Forget all of that crap about March coming in like a lion and out like a lamb. None of that stuff applies this year. March was off-the-scale and simple sayings don't do it justice.
This is a little premature since March 31st is not in the books yet, but let's look back on what was a remarkable and unprecedented month.
Believe it or not, it did snow some in March. Per the Alta Snowfall History at https://www.alta.com/weather, Alta actually got 44.5" of snow from March 1st to 6th. That seems like a lifetime ago given the heat and dryness that followed.
With one day to go, the average temperature for March at the Salt Lake City International Airport is 53.4°F, 3.3°F higher than any previous March. A record for the month is in the bag.
| Source: https://xmacis.rcc-acis.org/ |
But the mean obscures the variability and some of the extremes that occurred during the month. This March featured five days with a maximum temperature greater than or equal to 80°F. Prior to this year, there was only one prior March day that reached 80°F (31 March 2012). We also reached 84°F, four full degrees higher than the previous all-time March record (also 31 March 2012) and 6°F warmer than the 20th century March record.
Every SNOTEL station with a long-term record in the Wasatch Range currently sits at < 50% of median snowpack water equivalent and every one is at their all-time low for March 30. EVERY ONE. Lower-to-mid elevation SNOTELs currently do not have any snow. Although it is not impossible that they see some snow in the future, for all intents and purposes, the seasonal snowpack at lower-to-mid elevations is gone. For these sites, bwlow is this year's first day with no snopwack compared to the prior record in parentheses.
Ben Lomond Trail (5970 ft): March 15 (April 2)
Farmington Lower (6850 ft): March 23 (April 4)
Parrish Creek (7760 ft): March 30 (May 2)
Parleys Summit (7590 ft): March 24 (April 4)
Timpanogos Divide currently has 0.1" of snowpack water equivalent, so it may be at zero by the end of the month too and it sits at 8180 feet.
Parish Creek might have the most impressively anomalous snowpack of these sites. It reached no snow yesterday (March 30). Records for this site only go back to 2000, so not as long as some sites. Still, they hit no snow yesterday (March 30), a bit more than a month ahead of the prior record (red line, which corresponds to the 2015 water year) and more than 6 weeks ahead of median (green line). Illustrating the fickle nature of spring, the big peak is from the 2023 water year, which saw increasing snowpack until late April with a maximum on April 25th.
| Source: https://nwcc-apps.sc.egov.usda.gov/awdb/site-plots/POR/WTEQ/UT/Parrish%20Creek.html |
Talk about a tale of two water years.
Of course, with April Fools on tap tomorrow, a change of the weather is in store. Showers and thunderstorms will develop later today with a trough moving through overnight bringing valley rain and upper-elevation snow, both of which could be heavy at times. Below is the GFS forecast valid 0900 UTC 1 April (0300 MDT) showing the trough over northern Utah with widespread precipitation along and ahead of it.
The GFS puts down 1.88" of water and 18.2" of high-density snow for Alta-Collins through 5 PM on April Fools day. For the same period, the HRRR is at 1.33" of water and 10.6" of snow while the RRFS members are mostly around 1" of water and 10" of snow although there are a couple of low and high outliers. A reasonable middle ground is 1–2" of water and 8–16" of high-density snow for Alta-Collins, which should be high enough to see all snow.
For Alta-Collins, the HRRR forecast below shows most of the precipitation happening Tuesday night and early Wednesday, although it is possible that something pops up Tuesday afternoon. Note also that the wet-bulb zero level is initially above the Alta Base and then falls to just below Elberts. Perhaps Alta will see some rain at the base late today (although in a thunderstorm the snow level could drop temporarily) and this evening before changing to wet snow.