Just a brief note...as the precipitation band now pushes southward (however, the flooding is yet to come for many locations since it takes time for the precipitation to move down the rivers).
Here is the total rain at 11:30 AM. A band of over three inches across N. Seattle and over the eastern suburbs, and over 4 inches for the Kitsap. Much less to the north.
Nearly eleven inches at Quinault! 7.3 inches at Cushman Dam. 4.2 inches at Verlot Ranger Statoon. Darrington and Skykomish about 4.5 inches. The totals in the mountains are impressive, but don't equal those of the REALLY big events.
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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...
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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 ...
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The latest model forecasts are consistent: an unusually powerful storm with extreme low pressure will develop rapidly offshore on Monday a...
Looking at the IR satellite loop on the UW atmospheric sciences website from the past few hours, you can see the serious rainshadow band along the east slopes of the Cascades - the whole "cle elum" effect thing going on. We're not getting that here in White Center, that's for sure...
ReplyDeleteOnly 3/4 of an inch out at my station in the "Shadow" in Sequim, but the solar readings haven't gone above 100 w/m^2 in 36 hours!
ReplyDelete3.82" here on North Beacon Hill Seattle for the 24 hour period ending at 11AM. A December record here (36 years of record).
ReplyDelete3.32" for last 22 hours in Aberdeen, ending ten a.m. Sun morning.
ReplyDelete3.91" at 11:30 am here near Phantom Lake Elementary (East Bellevue). We're about 200' above Lake Sammamish, so no immediate flooding for us, but the lowest part of our sidewalk is under water.
ReplyDeleteNorth Admiral in Seattle totaled a whopping 4.5" from 11 a.m. to 11 a.m. Funny how some locals received such differing amounts.
ReplyDeleteNorth Admiral in Seattle totaled a whopping 4.5" from 11 a.m. to 11 a.m. Funny how some locals received such differing amounts.
ReplyDeleteOkay, we've had the snowstorm, we've had the (flooding) rainstorm, now if we can get the windstorm out of the way we're done for the rest of the year!
ReplyDeleteWettest location I could find. Note the 48 hour total of more than 12 inches.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/crn/newmonthsummary?station_id=1233&yyyymm=201012&format=web
rainfall report: pretty darn wet!
ReplyDeleteModels, satellites and forecast teams did a great job. More than 72 hours advance notice of the event. Plenty of time for disaster preps etc. No real big surprises. Another good example of why it is good to invest in models and satellites. Radar is nice but not relevant to advance planning for flooding.
Relying on my unreliable, plastic, stuck in the ground rain gauge I've measured 4.4 inches in our back yard north of NE 75th in near View Ridge in Seattle. The back yard floods briefly during such events, and did this time, too. That will have siphoned out through the soils by tomorrow morning.
ReplyDeleteStill, over all I know that in my decades in the Northwest around Seattle I've seen much more impressive rivers of rain fall, sometimes for several days.
I would like to know how much of this fell as snow at and above the snow level in the higher elevations. I can't rely on my rain gauge to tell me that, or even accurately forecast it, but it seems that they had to have gotten 24 plus inches above 7,000 feet. Including the last several days I would hazard to guess that the heads of the southwest glaciers on Mt Rainier, like Tahoma, Puyallup, Nisqually, etc, must have gotten 4 feet of snow.
Right or wrong, Cliff?
3.20" of rain storm total here in Normandy Park.
ReplyDelete