Posts

The Big Chill will Save California From the Big Melt

Image
The media has been going big on potential disasters in California. Drought warmings earlier this winter have been replaced by scary warming of major flooding as an incipient  "Big Melt" rapidly melts the record-breaking snowpack over the Golden State. Desperately, California reservoir managers have been dumping water in a race to prevent reservoirs from being overtopped and potentially damaged as temperatures warm. But it now appears that the weather gods have decided to be kind, and meteorological salvation is now in California's future. An incipient Big Chill is about to reduce the Big Melt to tolerable levels . Using the European Center ensemble prediction system, the best in the world, here are the predicted differences from normal of surface air temperatures around California for the next week.  This is also called the anomaly from climatology. Blue indicates colder than normal;  green is much colder than normal (by 8°F or more). Wow.   Lots of green over the entire

A Three-Dimensional Heatwave

Image
 Yesterday (Friday, April 28) was the first moderately warm day of the Northwest "summer" season,  with temperatures ranging from near 90F along the western slopes of the Cascades to around 70F near the water (see a map of high temps below) Why were the warmest temperatures along the western slopes of the Cascades? It turns out that the Friday heat was very three-dimensional.   Water provided some cooling, but the situation was much, much more complex than that. We need to start with the sea-level pressure pattern, with the one at 11 AM Friday shown below.   High pressure over eastern Washington and low pressure over northwest Oregon and southwest Washington resulted in an easterly (from the east) wind moving over the Cascades.   But at low levels around Puget Sound winds were from the north, since pressures were higher over northwest WA and lower over western Oregon.  Near mountains, winds like to go from high to low pressure. A schematic of the situation around Puget Sound

Warmer in Seattle Than Los Angeles or San Diego!

Image
A short Northwest heatwave is ahead and it will come on with a vengeance on Friday.    So get those tee shirts, shorts, sunglasses, and a cool drink ready.   It will be all the more jarring after an unusually cold spring. Many of you will experience temperatures in the 80s.... Let me start with temperatures predicted on Friday around 5 PM on Friday by the UW WRF model.  The white areas are places where temperatures are predicted to rise to 80F or more.  White hot. Temperatures will be cooler near Puget Sound and over Northwest Washington.  So if you like heat, move inland and south.  And cancel the trip to southern California--it will be warmer here!  Saturday will be a transitional day, with cooler air starting to move inland on the coast.  But still getting to the mid-70s in the western Washington and Oregon interior.  Expect further warming over the Columbia Basin, where mid-80s will be commonplace (see the forecast for 5 PM Saturday below). A state-of-the-science approach to foreca

Why is there often a strange, stationary radar echo along the Washington Coast?

Image
Virtually every week someone asks me about a strange-looking weather radar feature that is often along the Washington coast. UFOs?  Chinese balloons?   A stationary flock of birds?   Or could it be the ocean?   The answer is revealed below. Below is an example on April 11th around 7 AM from the National Weather Service Langley Hill radar near Hoquiam Washington (the radar is shown above).   You see the bluish area west of Hoquiam, just offshore on the central Washington coast?  That is the feature.   The other features are areas of precipitation.  They move.  The area off of Hoquim stays put. The image above is for the lowest scanning angle that is typically used in U.S. weather radars, a half-degree (0.5 degree) above the horizontal.    However, the Langley Hill radar was giving permission to have a lower scan angle (roughly 0.2 degrees) due to the intercession of Senator Maria Cantwell.   The image from that angle at the same time is shown below. The feature has gotten stronger and l

The Upcoming Northwest Heatwave and Snowmelt

Image
 It is now certain that our region (and the entire western U.S.) will experience a welcome spring "heatwave", with substantial snowmelt causing a surge in river levels. The origin of the big change is the development of a major upper-level ridge along the West Coast later this week.  To illustrate, here are the forecast 500-hPa heights (think of it as pressure around 18,000 ft) for 5 AM Friday.  The red colors indicated heights/pressures well above normal).   This major ridge is associated with warmer-than-normal air that will rapidly sink, warming by compression. The latest National Weather Service predictions for Seattle indicate temperatures reaching the mid-70s on Friday and Saturday.  Add another ten degrees for the Columbia Basin. The recent UW WRF model forecast suggests that some places in the west will get into the 80s in western Washington, with Portland rising into the mid-80s. Folks are going to go wild after one of the coolest springs in Northwest history. And th

One of the Coldest Aprils In Northwest History Will Soon Be History

Image
April 2023 has been starkly cool over the Pacific Northwest.  In fact, the second coolest on record in many locations.  The coolest in others. Just look at the April temperatures at Seattle and Pasco compared to normal highs (purple lines) and lows (cyan lines) is enough to put a literal chill down your spine. Most days have had lows well below normal and only ONE day during April reached the normal high in Seattle. A plot of the differences of temperature from normal for the past two weeks shows uber-cold maximum temperatures (blue color, 6-9F below typical) for much of Oregon and Washington.   This is historic cold.   For example, at Olympia, the average maximum this month so far was the COLDEST on a record going back over 80 years!   In Seattle, it was the second coldest (2011 was the chilly winner).   The bad news?  We will have to endure a few more days of these frigid conditions. The good news?   In roughly a week, a strong ridge of high pressure will build over the region bringi

Increased Wildfire Danger over the Western U.S. from Wet and Cold Conditions

Image
There is an enhanced potential for wildfires over the western U.S. this coming summer and early fall, but it is not due to warming and drying. In fact, just the opposite.   A cool, wet winter has created an increased wildfire threat by producing a bountiful volume of flammable grasses.  A threat that extends from eastern Washington into southern California. Eastern Washington Near Thorp, WA, July 2022 When most people think of wildfires they usually refer to forest fires.  However, grass fires are just as important in the West, if not more so.  Furthermore, burning grass plays an important role in many forest fires.  Many of the most damaging fires in the western U.S. have had a large grass contribution.  For example, the eastern Washington town of Malden, which was destroyed in September 2020, and the 2018 Camp Fire around Paradise, CA. The distribution of seasonal grasses in the West is shown below (indicated by green colors).  There is a LOT of grasslands across eastern WA and OR, a