Clouds and precipitation are back in the forecast, but unfortunately it's yet another warm event.
Below is the ECMWF HRES forecast for 1800 UTC 11 Feb (1100 MST Wednesday). A weak, decaying atmospheric river extends across the northern Baja Peninsula and up the lower Colorado River Basin. Elevated (but atmospheric river level) integrated vapor transport extends into northern Utah with south-southwesterly flow at 700-mb. The 700-mb temperatures at that time are forecast to be about -3.5°C, which would likely a snow level near or just above the base of Park City (7000 ft).
A look at the HRRR-derived guidance for upper Little Cottonwood shows some dribs and drabs today, but periods of precipitation overnight, tomorrow, and tomorrow night totaling a bit over an inch of water and just under 10 inches of high-density snow through 5 AM Thursday at Alta-Collins. The middle-left panel shows the wet-bulb zero height and our estimated melting layer in green. The wet-bulb zero makes it up to the base of Alta, which means snow levels likely pushing 7500 feet or so before lowering Wednesday night (and lowering further on Thursday).
A look at the RRFS ensemble shows four of the members very close to an inch of water and in the 10-15" range for snow through 11 AM Thursday (18Z 12 Feb). One member is more excited. Root for that one.
It is what it is.
I saw Ogden Nordic closed (or at least partially closed) their trails.
ReplyDeleteAt least it's looking pretty good right now for next week.
ReplyDelete