And ironically such cold temperatures are a bad sign for those battling the wildfires north of San Francisco.
To "warm up" this blog, lets start with the latest cam shots at Snoqualmie and Stevens Passes. White stuff. Enough to make folks think about the upcoming winter season (which may be a good one because of La Nina).
During the last day, many NW folks have observed frost, with temperatures dropping below freezing on both sides of the Cascades. The map of minimum temperatures for the 24-h ending 8 AM Saturday (below, click to expand), shows 20s in eastern Washington, with teens and even single digits in the valleys of the high plateau of Oregon. Klamath Marsh RAWS site east of Crater Lake dropped to 5F and Burns, Oregon set a new record for the date (10F).
The below-normal temperatures were clearly evident at Sea Tac and Pasco, WA--here are plots for the past two days at these locations, with average maxima (purple) and minima (light blue). At Sea-Tac, Thursday was crazy cold (about 12F below normal) and this mornings low temperatures were clearly the coldest so far this fall.
And many days dropping below normal at Pasco.
The air morning into our region is near record cold, something shown by comparing the incoming temperature at 5000 ft (850 hPa) at Quillayute (Wa coast) with climatology (see below). The gray dot shows the observation at 5 PM Friday and the blue line shows the record low for the date.The cold air that moved into the Pacific Northwest is associated with higher pressure, something shown by the 12-h forecast for 5 AM today (Saturday) for sea level pressure (solid lines) and lower atmosphere temperature (color shading). At the leading edge of the cold/high pressure there is a large change in pressure (pressure gradient) that is associated with strong winds. Unfortunately, some of that pressure-change zone is now over northern CA, which is revving up the winds, particularly over the northern Sierra. Not as bad as Sunday/Monday, but enough to bring concerns of reinvigorated fires.
The winds yesterday were mostly northerly (from the north) over northern CA, and that blew the smoke southward toward San Francisco (see MODIS image).
I am working on an analysis of winds during this fire event, particular an evaluation of how unusual they were...stay tuned.
from Cliff Mass Weather and Climate Blog http://ift.tt/2yhIFvF
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