Northern California's coming super soaker event via the 'Pineapple Express'

UPDATE: Added this HiDef imag showing a trio of lows (commas shaped clouds) in the Gulf of Alaska and southward:

Click image to enlarge to HDTV size

There’s lots of buzz here in Northern California about a series of upcoming storms starting today and through the weekend that are expected to bring gusty winds and significant rain. So much rain in fact, that there is likely to be flooding. Some reports have my area of NorCal getting as much as 20″ of rain (~75% of the normal seasonal total). I think that is over-forecasted, but it certainly is a possibility.

I remember one similar event in the El Niño years of the 1990’s, a “March Miracle” that dropped ~17″ of rain in a  24 hour period in the mountains just east of me at a DWR weather station called “Four Trees” above the Feather River Canyon. It was such an anomaly that former California State Climatologist Jim Goodridge and I set out to see if maybe the rain gauge had a urinal attached or some other such issue. It turned out that the station was fine.

The setup of this series of storm systems in not unlike that event though, a strong, deep, Arctic low will guide the storms with its rotation right into Northern California as an “Atmospheric River” (AR) or “Pineapple Express” as we often call it.

TWC writes:

Amazingly, according to NOAA’s Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL), a strong AR can transport as water vapor up to 15 times the average flow of liquid water at the mouth of the Mississippi River!

Suffice to say, if an AR stalls over a particular area, significant flooding can be the result.  In fact, a study by Ralph et al. (2006) found ARs responsible for every flood of northern Calfornia’s Russian River in a 7-year period.

According to NOAA/ESRL, 30-50% of the average annual precipitation in the West Coast states typically occurs in just a few AR events. With that in mind, one such AR is poised to soak parts of the West Coast this week.

The Quantitative Precipitation Forecast (QPF) model for this event is quite striking, putting the most significant rainfall into Butte County (where I live), Tehama County, and Plumas County from about Midnight Thursday to 10AM PST Friday as seen in these two plots:

That works out to ~ 5 inches in a 12 hour period for those two hotspots in NE Butte County. This image below shows the 5 day total expected rainfall courtesy of the NOAA NWS Hydrometeorological Prediction Center.

That should place some significant strain on the Feather River and Russian River watersheds.

There’s also concern over burn areas from summer fires that may get so saturated that mud and debris flows might be issues:

NWS Sacramento has prepared a video briefing:

Note that no place does NWS say there’s any connection to climate, CO2, or global warming. But just watch, the first news report of some related event or disaster will likely prompt those political activists that want to make you believe things like this are “unprecedented” and exacerbated by “global warming” to make some connection for their purposes.

My local newspaper, the Enterprise Record has a good editorial today about preparedness and Hurricane Sandy. I especially liked this part:

Most of us live in an environment of asphalt and sturdy buildings, with nature tamed into lawns and shrubs and shade trees. Even our “natural” parks are pretty polite places. We throw the switch and the lights come on. We turn the tap, and water comes out of the faucet. Nature is distant and remembered through a romantic mist.

(Read it all here.)

Which is why when political activists like Bill McKibben try to stir up emotions over routine weather events, he is often successful at convincing the gullible that somehow, the weather has changed and turned more sinister, and that people are to blame.

That sort of “blame the witches” thinking went out with the middle ages.

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November 29, 2012 10:44 pm

eyesonu says:
November 29, 2012 at 9:13 pm
What you have written in your comment is interesting. I will be watching next weeks weather.
Since the concept of the planetary alignments is somewhat beyond my reach, could you direct me to a more detailed description with some graphics for the “beginner” on this?
Links to part of 102 posts, of my and others blog comments, references, and four lengthy pages of charts, a couple of movies, and graphs that can be found here: http://research.aerology.com/
http://research.aerology.com/lunar-declinational-affects-on-tornado-production/
http://research.aerology.com/aerology-analog-weather-forecasting-method/
http://research.aerology.com/natural-processes/galactic-perspective/

Jenn Oates
November 30, 2012 12:25 pm

It’s raining pretty hard outside my Elk Grove classroom at the moment, but as I can see from reading the comments, a lot of us have weathered similar and worse in our lifetimes, so…no bigs.
And dang, there are a surprising many of us from the Sacramento area!

Pat Ravasio
November 30, 2012 6:02 pm

[snip. Your ad hominem trolling is unwelcome. — mod.]

November 30, 2012 7:40 pm

My younger brother, (up in the north of California near the Oregan border,) emailed me this afternoon that his front yard rain gauge just set a record (for his yard) of 2.36 inches in an hour. He only got around 2 inches yesterday, but the wind has been very strong.
I hope you can update this thread. It is sinking down pretty low below the “new news,” even though it is still happening.

RockyRoad
December 3, 2012 4:11 pm

Brandy Creek, CA, got 23 inches from this “Pineapple Express”. The forecasters, who said up to 20 inches was possible, were right. Even Anthony’s expectations were exceeded!

December 4, 2012 6:40 am

Thank God… We just got a good soaker in the Ozark Mtns. Lakes and ponds might get a raise. Man, do we ever need it, they were very, very low!!!!! Yesterday, I just removed drought killed shrubs and stuff from the summer 2011. South of Branson, MO in the Upper Buffalo River Wilderness area got much of the Oklahoma & Texas 2011 scorcher and a lot of the Kansas & Nebraska’s 2012 drought.
Keep pumping rain this way!!!!!
http://www.intellicast.com/National/Radar/Current.aspx?region=lit&animate=true