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Mike Powell | All | HVYSNOW: Probabilistic He |
March 31, 2026 8:12 AM * |
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FOUS11 KWBC 310749 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 349 AM EDT Tue Mar 31 2026 Valid 12Z Tue Mar 31 2026 - 12Z Fri Apr 03 2026 ...Potentially impactful mixed precipitation event increasingly likely for the Upper Midwest into the Great Lakes Thursday... ...Sierra Nevada to the Rockies... Days 1-2... An incoming shortwave out of the Pacific this afternoon will bring some light to perhaps modest snow to the Sierra Nevada, Wasatch, Uintas, and CO Rockies as it zips eastward. To the north, lingering moisture along a stationary surface boundary will maintain light snow over the ID ranges into Wyoming with additional accumulation. Snow levels will be high (8000-9000ft to the south, though falling ~1000ft as the trough moves through) with WPC probabilities for at least 8 inches of snow are at least 50% above 7500ft (Sierra) to 10,000ft (CO). Totals in the CO Rockies may eclipses a foot above 11,000ft. Over ID into WY, WPC probabilities for at least 8 inches of snow are at least 50% above 8000ft. ...Pacific Northwest to the Northern Rockies... Days 2-3... A powerful closed upper-low diving southward from the Gulf of Alaska will be the catalyst for renewed mountain snow in the Olympics, Cascades, the Salmon/Siskiyou of northern CA, and as far east as the Blue Mountains Wednesday afternoon and continuing through Thursday. The approaching 850-500mb layer heights associated with the closed low are below the 10th percentile and snow levels will be able to drop as low as 2,000ft Wednesday night in the Olympics, Cascades, and even as far south as the Siskiyou. A steady stream of Pacific moisture embedded within SWrly mean layer flow, suitable for upslope enhancement as well, will also favor locally heavy snowfall rates in these ranges. Drier air should move in on the backside of the closed low by Thursday afternoon, although lingering westerly low-level winds should support light- to-moderate snow in the Cascades for the remainder of the day on Thursday with all precipitation ending by early Friday morning west of the Divide. To the east, snow will start overnight tomorrow night and continue through this forecast period (12Z Fri) over Montana. With a closed low track from the WA/OR border ESE across central ID into central WY, snow will maximize over the Blue Mountains, Bitterroots, Absarokas, Tetons and into the Bighorns. The western MT ranges will also see moderate snow totals closer to the 700mb low and old triple point surface low. WPC 48-hour probabilities for at least 12 inches of snow are high (>70%) in the OR Cascades above 4,000ft with at least moderate chances (>50%) for snowfall totals >8" at elevations >3,000ft. The WA Cascades will see lesser snowfall totals than their OR neighbors given the best Pacific moisture plume will reside farther south, but several inches of snow at pass level (Snoqualmie and Stevens) are expected. To the east, WPC probabilities for at least 12 inches of snow are at least 50% above 7000ft or so. ...Northern New York and New England... Days 1&3... A lingering front will become the focus for organized precipitation as a series of low-amplitude southern stream waves interact with deepening moisture. Light precipitation will spread across the region today with the first wave, followed by heavier precipitation tonight as a following wave strengthens ahead of a more amplified northern stream wave moving across Quebec. While southwesterly flow aloft advects warmer air into the mid-levels, a shallow but stubborn layer of sub-freezing air is expected to remain entrenched across northern New England. Forecast soundings support mostly snow across far northern Maine, while areas farther south, including areas as far south as Downeast Maine, may see snow transitioning to accumulating ice. Guidance continues to indicate that northwestern Maine is the area mostly likely to be impacted with heavier ice accumulations. WPC probabilities of at least a tenth of an inch of ice are 30-50% over the Central Highlands and northern White Mountains. Northern Aroostook County has the highest chance of staying all snow, with WPC probabilities of at least 4 inches 50-90%. Following a brief dry period Wednesday night, the threat for wintry weather is forecast to return to the region on Thursday as the system detailed below lifts toward the Great Lakes -- bringing moisture back into the region as cold high pressure remains anchored to the north. For Day 3, the setup again would favor all snow over far northern Maine then quickly transitioning to sleet and freezing rain for the Central Highlands southwestward through much of northern NH, the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont, and the northern Adirondacks. WPC probabilities for at least 4 inches of snow are 30-50% along the northern Maine border with Canada (North Woods area). For freezing rain, WPC probabilities for at least a tenth of an inch of ice are at least 30% over the northern CT River Valley/Northeast Kingdom into central/northern NH and northwestern Maine. ...Upper Midwest/Corn Belt/Western Great Lakes... Days 2-3... An amplified shortwave exiting the Rockies Wednesday night will lift toward the Great Lakes, directing a deep plume of Gulf moisture to the north. As precipitation blossoms across the region on Thursday, a sharp thermal gradient north of the I-80 corridor will support a broad swath of wintry weather, topped by a west- east band of heavy snow and bordered to the south by a corridor of sleet and freezing rain, with significant ice accumulations possible. Uncertainty remains high overall due to a shifting storm track in the models (northwest trend since yesterday) and ptype uncertainty through the storm evolution as many areas will see a transition from snow or sleet to freezing rain and perhaps just rain. Though precipitation may be still ongoing at the end of this forecast period (12Z Fri), the heaviest will likely be on Thursday. Through 12Z Friday, WPC probabilities for at least 4 inches of snow are at least 50 percent from portions of the eastern Dakotas through much of central to northeastern MN (especially the Arrowhead), northern WI, and into the western U.P. of Michigan. The highest probabilities of snowfall in excess of 8 inches lies over the Arrowhead (30-60% chance). The freezing rain may be significant within a broad region that may see at least some icing; namely, SD through MN and WI to MI. WPC probabilities for at least a tenth of an inch of ice are at least 30% over much of Wisconsin into the U.P. and the northern 1/3 of Lower Michigan. Some areas could see in excess of 0.25" icing, specifically central WI and northern Lower Michigan, but this is subject to change with the storm track. The probability of Moderate impacts per the WSSI-P are at least 40% in these areas. Fracasso/Mullinax/Pereira $$ --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux * Origin: Capitol City Online (618:250/10) |
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