The coldest air of the season has reached the Pacific Northwest, and some western Washington locations are already reporting precipitation in the form of ice pellets!
You can see the impact of the cold air on visible satellite imagery taken on Monday afternoon (see below). As frigid cold air from Alaska and northern British Columbia moves over the warmer water of the Pacific, an unstable situation develops that produces cumulus convection......towering cumulus clouds with brief showers.
You can see the cumulus showers on the satellite image (white blobs with clear spaces between them), and they are aligned with the wind direction (red arrows).
You could see the convective showers coming onshore late Monday afternoon, as viewed by local weather radars:

Late Monday afternoon, the freezing level was about 1600 ft in the Olympics, which means the snow level was roughly 600 ft. It will decline further over the next few days.
A closer view on early Thursday AM (below) shows very cold temperatures over Washington...cold enough for lowland snow. The only thing missing will be precipitation.
Finally, expect particularly cold air moving southwestward down the Fraser Valley into Bellingham. This is illustrated by the ensemble of many high-resolution forecasts at Bellingham (below). Temperatures will drop way below freezing. Windy as well.



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