This blog discusses current weather, weather prediction, climate issues, and current events
November 05, 2008
The Warm Front Cometh
Now that I have recovered from following the elections, back to weather.
Today should be a very pleasant day..cool, dry, with temps getting into the lower 50s. But change is on the way! An usually strong warm front will move through early tomorrow AM. The air mass will become much warmer and wetter, winds will strengthen and turn to the southwest along the coast and aloft...with rain, sometimes of moderate intensity moving in. There will be rain to our south over Oregon today...but it won't reach Puget Sound until after dinner. The heavy stuff won't get here until 4-8 am tomorrow...and both Thursday and Friday will be wet. The mountains (particularly the Olympics and north Cascades) will get very heavy rainfall...with some locations hit by 5-10 inches over the next two days.
So what do you do? Head to Sequim! There will be a nice rainshadow there tomorrow--as is typical under rainshadow conditions. Take a look at the precipitation forecast for the UW high resolution weather predictions attached.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
A Near Perfect Forecast of Yesterday's Event. The Next Windstorm Comes into View
The next time someone makes a weatherperson joke, remember the nearly perfect forecast for yesterday's wind event over Washington. No l...
-
Mother Nature seems to have forgotten about the current strong El Nino and the record warmth of the past month. Massive snow will fall over ...
-
The latest model forecasts are consistent: an unusually powerful storm with extreme low pressure will develop rapidly offshore on Monday a...
Hi Cliff,
ReplyDeleteCan you explain the precipitation forecast? What are the units on the scale on the right hand side? It looks like the scale is labeled "cin". Cubic inches? Over some unit area in 48 hours?
Thanks!
Brad...it is hundredths of an inch...so 256 is 2.56 inches
ReplyDeleteOK, that makes sense. Is it a rainfall rate or a total over the forecast period?
ReplyDeleteThanks for this blog. I rely on your weekend forecasts on KUOW a lot, and now I'm finding myself checking your blog daily.
Brad,
ReplyDeleteThe plot shows the forecasted amount of rainfall in the 3 hour period prior to 4pm Thurday, in other words, the amount of rain between 1pm and 4pm local time.
Thanks. It makes sense to me now.
ReplyDelete