


Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
536 FOUS11 KWBC 181908 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 308 PM EDT Sat Oct 18 2025 Valid 00Z Sun Oct 19 2025 - 00Z Wed Oct 22 2025 ...Pacific Northwest and Northern Rockies... Days 1-2... A large, yet weakening, northeast Pacific storm system will direct its cold front and attendant atmospheric river at the Pacific Northwest tonight and Sunday morning. ECMWF PWATs are above the 90th percentile tonight and the IVT tops out around 800 kg/m/s. This same moisture source looks to spill over into eastern WA, northern ID, western MT, and northwest WY late tonight and into Sunday. The strongest lift at mid-upper levels occurs overnight and into Sunday morning as sharply decreasing heights and 500mb PVA allows for heavier snowfall rates (1-2"/hr in some cases) and falling snow levels. The cold front is expected to come ashore around 06Z tonight, which will coincide with a gradual decrease in QPF at the same time as snow levels steadily decrease to around 5,000ft. Some of the higher passes (such as Washington Pass/SR-20, elevation 5,477ft) will be at risk of receiving hazardous snowfall accumulations tonight and through Sunday morning. Farther east, snow levels will range generally between 6,000-8,000ft (closer to 6,000ft farther north, closer to 8,000ft in the Tetons and Wind River Range) but some areas as low as 5,000ft in the ID Panhandle and Lewis Range could see minor-to- moderate snowfall totals. Snow will linger into Sunday night for the Northern Rockies`s ranges before tapering off Monday morning. WPC probabilities for >8" of snowfall are moderate-to-high (50-80%) in the northern WA Cascades and moderate (40-70%) in Bitterroots and Lewis Range above 6,000ft. Anywhere between 6-12" of snowfall is possible around Glacier Nat`l Park through Monday morning. The WSSI does show generally Moderate Impacts around the Glacier Nat`l Park, with some of the higher peaks potentially dealing with Major Impacts. Expect icy and hazardous travel conditions in the higher peaks of the Cascades and Northern Rockies. The probability of significant freezing rain across CONUS is less than 10 percent. Mullinax $$