A very strong, rapidly developing, midlatitude cyclone will approach the Northwest coast on Friday and move through on Saturday.
Fortunately, the wind situation will be far less threatening in the interior compared to the November 9 event. This blog will explain why. But big waves may cause problems on the northwest coast.
Let's start with the predicted sea level pressure and surface wind gust map at 10 AM Friday morning.
Pretty scary looking, with a 979 hPa low-pressure center. Strong winds (up to 60 knots) will occur in a ring around the low center. An associated occluded front will be hitting the Oregon coast with even stronger winds at this time.
By 7 PM on Friday the low will move northwestward and strengthen slightly to 977 hPa.
Over western Washington, the winds will evolve in three acts.
In the first, shown at 1 PM on Friday, strong winds (blue colors) will occur along the coast and over the waters of NW Washington. Strong downslope winds will occur on the lee (NE) side of the Olympics. Moderate (20-35 kt) easterly winds will descend the western slopes of the Cascades, but their strength will be NOTHING like November 19th.
This event will represent a typical mid-winter blow.
The most serious impacts may be the waves and high water levels on the Washington Coast.
The strong winds acting on the Pacific should produce substantial wave action on our coast and Vancouver Island. The latest NOAA WaveWatch3 prediction is for significant wave heights of 20-30 ft.
That will be on top of some higher-than-normal astronomical tides (see below for La Push/Quilayute):
Let's hope the media doesn't get overly dramatic once again like they did last time. You'd think we were getting a Category 5 typhoon the way the medium overhyped it last time.
ReplyDeleteIn some places it was pretty serious. Other locations not so much. In my neighborhood in ne seattle and shoreline, there were numerous uprooted trees. Some of them caused major home damage with caved in roofs. Power was out for 3 days on my block. Someone died in Lynwood when a tree fell on them. I'm happy that you seemed to come out of it ok.
DeleteSays you! Try living in Maple Valley or Mirrormont. Lots of houses are total losses with 200-year-old cedars cleaving them in half. I’ve lived here 50+ years and never experienced anything so terrifying. If anything, I don’t think TV meteorologists warned enough.
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DeleteYeah, honestly the media hyped the November storm appropriately--as did Cliff. One blog entry was titled "The Deepest Low Pressure Center in Northwest History? Damaging Winds West of the Cascades" after all.
DeleteThis morning (Wednesday) the jets at SeaTac airport were really loud at my house, which is between Three Tree Point and Seahurst Park. The sound really seemed to carry through the atmosphere. I’m curious why this sometimes happens.
ReplyDeletePaloma...that can happen during inversion situation when cold air is near the surface and warmer aloft aloft. Acts like a lens for sound..cliff
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