Hydrometeorological Discussion
Issued by NWS California-Nevada RFC
Issued by NWS California-Nevada RFC
454 AGUS76 KRSA 311504 HMDRSA Hydrometeorological Discussion National Weather Service / California Nevada RFC / Sacramento CA 805 AM PDT Fri Oct 31 2025 ...DRY CONDITIONS AND ABOVE NORMAL TEMPS THROUGH MONDAY FOR MOST AREAS ASIDE FROM OCCASIONAL SHOWERS ALONG THE N COAST AS SYSTEMS MOVE THROUGH THE PACNW... ...A LARGER LOW WILL APPROACH INTO MID-NEXT WEEK RESULTING IN MORE WIDESPREAD PRECIP... .METEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS (FRI AM - THU AM)... Dry conditions across most of the region along with above normal temperatures into early next week as high pressure remains overhead. Temperature anomalies expected at +5 to +10 deg F with some locations reaching +15 deg F. A weak surface low will move into the PacNW into tomorrow along with a cold front. The front will move south into nrn CA later Saturday sending some showers into the north coast and srn OR Cascades. Expecting about 0.10-0.30" or so over the Smith basin quickly tapering down to a few hundredths over Cape Mendocino for Saturday. By Sunday morning, the system will have dissipated with dry weather then continuing through Monday morning. At that point, another system will approach the PacNW sending additional showers into the north coast later Monday through Tuesday afternoon. More precip is expected along the north coast this time with showers making it across I-5 and southward into the North Bay. There is more uncertainty with this second round of precip as models and ensembles disagree. QPF clusters ending 00z Weds differ with just under half of the overall CMC/GFS/ECMWF membership favoring 1.50"+ along the north coast while the rest generally keep things under 0.50". The official forecast is somewhere in between at about 0.50-1" across the north coast (up to 1.75" King Range) and 0.10- 0.50" or so inland into Shasta. The main event will come into Wednesday as a large surface/upper low traverses the Gulf of Alaska picking up tropical moisture before heading for the west coast. Models start pushing higher precip amounts into the north coast some time either Tuesday night or Wednesday morning. There is quite a bit of uncertainty in the forecast as models disagree and ensemble spread is high. The det GFS/ECMWF are showing structural differences in the surface/upper low that lead to different orientations of the precip band that will arrive some time Tuesday night or Wednesday morning. The result of this is a steeper north/south orientation out of the ECMWF that keeps heavy rain offshore until about mid morning. The slope of the precip band out of the GFS is less steep bringing heavier precip in overnight and spreading it inland throughout the morning. The flatter slope is also resulting in better interaction with the coastal ranges and Shasta out of the GFS producing much higher precip amounts over the mountains. From 00z-12z Weds the ECMWF has generally less than a tenth of an inch from the north coast to Shasta while the GFS has 0.50-1" along the north coast and up to 2.50" over the King Range. There is a huge spread of outcomes looking at the individual ensemble members with some holding off any precip entirely until later Wednesday and others showing nearly 1.50" as far inland as the NV border before 12z. 24 hour QPF spread at Arcata ending then ranges from 0-3" in the GFS and 0" to just under 3.50" for both the legacy ECMWF and the AIFS. The official forecast is about in the middle of this range closer to the det GFS and in between the latest NBM and morning WPC guidance. The rest of Wednesday, the front will travel across northern CA as troughing from the upper low moves onshore. This will spread precip inland across nrn CA and southward into the Bay Area. Precip will diminish later in the day as the trough swings through leaving lighter showers overnight. WPC has the cold front across srn CA by the end of the forecast period. The same uncertainty remains a concern for the rest of Wednesday with still relatively high ensemble spread, though not as severely as Tuesday night. Looking at the 48 hr QPF clusters ending 00z Fri there are 3 groups split to 47%, 28%, and 25% of the GFS/ECMWF/CMC ensemble members. The differences mainly lie in how far inland across nrn CA to spread higher totals (2.50-3.50"+) and how far south across the state to carry showers. The first two clusters agree on the latter point taking precip through Monterey County while the third cluster (0% CMC, 50% GFS, 20% ECMWF) has showers as far south as Ventura county. The official forecast is again in between carrying a few hundredths into Santa Barbara but confining higher totals to the north coast/Shasta. Mainly went with a combination of WPC and the NBM but adjusting in the early period to confine the precip a bit more westward. Want to emphasize again this is a low confidence forecast and amounts will change over the coming days. For now QPF for this system (00z Weds-12z Thurs): 2.50-4" north coast, 2-3" Shasta, 1- 2.25" northern Sierra, 1-2" rest of northern coastal CA, 0.75-1.50" central Sierra/Sac Valley, 0.50-1.25" greater Bay Area, 0.10-0.75" southern Sierra/SJ Valley, and a few hundredths to 0.25" or so from Point Conception to SLO county. Freezing levels Tuesday afternoon around 10-13.5 kft from the nw border to the southern Sierra lowering overnight down to 7.5-10 kft north of I-80 mid Weds am. By the evening expecting freezing levels 6.5-9kft north of I-80 and 8-12 kft from I-80 to the southern Sierra. Please Note: This product may NOT be routinely updated. Please refer to the following product issued by the CNRFC www.cnrfc.noaa.gov/Daily-Briefing for a graphical summary of weather and hydrologic conditions. QPF graphics are available at www.cnrfc.noaa.gov/qpf.php AS $$