


Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
190 FOUS11 KWBC 090719 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 319 AM EDT Thu Oct 9 2025 Valid 12Z Thu Oct 09 2025 - 12Z Sun Oct 12 2025 ...Northern Rockies... Day 3... By the end of the short range forecast period (Sunday morning) a sharp, negatively-tilted upper trough is forecast to impact the northern Rockies with moderate to heavy precipitation and lowering snow levels. The upper trough configuration is expected to develop as a closed-low currently off the coast of the Pacific Northwest opens up and interacts with a diving shortwave out of British Columbia. Additionally, this pattern is favorable for increasing upper jet dynamics and is supported by model guidance depicting a 120-140kt southwesterly jet streak extending from the central Great Basin to the central/northern Rockies. This places the northern Rockies in the left-exit region of the upper jet and most favorable for upper divergence and widespread moderate precipitation. As the upper trough moves over the region Sat night (500 mb heights estimated to be just below the 10th climatological percentile per the 12z NAEFS) snow levels are expected to also fall below 6,500ft across much of the northern Rockies by early Sunday and below 5,000ft across the Pacific Northwest, where lighter precipitation will be located. The most impactful snowfall through this timeframe is expected to be located across southwest Montana as moderate precipitation overlaps with the lowering snow levels. Latest WPC probabilities for at least 6 inches of snowfall are 20-40% across the high terrain of southwest Montana above 8,000ft, which is still above many of the major mountain passes. Additionally, WSSI-P values for moderate impacts reach 30-40% in these areas primarily due to snow load concerns. The probability of significant freezing rain across CONUS is less than 10 percent. Snell $$