It is snowing around Northwest Washington....from the northern Olympic Peninsula, to Victoria and the San Juans to Whatcom County....and central Puget Sound is next.
And you can thanks an extraordinarily strong front for the white action. This is very good example of how precipitation intensity can bring the snow level down to the surface when temperatures are right on the edge for snow.
But first some pictures to "warm up".
Here is a snowy scene near Bellingham from a WSDOT cam looking at I5.Plenty of snow at the WSDOT site on the northwest Olympic Peninsula
Picture courtesy of Rick Sistek in Port Angeles
An extraordinarily strong front is moving through the region right now with an INTENSE temperature gradient and driving rain. Rain is hitting my windows in waves and there is practically no visibility. My little dog is getting scared from it.
Here is the latest radar image (from Radarscope). Wow. Red is intense rain...and I can assure you I am observing that right now.
And now it is happened here in Seattle. I can't believe this is happening....the temperatures are dropping so rapidly the windows in my office are clouding up....I have never seen this (see image).
And look at the observations on the roof of my building (below). During the past few minutes, as the winds switched from southerly to northerly, the temperatures dropped from around 14 C (57 F) to 5 C ( 41F)...and it is still dropping. You just don't see that around here very often.
An hour-old map shows the contrast: 56 F a the UW, but 41F near Edmonds...with a 180 degree difference in direction. Impressive.
The last NOAA HRRR forecast for total snowfall by 8 PM tonight is shown below:
Snowing in Whatcom county. The temp dropped almost 10 degrees in a few hours. Radar looks like precip will continue for quite a while. This could get interesting...
ReplyDeleteIt's been snowing on South Hill in Bellingham for under an hour and we have just shy of an inch on the cars and slightly less on the ground.
ReplyDeleteThis pattern reminds me very much of the Nov 26th 2006 snowfall when the Bellingham area picked up about 8 inches in 5 hours...
wow heavy rain in bellevue, i really hope it snows, or at least a few flakes....
ReplyDeleteHeavy rain (2" since midnight) turned to heavy snow near Sequim. Slush City!
ReplyDeleteWow!
ReplyDeleteJoel that is so cool
ReplyDeleteIt's been oscillating back and forth between snow and rain for most of the afternoon in Victoria, BC. There's a lot more snow at higher elevations with the attending power outages and traffic accidents. You're right Cliff, this is a remarkable weather system. It's not very often that you get snow here without an established arctic outflow.
ReplyDeleteThe snow around 2pm was intense on central San Juan island, 300 ft elevation. Really wet huges flakes some 3" across. As far as the noaa snow model goes, it nailed the blob on SJI. Now, branches are breaking out of trees along with heavy lumps of snow. Wild. And that after the rain... local station at trout lk. measured 2.5 in today when the front parked on us.
ReplyDeleteWould be curious on how the weather models messed this one up. Yea unusual conditions, but I don't really need fancy models to just say the obvious. 36+ on top of my baker ski resort at 1 pm, and snowing at the i5 border crossing.. seems like our modeling tries to be good most of the time.. unfortunately that is when it does not matter, the modeling should focus on complicated conditions.
ReplyDeleteMessed up? These were stunningly successful forecasts
DeleteCliff, I think your blog did a much better job at informing us about this snow event than NOAA and weather.com. NOAA did not have snow/rain in the forecast until this afternoon for North Seattle. weather.com did not mention snow at all for Seattle. Yet there is currently snow on the ground in some locations in North Seattle, which is consistent with the models you presented in your blog. Your blog is a huge service to the community!
DeleteMy weather station has that same temperature graph in Fauntleroy. I thought it was so cool I sent copies to a couple people. At the rapid drop in temperature, there was a maximum rain rate of 4.54”/hr for a couple minutes, it was insane.
ReplyDeleteI have NO idea when it began the switch over to snow but when I went to the store after 3pm in Tacoma, it was still quite rainy here. But around 8:15pm or so, I opened the back door to drop some food scraps into my food scrap bucket on a table just outside the back door and saw snowflakes. Not showing anything in the grass as it's too warm since we were in the low 50's earlier. I thought I saw a reading from my phone about an hour earlier that said 36F or something like that, but feeling closer to 28F or something like that and recalled noting, wow, the temps sure did drop in a hurry. Well, now I now. :-) At 3:15pm, the rain was was coming down pretty good then and it's still quite wet out there in T-Town.
ReplyDeleteJust checked outside and there's still maybe 1/2 to 1" of snow on the ground in Maple Leaf in N Seattle at almost 9PM. The snow on the streets has melted. Slightly above freezing on my front porch, about 8 feet above ground level. All in all, a pretty exciting afternoon with snow coming on the heels of heavy rain and stiff breezes.
ReplyDeleteWe got about 0.75 - 1.0" snow on the ground in South Hill by 2000 hrs. Our elevation is just under 600 ASL.
ReplyDeleteSnow at my home in Bellingham, but oddly rain/snow mix up at the Mount Baker ski area, and rain at Stevens Pass. I thought that they would have a huge amount of new snow up there. Was this some weird kind of temperature inversion?
ReplyDeleteEast auburn about 500ft, yesterday we dropped 15 degrees in about 15 minutes. Ultimately dropped from 58 and pouring rain with south winds around 2 or 2:30pm down to 34 by 6pm with heavy snow and north winds.
ReplyDeletePretty incredible to watch that transition. I was glued to my weather station and the window....and watching the outdoor american flag whip a 180 during that transition. :)
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