


Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
Issued by NWS
Issued by NWS
258 FOUS11 KWBC 120907 QPFHSD Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 507 AM EDT Wed Mar 12 2025 Valid 12Z Wed Mar 12 2025 - 12Z Sat Mar 15 2025 ...The West... Days 1-3... ...Impactful heavy snow for most California mountain ranges this afternoon into Thursday, mostly the southern Intermountain West terrain and Rockies late week, then blizzard potential on the northern Plains Saturday. Please see the latest Key Messages linked at the bottom... Potent upper-level trough continues to dig as it tracks south with the parent low drifting south from the Gulf of Alaska. The base of the trough approaches northern CA this afternoon, then digs south to the northern Baja through Thursday. Enhanced moisture transport has raised snow levels to around 3500ft in WA, 4500ft in OR, 5000ft in northern CA and 6000ft on the Sierra Nevada. However, the cold frontal passage and falling heights aloft will result in snow levels generally around 3500ft along the Cascade Range on south to the Shasta/Siskiyou this evening and 2500ft late tonight as snow rates decrease after the upper trough passage. The Sierra Nevada will be the focus of the moisture plume which features >400 kg/m/s SWrly IVT (near the 99th climatological percentile via ECMWF SATs) just ahead of the cold frontal passage this evening. This when snowfall rates will be at their heaviest... 2-3"/hr will be common per 00Z HREF for several hours between 20Z and 10Z Thursday down the length of the Sierra Nevada above about 6,000ft which is where Day 1 PWPF for >18" snow is categorical. Some upslope flow will linger into the Sierra Nevada Thursday morning, before a brief lull in the action arrives Thursday afternoon. By Friday morning, the next Pacific storm system arrives, producing more moderate snow rates for the Cascades and Sierra Nevada. However, snow levels now progged to remain low through this time, around 1500ft in western WA, and 2500 to 3000ft OR through the Sierra Nevada. Day 3 PWPF for >8" is 40-80% for the OR Cascades and Shasta/Siskiyou, peaking around 60% for the WA Cascades and Sierra Nevada. Farther south, the Transverse Ranges as well as the higher peaks of the Peninsular Ranges will see heavy snow late tonight through Thursday morning as the snow levels drop from 5500ft to 4000ft. Day 2 PWPF for >8" are 40-80% in the higher terrain. Overall, this is an ideal pattern for somewhat brief, but heavy snow for the Shasta/Siskiyou and along the entire length of the Sierra Nevada. Snowfall will be measured in feet with as much as 4-5 feet forecast in the peaks of the Sierra Nevada and 3 feet at the higher pass levels such as on I-80. The WSSI retains shows Major to Extreme Impacts in most of these ranges with Snow Amount the primary impact, but some impacts as a result of Snow Load and Blowing Snow are expected as well. Dangerous to impossible travel are anticipated with the potential for some instances of power outages and tree damage as well. The highly anomalous IVT responsible for the barrage of heavy snow in the California mountain ranges will advect moisture well inland across much of the Intermountain West as well. Heavy mountain snow is expected in the Blue, Sawtooth, and Absaroka of the northern Rockies. The high moisture plume will coincide with the added help of strong diffluent flow downstream of the upper trough to generate heavy snow from the Tetons on south through the Wasatch, Uinta, central Nevada ridges, the Kaibab Plateau and Mogollon Rim, and western Colorado Rockies. Day 1.5 and 2 WPC probabilities show high chances (>70%) for snowfall totals >8" in all of these mountain ranges, but it is the Wasatch, Uinta, and Mogollon Rim most notably that could see snowfall totals between 1-2 feet through Friday. ...Northern Plains... Day 3... The trough takes on a negative-tilt Thursday night over NM and closes in to a mid-level low over KS Friday morning. This low further deepens/strengthens as it tracks northeast over MN into Saturday. The southern stream wave crossing the southern Plains today limits Gulf moisture from streaming up the Plains until Thursday night, limiting the the moisture available moreso than if the wave weren`t crossing today. While enough Pacific- sourced will be present to allow some wrap around banding on the low over the High Plains Friday that banding should be fairly sparse until Friday night when the activity should be over central Neb/SD. This is notable as the area is in drought and will be experiencing strong winds ahead of the system - in some areas of the High Plains there may be just a dry wind shift. Once those bands do develop as they head for the eastern Dakotas and MN, heavy snow banding is possible. Powerful winds with the system will immediately result in blowing snow and a potential blizzard. Marginal thermals at the onset should result in a rain to wintry mix to snow progression with some ice accretion potential most likely over the Red River of the North Basin along the ND/MN border. Jackson ...Winter Storm Key Messages are in effect as linked below... https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/key_messages/LatestKeyMessage_1.png $$