Branford, Connecticut - Sunday, December, 1, 2019: Antoinette Higgins of Branford brushes snow off her car Sunday afternoon at Branhaven Plaza in Branford as the snowstorm begins to hit New Haven County.
Greenwich's Ethan Singsen, 14, ties a tree to the top of his family's car at the Tree & Wreath Sale at First Congregational Church of Greenwich in Old Greenwich, Conn. Sunday, Dec. 1, 2019. FCCOG is selling top grade New Hampshire trees and wreaths with all benefits going to charities Kids in Crisis, SoundWaters, Pacific House, Building 1 Community, Mothers for Others, and The Den for Grieving Kids.
Volunteer Leslie Vandermeer helps put a tree in the trunk of a car at the Tree & Wreath Sale at First Congregational Church of Greenwich in Old Greenwich, Conn. Sunday, Dec. 1, 2019. FCCOG is selling top grade New Hampshire trees and wreaths with all benefits going to charities Kids in Crisis, SoundWaters, Pacific House, Building 1 Community, Mothers for Others, and The Den for Grieving Kids.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less4of9New Haven, Connecticut - Sunday, December, 1, 2019: A New Haven Department of Public Works pay loader dumps salt into its snowplow trucks Sunday afternoon as the City of New Haven prepares to attack the snowstorm with its snow removal teams.Peter Hvizdak/Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less5of9
Volunteers Gavin Molly, left, 17, and Kevin Molloy sort trees at the Tree & Wreath Sale at First Congregational Church of Greenwich in Old Greenwich, Conn. Sunday, Dec. 1, 2019. FCCOG is selling top grade New Hampshire trees and wreaths with all benefits going to charities Kids in Crisis, SoundWaters, Pacific House, Building 1 Community, Mothers for Others, and The Den for Grieving Kids.
Volunteers cut a tree at the Tree & Wreath Sale at First Congregational Church of Greenwich in Old Greenwich, Conn. Sunday, Dec. 1, 2019. FCCOG is selling top grade New Hampshire trees and wreaths with all benefits going to charities Kids in Crisis, SoundWaters, Pacific House, Building 1 Community, Mothers for Others, and The Den for Grieving Kids.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less7of9New Haven, Connecticut - Sunday, December, 1, 2019: Fabian Esponda, a mechanic for the New Haven Department of Public Works, prepares to repair a snowplow frame attached to a public works truck Sunday afternoon as the City of New Haven prepares to attack the snowstorm with its snow removal teams.Peter Hvizdak/Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less8of9New Haven, Connecticut - Sunday, December, 1, 2019: Kyle DiPietro with salt spreader, left, and Rebecca Allen, right, both of Cheshire, prepare to sand the walkways near The Stack restaurant in the District by James Street in New Haven Sunday afternoon before the start of the snowstorm.Peter Hvizdak/Hearst Connecticut MediaShow MoreShow Less9of9
Brothers Jonah Collins, left, 3, and Micah Collins, 6, shovel snow while helping out at the Tree & Wreath Sale at First Congregational Church of Old Greenwich in Old Greenwich, Conn. Sunday, Dec. 1, 2019. FCCOG is selling top grade New Hampshire trees and wreaths with all benefits going to charities Kids in Crisis, SoundWaters, Pacific House, Building 1 Community, Mothers for Others, and The Den for Grieving Kids.
Despite forecasts of a foot of snow in parts of Connecticut, snowfall from Sunday’s storm came up short.
On Sunday, the National Weather Service forecasted 2 to 4 inches of snow along the shoreline, 4 to 6 inches across central Connecticut and 8 to 12 inches in northwest Connecticut.
Monroe, Naugatuck, Darien and East Lyme: 0.6 of an inch
New London: Half inch
Seymour: 0.03 of an inch
New Haven: A trace.
Ski areas in western Massachusetts and southern Vermont picked up between a foot and 15 inches of snow from Sunday’s storm, according to snocountry.com