First Alert Weather Mornings ahead; cold showers dump wet snow in spots heading into early


March is almost here! We’ve got a Leap Day tomorrow, then the first weekend of March 2024 ahead. Now some years in late winter or very early spring we get mornings with sloppy/wet snowfall in the lowlands of NW Oregon or SW Washington. Last year it occurred several days in the first week of the month. Notice the highs/lows and traces of snowfall at PDX last March. Highs only reached the mid-upper 40s, but little/no overnight freezing

The last day of February and first few days of March THIS year look the same. First, just the TL;DR version for those of you not that interested in details.

KEY POINTS

The weather fun is being brought to us courtesy of a chilly upper-level trough out in the Pacific. Here’s the view up at 18,000′ tomorrow

By Sunday the trough is weakening and has split up a bit

Last year’s close calls with morning snow were under the same setup; a cold upper-level trough just offshore on March 5th

No official measurable snowfall in Portland last March, but I had 4 days with snow up at 1,000′ at home just eat of Corbett

You can sure see the cold/unstable air approaching behind this evening’s cold front. Look at those “popcorn” looking clouds to the west!

The airmass tomorrow morning actually isn’t as cold as Fri/Sat mornings (just -3 to -4 at 850mb). Tomorrow morning’s snow possibility is what we call an “anafront”. That’s when steady/heavy precipitation falls BEHIND the cold front, dragging the sticking snow level 1-2,000′ lower than one would expect. In the past, these anafronts have brought a quick snow dump in the lowlands. Often it’s the lowlands up against the western Cascade foothills. The fresh 00z GRAF model has increased the snowfall forecast, although it seems a bit aggressive pushing 1/2″ deep into the eastern half of Portland and even downtown. We will see!

This WRF-GFS forecast through 4pm tomorrow is a bit messy with all those wind arrows on top. But you see those 1-2″ forecast totals down into foothills of eastern Multnomah and Clackamas counties

I love this graphic…the WRF-GFS cross-section for the next 96 hours (4 days). I’ve drawn in the zero degree (C) isotherm; you can see the lowering freezing level each morning. Notice it’s coldest Friday and Saturday mornings

Then the sounding for Friday morning at 7am from the same model. This is a “valley floor snow” sounding with temps at/below freezing just about to the surface. In this setup ALL showers are just snow in the lowest elevations. But whether it sticks in any one location depends on intensity and duration.

So IF showers are still going both Friday and Saturday mornings, ANYONE could see sticking snow as they pass overhead. Or, you could live closer to 1,000′, no showers pass during the coldest part of the day, and you get almost nothing. See why you shouldn’t get hung up on elevation? It always helps because it’s colder, but it’s only one factor in this weather pattern.

That’s it for this evening, I’m off for a quick little ski vacation the next couple of days, but the rest of the weather team should have this showery weather pattern handled well.



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