Sigh...what a start to December.
First let's have a look at the northwest storm. Some bit water totals so far. For the 3-day period ending at 6 AM PST/1200 UTC today (11 December), more than 10" of liquid precipitation equivalent at many sites in the Washington Cascades including 14.2" at Paradise SNOTEL (agreeing well with the expectations from the previous post) and 18.6" at the Lynn Lake SNOTEL between Paradise and Snoqualmie Pass.
| Source: https://www.weather.gov/wrh/hazards |
Crystal Mountain is reporting this morning that WA-410 is closed between Enumclaw and Greenwater, essentially cutting them off given that WA-410 is also closed over Cayuse and Chinook Passes to the south. Most of their web cams are down but sadly, even at 6800' at the top of the Green Valley Express where a cam is working, it looks like a net loss from this storm.
| Source: https://www.crystalmountainresort.com/the-mountain/mountain-report-and-webcams/webcams |
Could be worse. Below is the Summit West cam from Snoqualmie Pass.
| Source: https://www.summitatsnoqualmie.com/webcams |
Meanwhile in northern Utah, December continues to be the new October with yesterday's high of 61 at the Salt Lake city International Airport the average high on October 25.
I keep thinking how fortunate we are that this low-amplitude ridge developed in a way that we stayed relatively mild at low levels. If there had been a strong cold pool in place over the valley earlier this week, we would probably be much cooler. If we can't have snow, then we may has well have a mild conditions in the valley. We were also fortunate to have that storm last Friday Night and a few days of good snowmaking conditions before the warmth returned.
A look at the ensembles shows a few members flattening out the ridge just enough to bring some precipitation into northern Utah the middle to end of next week. An example is the ECMWF HRES. Forecast below for 1800 UTC Thursday 18 December.
Indeed, for Alta-Collins the Utah Snow Ensemble has a few enthusiastic members, although most of the forecasts are still in the low-end snowfall range and most are warm through the 10-day forecast period.
Median total water equivalent and snowfall are 0.91" and 8.0" through 5 PM Saturday 20 December, so we will set that as the over/under.
Well, this has to be the most depressing December ever for the Wasatch. With some models starting to show high pressure starting to strengthen/settle into the first week of January, it's begging to look like mid-winter Moab MTB trips will be a genuine thing this year. Poor PowMow w/ their lower elevation...Paradise might not open until MLK day at best!
ReplyDeleteSo how often has there been no Steenburgh winter? We're headed that way.
ReplyDelete