• Winter Storm Key Msgs pt1

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Sat Jan 4 08:38:00 2025
    FOUS11 KWBC 040840
    QPFHSD

    Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    340 AM EST Sat Jan 4 2025

    Valid 12Z Sat Jan 04 2025 - 12Z Tue Jan 07 2025

    ...Western U.S.... Days 1-3...

    An amplified shortwave trough will continue to move progressively
    east from the Intermountain West into the Rockies today, bringing
    mountain snows to portions of the northern and central Rockies. The
    heaviest amounts are expected to fall along the northern to central
    Utah and the northwestern Colorado ranges. Snowfall rates
    increasing up to 2-3 inches an hour later this morning, are expected
    to result in snowfall totals of 6-12 inches, with locally heavier
    amounts across portions Wasatch and Uinta Mountains.

    Meanwhile, unsettled weather will continue in the Northwest, as a
    warm front associated with a shortwave trough moving over the top of
    an upstream ridge approaches the region today. This is expected to
    produce snowfall accumulations of 4-8 inches for many Cascade
    locations above 4000 ft, with heavier totals across the higher
    peaks. This system will slide southeast across the northern Rockies,
    bringing some additional locally heavy snows to the northern Idaho
    and western Montana ranges as another wave approaches the Pacific
    Northwest on Sunday.

    Followed by a sharp, amplifying ridge, moisture and the threat for
    additional heavy snow will be limited with this third system as it
    drops south from the Pacific Northwest into California and the Great
    late Monday into Tuesday.

    ...Great Lakes LES... Days 1-2...

    The strengthening -NAO block over Greenland and the North Atlantic
    will keep a large gyre-like 500mb upper low parked over southeast
    Canada and the northwest Atlantic over the next few days. On its
    western flank, it will work in tandem with strong 1040mb+ high
    pressure over central Canada to keep a tight pressure gradient over
    the Great Lakes, resulting in cold NWrly flow over the Lakes. This
    will prompt favorable LES on northwesterly flow along with a few
    upper level disturbances traversing the Great Lakes through Sunday.
    The Great Lakes will gradually cool, but lapse rates will remain
    steep enough over and downwind of the lakes to where lake- induced
    instability may exceed 500 J/kg on occasion. The snow belts of the
    Michigan U.P. and from the shores of eastern Lake Ontario to the
    Tug Hill will be most favored for heavy snow through this weekend.
    A prolonged WNW- NWrly fetch connecting a single band from lakes
    Superior, Huron, and Ontario will help produce the more significant
    amounts (1-2ft+) in Upstate NY between Syracuse and the Tug Hill.
    The WSSI shows Major to Extreme impacts for the Syracuse metro
    region and points northwest to Lake Ontario. Latest WPC
    probabilities are high (>70%) for at least 12 inches across this
    narrow LES band downwind of Lake Ontario.

    ...Northern High Plains... Day 1...

    The ongoing winter storm in the Northern Plains is a great example
    of mesoscale banding via strong frontogenetical forcing. Snow is
    underway from northwest MT to western SD as healthy mid-level
    divergence exists associated with an elongated sharp trough axis
    forecast to cross Alberta and the Intermountain West today. Closer
    to the surface, lower pressure over the western U.S. and strong
    1040mb+ high pressure over Canada is leading to winds near the
    surface to be unusually strong out of the SE that is directing
    moisture, with origins out of the Gulf of Mexico, into the Northern
    High Plains. This is leading to exceptional 850mb WAA emanating
    out of the Southern High Plains at low level. In addition, this
    mean SErly flow at low- levels favors upslope enhancement through
    Saturday as the region becomes favorably placed on the northern
    flank of the 700mb low by 18Z today. Lastly, SWrly 700mb winds out
    of the southwestern U.S. are causing their own WAA and FGEN
    forcing as warm 700mb temps collide with much colder air in the
    Northern Plains and create a stripe of moderate snowfall.

    The end result is a setup for bands of heavy snowfall setting up
    from the heart of "Big Sky country" on south and east into western
    South Dakota. The WPC Snowband Probability Tracker still shows
    HREF guidance sporting 1-2"/hr rates early this morning across
    southwest MT. Areas as far south as northeast Wyoming also could
    see these heavy snow rates, primarily east of the Big Horns where
    upslope flow can enhance snowfall rates. As the best upper level
    dynamics shift southeast this evening, some lingering easterly
    flow may keep periods of snow in the forecast through the overnight
    hours, but snow should finally taper off by Sunday morning. WPC
    probabilities show a wide swatch of high chance probabilities
    70%) for at least 4" of snow from southwest Montana to northeast
    South Dakota. The WSSI shows widespread Minor Impacts through the
    Northern High Plains with some spotty Moderate Impact areas in
    north-central Montana (combined with snow occurring before 12z this morning).


    ... Continued ...
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