For Immediate Release – AccuWeather News
March 12, 2012 — State College, PA –As locations east of the Rockies experience Maylike warmth, residents in the Pacific Northwest are in for a stormy week.
The first in a round of potent storm systems will crash onshore today, bringing a variety of active weather conditions including
hurricane-force wind gusts, feet of snow and heavy rain.
A powerful area of low pressure barreling into British Columbia is responsible for the stormy conditions.
Along the immediate Oregon and Washington coasts, winds will gust to near 70 mph at times with sustained winds of 40 to 50 mph. These battering winds can lead to downed power lines and trees.
The winds will whip the rain into sheets along the coast where 1 to 2 inches of rain will fall today. By the time the storm winds down late tonight and on Tuesday, some locations could have received up to 4 inches of rain!
RELATED:
Storm Waves Over 30 Feet Pound Northwest Coast
Farther inland, rainfall amounts will be less extreme, although a very wet day is in store from Portland to Seattle.
In the higher elevations, heavy snow will pile up. Over a foot of snow is likely from this storm in the Olympic mountains of Washington. Farther south, feet of snow will likely accumulate in the mountains of northern California tonight into tomorrow.
Snow amounts farther inland will be lighter with a half foot in northern Idaho and northwestern Washington. The Cascades of Washington and Oregon as well as the Sierras in California can expect a foot of snow as well.
As AccuWeather.com meteorologist Brian Edwards points out, “This pattern, while not favorable for outdoor activities, will help to alleviate some of the dry conditions and the lack of snowpack in the mountains.”
Edwards goes on to explain, “Snowpack in the Sierra Nevada of California was running at about 30 percent of normal as of the end of February. This is a far cry from the same time last year when snowpack and snow-water equivalent were above average in the vicinity of 120% of normal.”
This early week storm system will be the first in a string of moisture-laden disturbances that will impact the Northwest this week.
Story by Dan DePodwin, AccuWeather.com Meteorologist.
If you have questions or want to speak with a meteorologist, please contact our 24-hour press hotline at (814) 235-8710 or email clitherow@accuweather.com.
“…Along the immediate Oregon and Washington coasts, winds will gust to near 70 mph at times with sustained winds of 40 to 50 mph. These battering winds can lead to downed power lines and trees…”
Looks like the Greenies there will get an early “Earth Day” (having their lights out for an hour or so).
So just think, mother nature has a way of reducing the CO2 emitted by all you people using fossil fuels just to keep warm.
Much ado about nothing. This is a strong late winter storm. Not the strongest of the season, and VERY typical of a la nina March and April (excellent late season snow skiing). Yeah, it’s cool and wet here- move along, nothing to see….
Widespread power outage mid Vancouver Island around 6:00am PST. High winds and heavy rain currently dying down late morning / lunchtime. Power restored about 10:00am.
Quite the roof rattler.
The horror – I woke up in Seattle this morning and my garbage can had blown over, with the lid somewhere down the street. The lid from my neighbors can was across the street. I thought briefly of working from home to avoid exacerbating the storm with my carbon emissions, but realized that unless I could convince all my neighbors to do the same my children were facing a future without garbage can lids.
THANKS for mention Sean Peake and Jazznick!
The next day or two may be especially interesting earthquake-wise as well as storm-wise, when some predicted coronal holes become earth-facing; see (2nd comment) http://climaterealists.com/index.php?id=9274#post_comments
I do not know how far south this storm will go, but it could be a big problem for all fruit trees in bloom.
http://policlimate.com/weather/current/gfs_dyntrop_nh.html
The MJO got its mojo.
Yeee hah! Like manna from heaven. My do we need some serious rain, pretty much anywhere south of 40 N, here on the Left Coast.
Here in downtown Vancouver overnight the howling and moaning was something awful.
And not just mine! The wind was howling and moaning too!
Victoria BC had quite high winds last night and early this morning, not over yet.
http://www.timescolonist.com/technology/High+winds+wreck+boats+topple+trees+houses/6286062/story.html
Picking up steam at the Bodega Bay Buoy, a bit north of San Francisco, wind shifting to the south and increasing, barometer dropping, still a bit of sun but the storm will be here soon …

w.
Intermittent strong winds and fairly steady rain here north of Seattle.
Wasn’t that bad on Whidbey Island. Gusting up to 65 isn’t that rare here.
We did lose power this morning, but the generator kicked in and all was well. Fossil fuel saves the day again.
Here on North Whidbey none of my garbage cans left their positions. Meaning we’ve had worse in the last couple months than this.
Yawn…
Happy to say that 10 miles east of Seattle all we got were a few large white “rain drops” and tons of rain. No gale force winds, thankfully, and after the drenching we’ve gotten the last few weeks many of our old growth trees would have toppled.
The Sky is falling in Southern Portland. I am about 30 minutes South of Northern Berkley and it not only falling, its sticking best on the road. No school for days, at least for the local kids. This is actual winter snow.
It was never windy, rainy, or snowy anywhere ever before.
Must be climate change.
/sarc
Update from Snowmaggedon…near Joint Base Lewis McCord…near Tacoma.
Temps have been dropping about a degree an hour since midnight. Sleet has changed to snow and its beginning to stick on the pavement…temp at 150 ft elevation, one mile inland, 34 degrees and falling…
Something tells me this ain’t in the computer models…non typical storm…it is snowing pretty hard, lol.