The Week Ahead - Post game Snow show??
Foothills/Snoqualmie Valley: A convergence zone is expected to form, enhancing precipitation potential for a few hours later this evening. It still looks like there's fairly good southerly flow aloft so it may come in a bit too warm for snow, but the heavier showers are known to at least temporarily bring the snow level down (~500ft). The GFS model is showing a more favorable setup for this. I'd say there's a 50% chance some might see snowflakes by the tail end of the Super Bowl tonight, or later into the evening (after 8-10 pm), potentially lasting into the overnight hours.
But that’s the crux of it. For the last several days we've seen the GFS model persistently call for a fair amount of snowfall in the foothills, tonight and over the coming days, while the Euro model, also advertising the colder air, but has been trending much drier with little precipitation chances, at least for the first part of the week ahead.
For Sunday evening/Monday morning we’ll go with a base case of rain/snow mix with with accumulations of trace-3” in the highest hills (e.g. Eagle pt., Wilderness Rim). If current GFS wins out, those accumulations look possible down to the Valley floor (~500 ft). Even the National Weather Service had been acknowledging the potential for ~2” around “North Bend” overnight.
The model forecasts divergence continues through much of the coming week. GFS calling for lingering snow flurries or even showers much of the week, while the Euro has us mostly dry.
The one thing models seem to be in agreement on is colder air is on the way, and much colder by Thursday or Friday, potentially dropping Low temperatures into the teens. Look at inland B.C. and the plateau's of central WA (e.g. Mazama, Winthrop, Leavenworth). Below zero certainly a possibility there!
Looking at several models, I'd say upper teens/low 20's is a real threat for Snoqualmie Valley later in the week.
If you saw our poll on twitter last night, and you’ve made it this far reading:), I’ll reveal the answer (below).
Comments
Post a Comment