For those worried about below-normal mountain snow, your worries are over..... a major snow dump is ahead.
You can also expect great skiing, and there could be some travel delays in the mountain passes.
Today, the Seattle NWS office noted the snowy threat....and they are right.

As I discussed regarding the windstorm forecast failure of last week, a good forecaster needs to examine the predictions of multiple forecast systems and ensembles of many forecasts from the same system in order to judge the reliability of a prediction.
Let's do exactly that.
For the period ending Sunday at 11 AM, the European Center snowfall total is impressive, reaching 4-5 feet. You read that right. 5 feet.
The U.S. model has similar depths for that period.
Next, let's look at the ensemble of many snow forecasts at Stampede Pass (on the drier side of the Cascades) from the UW WRF model (only for the initial period through Thursday morning)--see below.
All the forecasts are calling for snow, which is steadily accumulating at that location. We can have some confidence that substantial snow will fall there.
Now, let's turn to the latest run of the high-resolution UW WRF model. Below are the snowfall totals through Thursday at 11 AM. Up to three feet in the mountains!Note there are a few areas of VERY, VERY light snow reaching near sea level. This represents a few flakes mixed into the rain.
Temperatures will be relatively cool on Thursday morning at 4 AM, with very low freezing levels. Here is a forecast map of the temperature around 2500 ft. White and blue indicate below-freezing temperatures. Precipitation will obviously be snow at that level (2500 ft) for the entire region, melting as it approaches sea level.
I don't want to hype this (I don't run a YouTube channel 😋), but just don't be surprised to see some flakes on Thursday morning if you are near sea level. The mountains will be hit hard...pretty much guaranteed.