percent in some areas over the next several days -- not an ideal condition for battling the blazes.