No, this is not some kind of meteorological pornography.
A "Dirty Ridge" is when moisture, often accompanied by clouds and precipitation, makes its way around the northern portion of a high-pressure area ( ridge is another name for high pressure).
Wet conditions with high pressure, not some type of obscenity.
Before I start, some review. Low-level winds typically rotate clockwise around higher pressure areas (see below). Thus, winds are southerly on the western side of the high and westerly (from the west) on the northern side.You can see this windfield around the forecast high at 7 PM Friday night (below, for the 850 hPa level, about 5000 ft above the surface).
Strong winds from the southwest and west on the western and northern sides of the high draw moist air northward from the subtropics around the western flank of the high and moves it eastward over the northern flank of the storm. The clouds and rain are the "dirt" of the dirty ridge.
Fast forward to Tuesday morning (March 10), and the high is still offshore, and moisture continues to move around its western and northern flanks (see below).
This circulating moisture will be forced upward by local mountains, resulting in precipitation (the 72-h precipitation ending 5PM Sunday is shown below).







