Very heavy snow has fallen in the mountains, with several feet in the passes and above. Current depths include:
41 inches at Mount Baker Ski area
43 inches at Stevens Pass
47 inches at Paradise at Mount Rainier
What about uncertainty in the forecast?
Good question. We always need to consider that. Below is a "plume diagram" of the snowfall at Stampede Pass (4000 ft) for the many forecasts of the NOAA/NWS GFS ensemble system (called GEFS). Looking at many forecasts, all slightly different, is a good way to explore the uncertainty of a forecast. The black line is the mean of all the forecasts.
There is some uncertainty, but all the forecasts show bountiful snow, with roughly 25 inches more by next weekend.
Is there uncertainty? A lot.
The vaunted European Center model has a large, excellent ensemble of many forecasts. Here is plot of the mean sea level pressure of all the ensemble members and the locations of of the low centers for all the forecasts. Mama Mia! They are located all over the place and of different central pressures. So big time uncertainty....and none of them positioned to give Seattle a major blow.
Bottom line: lots of white stuff in the Cascades is a good bet. Big windstorm on Tuesday--no so much.
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A very informative post. Great to hear that the ski destinations are finally going to open up. My sister was constantly asking me to check that on the Climacell app. I will forward this article to her.
ReplyDelete"So big time uncertainty....and none of them positioned to give Seattle a major blow."
ReplyDeleteWould not some of the more southern projected locations for the low center have potential to continue towards Seattle? Or are they all expected to continue up the coast?