Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
284 FOUS11 KWBC 181926 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 226 PM EST Tue Nov 18 2025 Valid 00Z Wed Nov 19 2025 - 00Z Sat Nov 22 2025 ...California through the Southern Rockies... Days 1-3... A series of upper lows tracking into the southwestern U.S. will continue through the remainder of the work-week that will keep mountain snow in the forecast from the Sierra Nevada and the peaks of the Transverse Ranges to as far east as the CO/NM Rockies. The current stretch of active weather is due to an upper low over southern CA that is directing a swath of rich subtropical moisture and generating large-scale vertical ascent over the Southwest. A lack of a sub-freezing antecedent air-mass is making the more remote mountains ranges of the southern Sierra Nevada, northern AZ, southern UT, and CO`s San Juan Mountains as the favored locations for measurable snow through Wednesday evening. By Wednesday night, the 500mb upper low opens up into a potent shortwave trough that takes on a negative tilt over the Gulf of California, resulting in increased divergence aloft and a healthier influx of moisture into the southern Rockies. While snow levels may dip to as low as 7,000ft in parts of NM and CO, the bulk of the heavier snowfall totals will be confined to elevations above 9,000ft in the San Juans and Sangre De Cristo. The heaviest snowfall transpires in these mountain ranges on Thursday and persists with lighter amounts into Friday morning. WPC probabilistic guidance shows moderate-to-high chances (50-80%) for snowfall totals >8" and low-to-moderate chances (20-40%) for snowfall totals >12" for elevations above 9,000ft in southern CO and northern NM, while similar probabilities for snowfall totals >8" also exist for southern UT mountain ranges above 8,000ft. At the same time as the current upper-level trough goes negative tilt over northern Mexico early Thursday morning, another upper low off the West Coast tracks south along the CA coast on Thursday. By Friday, the upper low is forecast to reside over the southern CA coast with a near carbon-copy setup to Tuesday`s upper-level pattern. Snow will start to unfold in Salmon/Trinity/Siskiyou of northern CA early Thursday morning, followed by the Sierra Nevada throughout the daytime hours on Thursday. Snow levels may dip as low as 5,000ft, but only minor snowfall accumulations are anticipated below 6,000ft. The heavier snowfall totals are most likely to unfold at elevations above 7,000ft in the Sierra Nevada through Friday morning. This new upper-low will perform a similar synoptic-scale evolution to Tuesday`s low, but this time it will track a little farther south and west, resulting in lesser concerns for snow in the higher mountain ranges of southern NV, northern AZ, and southern UT. WPC probabilities depict moderate chances (40-60%) for snowfall totals >4" along the Sierra Nevada above 7,000ft with low chances (10-30%) for elevations >9,000ft in the southern Sierra Nevada receiving >8" of snow. The peaks of the San Gabriel and San Bernadino Mountains (above 7,000ft) also have moderate chances (40-60%) for snowfall totals >4" late Thursday night and into Friday. Mullinax $$