596  
FXUS66 KPDT 180559  
AFDPDT  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE PENDLETON OR  
959 PM PST SUN NOV 17 2024  
 
UPDATED AVIATION DISCUSSION  
   
SHORT TERM...TODAY THROUGH TUESDAY  
A PARTICULARLY ACTIVE  
PERIOD IS IN STORE FOR THE FORECAST AREA, WITH EVERYTHING FROM  
RAIN, HEAVY MOUNTAIN SNOW, AND STRONG WINDS SLATED FOR THE NEXT 72  
HOURS.  
 
FOR TODAY, A COLD FRONT IS SWINGING THROUGH THE FORECAST AREA,  
BRINGING WITH IT GUSTY CONDITIONS, RAIN, AND EVENTUALLY, MOUNTAIN  
SNOW. YESTERDAY'S SYSTEM PROVIDED US WITH A SHOT OF WARM AIR THAT  
LIFTED SNOW LEVELS ABOVE OUR MAJOR MOUNTAIN PASSES, BUT AS THIS COLD  
FRONT MOVES THROUGH, COLDER, NORTHERLY AIR WILL RUSH IN BEHIND AND  
DROP SNOW LEVELS DOWN TO AROUND 2000 FEET. A WINTER STORM WARNING  
REMAINS IN EFFECT FOR OUR CASCADES AND NORTHERN BLUES ZONES, WITH  
THE EXPECTATION BEING THAT WARNING-LEVEL SNOW WILL PRIMARILY FALL  
BETWEEN THE WRITING OF THIS DISCUSSION AND EARLY MORNING MONDAY.  
LIGHT SNOW WILL PERSIST INTO THE DAY MONDAY, BUT ONLY EXPECTING A  
COUPLE OF INCHES AT BEST TO FALL AT PASS LEVEL BETWEEN DAYBREAK  
MONDAY AND MIDNIGHT HEADING INTO TUESDAY. ELSEWHERE, RAIN SHOWERS  
WILL OCCUR ALONG THE COLD FRONT, BEFORE DRIER CONDITIONS PREVAIL  
ACROSS THE LOWER ELEVATIONS LATE TONIGHT THROUGH MOST OF THE DAY  
MONDAY. BREEZY WINDS WILL CONTINUE AMIDST THIS ACTIVE PATTERN.  
 
LOOKING AHEAD TO TUESDAY, A POTENTIALLY SIGNIFICANT LOW PRESSURE  
SYSTEM IS SHAPING UP OFF THE COAST OF THE PACNW. GLOBAL MODELS ARE  
SUGGESTING THAT THIS LOW COULD HAVE A CENTRAL PRESSURE AS LOW AS 945  
MB, WHICH IS QUITE STRONG FOR THE REGION. THIS LOW WILL CIRCULATE A  
WARM FRONT THROUGH THE FORECAST AREA DURING THE LATTER HALF OF  
TUESDAY, WHILE KEEPING US IN A PERSISTENT BAND OF WET, SW FLOW ALOFT  
THROUGH THE REMAINDER OF THE WORK WEEK. WARM FRONTS LIFTING THROUGH  
FROM THE SOUTHWEST ARE TYPICALLY CONDUCIVE FOR DOWNSLOPING WIND  
EVENTS, AND GIVEN HOW STRONG THIS LOW LOOKS TO BE, DID OPT TO ISSUE  
A HIGH WIND WATCH FOR THE BASE OF THE BLUE MOUNTAINS OF OREGON, AS  
WELL AS CENTRAL AND NORTH CENTRAL OREGON. DON'T THINK MODELS ARE  
QUITE CAPTURING THE POTENTIAL WIND THREAT THIS FAR OUT, BUT WOULD  
NOT BE SURPRISED IF CAMS START DEPICTING WIND GUSTS EXCEEDING 60 MPH  
FOR THESE AREAS TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY.  
 
MOISTURE ADVECTION WILL BE ROBUST WITH THIS LOW AS WELL,  
PARTICULARLY FOR THE CASCADES. MODELS ARE CURRENTLY SUGGESTING THAT  
THE FOOTHILLS OF THE CASCADES, PARTICULARLY IN WASHINGTON, COULD SEE  
HEAVY SNOW EXCEEDING 6 INCHES ABOVE 2500 FEET, WITH SEVERAL INCHES  
OF SNOW POTENTIALLY EXTENDING DOWN TOWARD CLE ELUM AND EVEN INTO THE  
KITTITAS VALLEY. MUCH IS STILL SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITH THE FORECAST  
OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS, BUT PARTICULAR INTEREST WILL BE KEPT ON THE  
TUESDAY NIGHT INTO WEDNESDAY TIME PERIOD IN TERMS OF MONITORING THE  
POTENTIAL FOR A SIGNIFICANT WEATHER EVENT. EVANS/74  
   
LONG TERM...WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY  
SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW ALOFT  
WILL BE DOMINANT IN THE LONG TERM AS A VERY STRONG LOW PRESSURE  
SYSTEM SITS JUST OFFSHORE OF THE PACNW, BRINGING PLENTIFUL  
PRECIPITATION IN THE FORM OF AN ATMOSPHERIC RIVER WITH  
TEMPERATURES WARM ENOUGH TO KEEP MOST OF THE REGION AS RAINFALL  
RATHER THAN SNOW, BUT WITH THIS WILL COME CONCERNS OF LOCALIZED  
PERSISTENT RAINFALL AND POSSIBLY ISOLATED FLOODING.  
 
WEDNESDAY STARTS WITH A DEEP AND STACKED LOW FROM THE SURFACE TO  
500 MB JUST OFFSHORE OF THE US/CANADA. STRONG WINDS WILL HAVE  
ALREADY BEEN OCCURRING OVERNIGHT FROM TUESDAY INTO WEDNESDAY, WITH  
A HIGH WIND WATCH CURRENTLY IN EFFECT FROM CENTRAL OREGON UP  
THROUGH THE FOOTHILLS OF THE BLUES. BY LATER WEDNESDAY MORNING  
WINDS WILL STILL BE BREEZY, BUT SHOULD BE RELAXING BY THE  
BEGINNING OF THE AFTERNOON. WITH WINDS LESSENING, OUR MAIN  
CONCERNS WITH THIS SYSTEM WILL BECOME PRECIPITATION AS THE LOW  
CONTINUES TO SIT JUST OFFSHORE AND SPIN MOISTURE ACROSS THE REGION  
DAILY. SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW SHOULD HELP TO BRING RISING SNOW LEVELS  
THOUGH, ABOVE 4-7K FEET BY THURSDAY. THIS MEANS THE MAJORITY OF  
FALLING PRECIPITATION WILL BE RAINFALL OUTSIDE OF THE HIGHEST  
ELEVATIONS, LIMITING IMPACTFUL WINTER CONDITIONS FOR US. THAT  
BEING SAID, SOME LOCALIZED AREAS OF FLOODING MAY OCCUR AS WE SEE  
DAILY RAIN ALONGSIDE MELTING OF ANY SNOW THAT DID FALL PRIOR TO  
THIS. A WIDESPREAD FLOOD EVENT ISN'T EXPECTED CURRENTLY, AS DAILY  
QPF AMOUNTS WILL BE AROUND 0.1-0.5 INCH OUTSIDE OF THE MOUNTAINS,  
BUT THE NBM DOES SHOW A NEAR DAILY 50-100% PROBABILITY OF QPF  
AMOUNTS OF 0.1 OR MORE FOR OUR ENTIRE CWA. LOOK FOR LOCALIZED  
RISES ON RIVERS FOR OUR REGION TO BE POSSIBLE DUE TO THIS  
RAINFALL.  
 
OVERALL THERE IS MODERATE TO HIGH CONFIDENCE IN THE FORECAST.  
ENSEMBLES ARE IN VERY GOOD AGREEMENT ON THE FORECAST PATTERN,  
INDICATING THE STALLED LOW WILL DRIVE OUR WEATHER PATTERN THROUGH  
MOST OF THE NEXT WEEK OR SO. DIFFERENCES PRIMARILY ARISE RIGHT AT  
THE END OF THE PERIOD, WHEN CLUSTERS SHOW A VERY VARYING SOLUTIONS  
ON HOW QUICKLY THIS SYSTEM FINALLY DECIDES TO MOVE INLAND.  
OTHERWISE, ANY UNCERTAINTY WILL BE IN THE EXACT PLACEMENT OF THE  
MOISTURE AND THE POTENTIAL LOW-END (AT LEAST FOR OUR AREA)  
ATMOSPHERIC RIVER EVENT, BUT ENSEMBLES AGREE WE'LL BE SITTING  
AROUND 150-200% OF NORMAL PWAT VALUES FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR, SO  
EXPECT A SOAKER COME LATER NEXT WEEK. GOATLEY/87  
 
AVIATION...06Z TAFS...VFR CONDITIONS TO MOSTLY PREVAIL THROUGH THE  
PERIOD, BUT PRECIPITATION IMPACTS MAY BRING CONDITIONS TO MVFR OR  
LOWER. NEXT ROUND OF PRECIPITATION TO THE REGION IS EXPECTED TO  
ARRIVE AROUND 12Z, WITH LIGHT SNOW AT SITES RDM/BDN TURNING OVER  
TO A RAIN/SNOW MIX AFTER 17Z. SNOW IMPACTS MAY ALSO BRING  
VSBY/CIGS TO MVFR OR LOWER CATEGORIES, BUT CONFIDENCE TOO LOW TO  
INCLUDE AT THESE SITES. OTHERWISE, EXPECT MOSTLY VICINITY SHOWERS  
AT SITES DLS/PDT/ALW THROUGH THE PERIOD. WINDS OF 12-17KTS WITH  
GUSTS UP TO 25KTS WILL DEVELOP AT MOST SITES AFTER 17Z, THOUGH  
PERSISTENT WINDS WILL CONTINUE AT SITES ALW/PSC THROUGH 00Z.  
LAWHORN/82  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
PDT 33 45 28 46 / 70 30 20 10  
ALW 36 47 30 47 / 80 50 30 20  
PSC 39 50 34 48 / 30 10 20 10  
YKM 26 47 24 41 / 20 10 20 30  
HRI 36 49 31 50 / 40 10 20 20  
ELN 26 43 22 39 / 40 20 20 40  
RDM 27 41 24 44 / 70 50 20 10  
LGD 27 38 21 37 / 100 60 40 20  
GCD 26 38 20 41 / 90 60 50 30  
DLS 35 49 31 46 / 60 50 50 50  
 
 
   
PDT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
OR...WINTER STORM WARNING UNTIL 10 PM PST MONDAY FOR ORZ502-509.  
 
HIGH WIND WATCH FROM TUESDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH WEDNESDAY MORNING  
FOR ORZ507-508-510-511.  
 
WA...WINTER STORM WARNING UNTIL 10 PM PST MONDAY FOR WAZ030-522.  
 
 
 
 
 
SHORT TERM...74  
LONG TERM....87  
AVIATION...82  
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