213  
FXUS65 KREV 241020  
AFDREV  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE RENO NV  
220 AM PST TUE FEB 24 2026  
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
* THE NEXT IMPACTFUL STORM HAS ARRIVED, BRINGING GUSTY TO STRONG  
WINDS WITH RAIN AND HIGH ELEVATION MOUNTAIN SNOW THROUGH  
WEDNESDAY.  
 
* FLOODING POTENTIAL PERSISTS WITH THIS WEAK ATMOSPHERIC RIVER  
EVENT, HOWEVER FLOODING CHANCES REMAIN LOW.  
 
* WARMER AND DRIER CONDITIONS RETURN LATE THIS WEEK INTO THE  
WEEKEND. ALTHOUGH, THERE ARE HINTS OF A SYSTEM THIS WEEKEND INTO  
EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
WELL, OUR WEAK AR HAS ARRIVED RIGHT ON TIME. RAIN HAS BEGUN TO FALL  
IN THE SIERRA FROM THE TAHOE BASIN NORTHWARD AT THE TIME OF THIS  
AFD. CURRENT SNOW LEVELS BASED ON CURRENT TEMPERATURE OBS FROM  
AROUND THE AREA ARE ESTIMATED TO BE AROUND 7,500-8,500 FEET AND ARE  
EXPECTED TO RISE SIGNIFICANTLY THROUGHOUT THIS MORNING TO AROUND  
10,000-10,500 FEET.  
 
THERE'S A COUPLE MAIN HAZARDS AT PLAY WITH THIS STORM: RAIN ON SNOW,  
AND WIND. THE RAIN THAT WE'RE GETTING WITH THIS AR IS FALLING ON A  
FRESH, DEEP SIERRA SNOWPACK, WHICH ADDS TO THE RUNOFF. THIS IS A  
PRIME SETUP FOR LOCALIZED NUISANCE PONDING ALONG WATERWAYS AND LOW  
LYING AREAS. FORTUNATELY, THE AMOUNT OF RAIN THAT'S FORECASTED ISN'T  
EXPECTED TO CAUSE MAJOR FLOODING ISSUES. BUT MORE ON THIS IN THE  
HYDROLOGY SECTION DOWN BELOW.  
 
TOTAL RAIN AMOUNTS FOR THIS SYSTEM THROUGH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON  
AMOUNT TO 1.5-2.0" ALONG THE SIERRA CREST, DECREASING TO 0.5-1.0" IN  
THE TAHOE BASIN AT LAKE LEVEL, BECOMING VERY SHADOWED ALONG THE  
SIERRA FRONT AND EASTERN SIERRA IN MONO WITH A 50-60% CHANCE OF  
0.20" OR MORE. BASED ON THE DYNAMICS OF THIS STORM AND THE DIRECTION  
OF THE UPPER LEVEL WINDS, I WOULD EXPECT RENO/CARSON/MINDEN TO ONLY  
SEE LESS THAN 0.05" OF RAIN OUT OF THIS, THOUGH THERE'S ALWAYS THE  
CHANCE WE CAN SEE MORE SPILLOVER. ABOVE 10,000 FEET, HOWEVER, THE  
TAHOE BASIN SOUTHWARD INTO ALPINE AND MONO COUNTIES, SNOW  
ACCUMULATIONS OF UP TO 6 INCHES ARE LIKELY. HIGHER AMOUNTS OF 6-12"  
ARE FOCUSED AROUND THE PEAKS SURROUNDING TIOGA PASS.  
 
NOW ONTO THE SECOND HAZARD ASSOCIATED WITH THIS STORM: WIND. THE  
700MB JET OUT OF THE WSW WILL PEAK AROUND 70-75KT LATER THIS  
AFTERNOON. SO WE'RE TALKING SIERRA RIDGES GUSTING 110+ MPH. AS OF  
RIGHT NOW, SLIDE MT. IS ALREADY AT 86 MPH AND PALISADES AT 84  
MPH. ONE THING I AM SEEING WITH THIS SYSTEM IS AN OVERWHELMING  
SIGNAL FOR DOWNSLOPE WINDS ALONG THE SIERRA FRONT (WASHOE VALLEY,  
HWY 395 NEAR DOYLE, CARSON VALLEY) AND DOWN IN MONO COUNTY ALONG  
HWY 395. I WON'T GET INTO THE NERDY DETAILS, BUT IN THESE WIND  
PRONE LOCATIONS, GUSTS THIS AFTERNOON BETWEEN 10AM-4PM COULD PEAK  
CLOSE TO 70 MPH. RIGHT NOW, WASHOE VALLEY HAS ALREADY GUSTED TO 56  
MPH. AND WITH IT BEING SO SHADOWED LATER TODAY WITH VERY LITTLE  
RAIN, THERE IS HIGH CONFIDENCE (>90%) THAT GUSTS WILL EXCEED 60  
MPH. BUT WHAT ABOUT THE NON-WIND PRONE LOCATIONS? GOOD QUESTION.  
OTHER AREAS LIKE TRUCKEE, SUSANVILLE, FALLON, ETC HAVE AROUND A  
40% CHANCE TO EXCEED 40 MPH. IN OTHER WORDS, THE MOST LIKELY RANGE  
IS 30-45 MPH FOR MOST LOCATIONS.  
 
ONCE THIS STORM HAS WRAPPED UP WEDNESDAY, A RIDGE WILL MOVE IN FOR  
THE REST OF THE WEEK AND WE'LL WARM UP AND DRY OUT. TEMPERATURES  
DOWN IN RENO AND WESTERN NV VALLEYS (AND IN NE CA) WILL BE PUSHING  
MID-UPPER 60'S, IF NOT MORE THAN 70 DEGREES BY FRIDAY. QUITE THE 180  
FROM LAST WEEK! WINDS WILL STILL BE A BIT BREEZY ON WEDNESDAY, BUT  
NOT NEARLY AS STRONG AS TODAY. OTHERWISE, THE REST OF THE WEEK LOOKS  
GREAT! LOOKING A LITTLE BIT FURTHER AHEAD FOR ALL THE SKI/SNOWBOARD  
ENTHUSIASTS OUT THERE, THERE ARE SIGNS OF OUR NEXT STORM ARRIVING  
THIS UPCOMING WEEKEND. LONG RANGE MODELS ARE IN PRETTY GOOD  
AGREEMENT FOR THE POSITIONING AND TIMING, THOUGH THAT MAY STILL  
CHANGE BETWEEN THEN AND NOW. IT LOOKS LIKE WE MAY GET A CUT-OFF LOW  
MOVING IN OFF THE COAST ON SUNDAY, BRINGING THE POTENTIAL FOR  
MOUNTAIN SNOW AND VALLEY RAIN. BUT MORE DETAILS ON THAT LATER THIS  
WEEK.  
 
-JUSTIN  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
OUR NEXT STORM HAS ARRIVED THIS MORNING, YIELDING PERIODS OF MVFR TO  
IFR CONDITIONS AT SIERRA TERMINALS WITH MOUNTAIN OBSCURATIONS.  
SIERRA TERMINALS HAVE ALREADY STARTED TO EXPERIENCE RAIN SHOWERS,  
AND THOSE SHOWERS ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE THROUGH TONIGHT AND INTO  
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. THE HIGHEST RAIN RATES FOR SIERRA TERMINALS  
WILL BE BETWEEN 22Z-06Z THIS EVENING, THEN LIGHTER, MORE ISOLATED  
SHOWERS ARE EXPECTED THROUGH WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON.  
 
LLWS AND MOUNTAIN WAVE TURBULENCE WILL PREVAIL TODAY FOR TERMINALS  
IN THE SIERRA, ALONG THE SIERRA FRONT, AND EASTERN SIERRA. 700MB  
(FL100) WINDS WILL PEAK AROUND 70-75KT OUT OF THE WSW BETWEEN 16Z-  
02Z, BUT TERMINALS NEAR AND IN THE SIERRA WILL SEE GUSTS UP TO 40KT.  
FOR MORE INFORMATION REGARDING TURBULENCE, LLWS, AND MORE, PLEASE  
VISIT AVIATIONWEATHER.GOV.  
 
-JUSTIN  
 
 
   
AVALANCHE  
 
THE NEXT STORM HAS ARRIVED THIS MORNING, BRINGING MORE RAIN AND HIGH  
ELEVATION SNOW ABOVE 9,000-10,000 FT, AS WELL AS GUSTY WINDS UP TO  
90-110 MPH AT THE HIGHEST PEAKS.  
 
SNOW LEVELS COME DOWN ON WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON TO 7.5-9 KFT FOR THE  
TAHOE BASIN AND FOR MONO COUNTY WEDNESDAY EVENING, WHEN  
PRECIPITATION CHANCES TAPER OFF. HOWEVER, THERE MAY BE SOME  
LINGERING/ISOLATED SHOWER CHANCES GOING INTO EARLY THURSDAY.  
 
LIQUID AMOUNTS CONTINUE TO FLUCTUATE WITH THIS WEAK AR EVENT. IN THE  
LATEST NBM PROBABILITIES, THERE IS STILL A 15-35% CHANCE OF 2+  
INCHES OF LIQUID AT THE SIERRA CREST FROM THE TAHOE BASIN NORTHWARD  
BETWEEN TODAY AND WEDNESDAY EVENING, WITH THE CREST IN MONO COUNTY  
HAVING A <10% CHANCE.  
 
SNOW TOTALS WILL BE MINIMAL IN MOST AREAS, WITH ONLY UP TO 6" ABOVE  
9,000 FT FROM THE TAHOE BASIN SOUTHWARD. BUT SOME LOCALLY HIGHER  
AMOUNTS OF 6-12" ARE POSSIBLE IN MONO COUNTY ACROSS THE HIGHER PEAKS  
AROUND TIOGA PASS.  
 
SLRS WILL BE 2-6:1 ABOVE 9-10 KFT.  
 
RIDGETOP WINDS DECREASE TONIGHT AFTER 7 PM TO 60-80 MPH. THOSE WINDS  
WILL PERSIST THROUGH WEDNESDAY MORNING AND EVENTUALLY TAPER OFF  
PRETTY QUICK BY THE AFTERNOON.  
 
-JUSTIN  
 
 
   
HYDROLOGY  
 
RAIN AT ALL BUT THE HIGHEST ELEVATIONS DURING THE WEAK ATMOSPHERIC  
RIVER WILL LEAD TO RISES ON RIVERS AND STREAMS THROUGHOUT THE AREA.  
 
THE NOW EXPANSIVE LOW ELEVATION SHALLOW SNOWPACK (BELOW ABOUT 5500  
FEET), WILL CONTRIBUTE ADDITIONAL RUNOFF AS IT MELTS WITH WARM  
TEMPERATURES, RAIN, AND HIGH WINDS. THE DEEPER AND COLDER HIGH  
ELEVATION SNOWPACK (ABOVE ABOUT 7000 FEET) IS EXPECTED TO RETAIN  
MOST OF THE RAINFALL, BUT WARM SIGNIFICANTLY DURING THE EVENT. HOW  
THE NOW SIGNIFICANT MID ELEVATIONS SNOWPACK RESPONDS TO THE RAIN IS  
AN AREA OF GREATER UNCERTAINTY.  
 
THE GREATEST FLOODING CONCERNS IS FOR MOUNTAIN URBAN AREAS WHERE  
DEEP SNOW LARGE PLOW BERMS MAY BLOCK DRAINAGE SYSTEMS AND FUNNEL  
RUNOFF INTO UNEXPECTED AREAS.  
 
FLOODING FROM RIVERS AND STREAMS IS NOT CURRENTLY EXPECTED, BUT  
MINOR FLOODING IS POSSIBLE ALONG IF RAINFALL EXCEEDS EXPECTATIONS.  
CURRENT FORECASTS SHOW ABOUT ABOUT A 5% CHANCE OF MINOR FLOODING  
ALONG THE SUSAN RIVER NEAR SUSANVILLE AND THE WEST FORK OF THE  
CARSON RIVER INTO CARSON VALLEY, AND VERY LOW, BUT NON ZERO CHANCES  
ALONG THE MIDDLE FORK OF THE FEATHER NEAR PORTOLA.  
 
ELEVATED FLOWS ARE EXPECTED TO CONTINUE THROUGH THE WEEK AS WARM  
TEMPERATURES WILL IMPACT THE RECENTLY RIPENED SNOWPACK.  
 
THE RIVER FORECAST CENTER WILL BE EXTENDING HOURS WILL ADD A THIRD  
EVENING FORECAST ON TUESDAY FOR RIVER POINTS WHERE FLOODING IS  
POSSIBLE. CHECK FOR UPDATED RIVER FORECASTS AT: WWW.CNRFC.NOAA.GOV  
 
-TB  
 
 
   
REV WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
NV...WIND ADVISORY UNTIL 7 PM PST THIS EVENING NVZ002.  
 
WIND ADVISORY UNTIL 7 PM PST THIS EVENING NVZ003.  
 
CA...WIND ADVISORY UNTIL 7 PM PST THIS EVENING CAZ072-073.  
 
 
 
 
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab NV Page
The Nexlab CA Page
Main Text Page