Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
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440 FOUS11 KWBC 032036 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 436 PM EDT Fri May 3 2024 Valid 00Z Sat May 04 2024 - 00Z Tue May 07 2024 ...Cascades through Sierra Nevada, Intermountain West, and Rockies... Days 1-3... Sprawling low over the northeast Pacific west of BC this afternoon will deepen further from reinforcing shortwave energy tonight as it reaches the OR/CA coast before shifting east over far northern CA through Saturday night. This is an anomalously deep system for early May, with 500/700mb heights dropping 3 standard deviations below normal across southern Oregon and northern California. Warm conveyor moisture brings high elevation snow tonight to the Shasta/Siskiyou and southern OR Cascades before notable height falls and strong moisture influx along with left-exit region upper jet forcing and strong topographic lift brings a swath of heavy snow with rates locally exceeding 2"/hr down the Sierra Nevada Saturday afternoon and evening. Initial snow levels on the Sierra of over 7000ft Saturday morning will quickly drop below 5000ft during the heavy precip rates. This will generally be a heavy/wet snow with lower SLRs adding a snow load risk to the snow amounts which continue to trend upward. Day 1.5 WPC PWPF shows high probabilities for 8 inches or more falling on the CA Cascades and the northern/central Sierra in areas above 5000ft. Heavier accumulations of 1-2ft can be expected above about 7000ft. In addition to the falling snow, strong/gusty winds and blowing snow are forecast to contribute to moderate to locally major winter storm impacts as indicated by the WSSI. The system slowly fills/weakens as it moves from the northern CA/NV border Sunday morning across northern UT Sunday night. Snow levels still drop to around 5000ft with the low over the Great Basin/Intermountain west. Day 2.5 PWPF for more than 8 inches are 40-80% over the higher ranges of eastern OR/northeast NV, central ID, northern UT (including the Wasatch where local maxima are expected) to northwest WY. However, redevelopment is forecast by the 12Z model consensus as it moves over WY on Monday with Gulf-sourced moisture streaming in from the Plains enhancing snowfall for the eastern slopes of the northern Rockies. Day 3 PWPF for more than 8 inches are 30-70% for the northern CO Rockies, Absarokas and Bighorns in WY and into ranges of southwest MT. Furthermore, the next trough off the Pacific crosses the PacNW on Monday with renewed snow on the Cascades with snow levels around 4000ft. Day 3 PWPF for more than 8 inches are 40-80% north from the central OR Cascades through the western WA Cascades. The probability of significant icing is less than 10 percent. Jackson $$