Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
113 FOUS11 KWBC 060759 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 259 AM EST Thu Nov 6 2025 Valid 12Z Thu Nov 06 2025 - 12Z Sun Nov 09 2025 ...Pacific Northwest through the Northern Rockies... Days 1-2... The next shortwave trough passage over the Pacific Northwest is this evening as a potent wave crosses Washington, reaching mid Montana Friday morning. Warm/moist advection ahead of the wave raises snow levels on the Washington Cascades from 5000ft to 6500ft through this afternoon before sharply dropping to 4000ft overnight as precip rates slowly subside post axis passage. Day 1 WPC snow probabilities for >6" are 40-80% generally above the higher WA Cascade road passes. Pacific moisture surges inland over the northern Rockies tonight into Friday. However, snow levels rise only to around 6000ft tonight before dropping to around 4500ft under the trough on Friday. Day 1.5 WPC snow probabilities for >6" are generally 30-60% over the higher terrain of the Salmon River Mtns of ID, the Bitterroots, and the Lewis Range of Glacier NP and 50-80% for the Tetons. ...Northern Plains to Great Lakes... Days 2-3... Potent shortwave trough from the Pacific pivots from an eastward trajectory to southeasterly Friday night over eastern Montana. This trough then swings through Iowa later Saturday before being reinforced over the Great Lakes Saturday night by a Canadian trough dropping south. By Saturday morning, modest frontogenetic snowfall is expected to develop near the MT/ND border which is along the northwest flank of the surface low center. This wave is fairly progressive and working with marginal thermals. Day 2.5 WPC probabilities for >2" are 10-50% in a stripe across ND. The reinforcing trough could aid some more notable snow banding along the IA/MN border and trigger some lake enhanced snow, including over central MI where Day 3 snow probs for >4" are around 30%. Locally hazardous travel conditions could materialize owing to strong gradient winds on the periphery of the low and some areas experiencing their first snow of the season. The probability of significant ice across the CONUS is less than 10 percent. Jackson $$