I wanted to provide a brief update on the incoming system.
A strong front is approaching, which will bring modest winds and substantial mountain precipitation...but nothing like we endured last week.
The latest forecast precipitation totals through 4 PM Monday is for "only" 3-5 inches in the Olympics and northern Cascades.
Here is a sample for the Snoqualmie River, where levels just reach major flood levels. Also, a much lower peak this time.
Then there will be some winds associated with a strong cold front and the low pressure accompanying it.
This forecast surface map for 7 AM Monday shows the pressure pattern (solid lines), winds, and temperature (shading). A strong front is offshore at this time, with a large north-south pressure difference over western Washington. That means strong winds from the south.
By 4 PM, the front has moved in, and cooler air has swept into western WA. A big pressure difference across the Cascades means strong winds descending into eastern WA. Good for wind energy, bad for power outages around Ellensburg and Leavenworth.
Here in western WA, wind gusts should reach 40-50 mph, as illustrated by the Seattle WindWatch graphic for Seattle (below).
A few outages should be expected in western Washington--tens of thousands, but no more.
Finally, the big upcoming weather story will be SNOW. Lots of it in the mountains, as illustrated by totals through next Sunday (below).






I'm in Ellensburg and find it interesting the meteorologists I see on youtube don't mention any wind in Ellensburg tomorrow, only talking about the west side of the cascades. I use windy.com which does show some wind (roughly mid 30kt winds Monday afternoon/evening). Pretty typal wind speeds for around here though. I'm curious why so many ignore the wind forecast for central washington (kittitas county/valley).... Is it because it's so normal here?
ReplyDeleteIf I had to wager a guess, that is probably the reason. No need to go out of one's way to make a special note about something that is normal, I suppose.
DeleteWhen we first arrived in EBRG the wind blew about 25 mph for days. We asked a local if the wind always blows this hard. His answer: 'Well no, sometimes it blows harder.'
DeleteYes you are correct, central Washington is a far more normal place than western Washington.
DeleteAlways interesting how these models smash Western Kitsap with snow. It seems like they start at the top and work their way down like someone drawing soft serve ice cream into a dish. Like Western Kitsap gets snow only through the virtue of being on the edge of the dish and it spilled down from the top where the nozzle is...as opposed to actual meteorological and elevation conditions that support snow. Now, everyone in Seabeck who sees this will think we are going to get a White Christmas!
ReplyDelete1 AM Mount Vernon strong winds blowing west to east, multiple trees down (alders, firs). Windy shows W/41Kt at Naval Station Whidbey Island. Windy only shows W/14Kt at MTV. I'd estimate at least 41Kt. How can real-time weather be so far off.
ReplyDeleteHi.. any low land snow predicted for week of 12/22 on Eastside?
ReplyDeleteAny lowland snow predicted for week of 12/22 on the Eastside?
ReplyDelete