We are now close enough in time to predict a snowy future: many feet in the mountains and a good dusting in several western Washington locations near sea level.
Some dramatic changes in our weather are ahead starting tomorrow (Sunday) afternoon.
During the afternoon, a very strong cold front will move through western Washington, bringing powerful winds and rapidly declining temperatures.
To illustrate, below is the predicted surface weather map for 1 PM Sunday, with pressure (isobars, solid lines), surface winds, and near-surface (800 meters) temperatures (shading) shown.
Do you see the large change in pressure over western Washington (lots of lines)? That will cause strong southerly winds, with gusts to 30-45 mph over the lowlands.
After the front moves through, it will be game-on for regional snow.
Snowfall accumulations from 4 PM Saturday through 1 PM Sunday, right before the cold front moves into western Washington, is moderate, with perhaps a half-foot over the northern Cascades.
More snow will fall on Monday night and Tuesday morning, bringing mountain snowfall totals of 1-2 yards by Tuesday Afternoon.
The European Center model forecast is similar, and if anything more generous with the snowy bounty, with the totals through 4 PM 3 March pretty impressive. much of the Cascades receiving more than 45 inches.
I'll bet anyone that despite the above average precipitation and resultant increases in the snowpack this March, if it's only one centimeter below average (despite being a strong El Nino winter), the MSM will ignore it all and continue with their 24/7 caterwauling about AGW.
ReplyDeleteThis forecast has been a bust so far. Nearly 4 inches of rain at snoqualmie pass. Rained at stevens most of the weekend. Now it's getting colder and the moisture is quickly running out. Lost snowpack not gained at ski area level.
ReplyDeleteYes sir, the predictions have been pretty accurate so far. The heads-up was helpful.
ReplyDeleteThere was some intense hail or graupel (I'm not certain which it technically was) ranging up to almost 0.5 inch diameter today in Everett.
ReplyDeleteThere is a picture and a shortcut to the UW weather radar at the time showing the very localized 50+ dBZ return on the local sub-reddit:
There was some intense hail or graupel (I'm not certain which it technically was) ranging up to almost 0.5 inch diameter today in Everett.
There is a picture and a shortcut to the UW weather radar at the time showing the very localized 50+ dBZ return on the local sub-reddit:
https://www.reddit.com/r/everett/comments/1b11unf/you_dont_see_this_in_everett_every_day/