[willamette-fcst] Forecast - Friday, April 10th, 2009
Willamette Valley Ag/Burning Forecast
willamette-fcst at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Fri Apr 10 09:02:01 PDT 2009
Daily Smoke Management Forecast
Oregon Department of Agriculture
Smoke Management Program
Weather Outlook and Field Burning Advisory for Willamette Valley Growers and Fire Districts.
...Next Update Scheduled Monday, April 13th, 2009 at 9:00am...
Issued:
Friday, April 10th, 2009 at 9:00am.
Burn Advisory:
Agricultural burning is allowed. Suggested burn times are from now until 6:00pm.
Straw stack burning is allowed from now until 6:00pm.
Weather Discussion:
A weak upper-level trough set up camp of the Oregon
coastline last night and pulled moisture northward into the
state from another weather system moving into California.
That kept skies cloudy overnight with areas of rain and
mountain snow. Community Collaborative Rain, Hail & Snow
Network (CoCoRaHS) observations showed that rainfall totals
in the western Valleys, from Portland to Medford, ranged
from about one-tenth of an inch to more than one-half of an
inch. The greatest totals were in the Cascade foothills.
The coast only received from a few hundredths of an inch to
around one-quarter of an inch.
Significant snow fell in the Cascades overnight, with the
snow level near 3000 feet. Mt. Hood Skibowl reported 8
inches of new snow and Mt. Hood Meadows ppicked up 5 inches.
Further south, Mt. Bachelor received 4 inches of snow,
Willamette Pass 2 inches, and Mt. Ashland picked up 6
inches. Areas of rain and snow alos circulated northward
across central and eastern Oregon overnight. Locally more
than one-tenth of an inch fell from Klamath Falls north to
Redmond and The Dalles. Rain also extended east to Burns
and Rome. The lightest rain was in northeast Oregon, where
most locations only picked up from a trace to a couple
hundredths of an inch.
The jet stream is pushing a vigorous upper-level trough into
southern California this morning, with the trough along the
Oregon coast weakening under a split-flow pattern aloft.
Satellite imagery showed the main cloud-bands associated
with the northern trough beginning to shift north and east
of western Oregon. Some breaks in the clouds were appearing
over the Willamette Valley, and Doppler radar showed most of
the rain had moved north, into Washington. The ODA surface
analysis showed very weak southerly gradients across western
Oregon and valley winds were light south-southeasterly at
mid-morning. Temperatures were mostly in the mid 40s.
ODOT road reports indicated that snow shower activity was
also tapering off over the Cascades this morning with pass
temperature near freezing. The offshore trough is forecast
to continue weakening today, as it slowly drifts inland.
Weak southerly flow aloft will keep skies mostly cloudy with
a chance for a few light showers...mainly over the
mountains. Cool air aloft will help to cap valley high
temperatures in the mid 50s, even with a few sunbreaks.
Winds will stay fairly light and should turn more
southwesterly this afternoon.
Surface Winds:
SE 5-10 this morning, SW 5-10 this afternoon.
Transport Winds:
SSW 10 this morning, SW 17 this afternoon.
Atmospheric Ventilation Conditions:
Maximum mixing height today will be near 5000 feet. Ventilation index 85.
High Temperature:
Salem\'s high temperature today will be near 56.
Humidities:
Minimum relative humidity will be near 62%.
Sunrise/Sunset:
Salem sunset tonight: 7:52pm; sunrise tomorrow: 6:34am.
Extended Outlook:
The next weather system will weaken considerably, under a
split-flow jet stream, as it moves onshore Saturday. It
will be strong enough to maintain mostly cloudy skies across
western Oregon, but rainfall should be less than one-tenth
of an inch. The greatest valley rain totals will likely be
in the northern Cascade foothills. Snow levels will be in
the 3-4000 foot range.
The jet stream is forecast to become more consolidated over
Washington and Oregon Sunday, with a stronger system slated
to come onshore. The lastest computer models show rain
spreading across western Oregon by Sunday afternoon with the
cold front moving through Sunday evening. A cold and
vigorous upper-level trough is forecast to drop over the
region Monday. Showers on Monday could include small hail,
in the afternoon, with quite low snow levels. The trough
will slowly pushing east Tuesday with showers tapering off.
A transitory ridge is forecast to bring some drying and
warming around the middle of next week. Another system is
forecast to move onshore late Thursday and Friday with more
rain likely.
Tomorrow (11 Apr): Mostly Cloudy. Chance of Light Rain...Mainly North. 42/57
Sun (12 Apr): Rain Developing by Afternoon. Snow Level 5000 Feet. 44/57
Mon (13 Apr): Showers with Mountain Snow. Snow Level Dropping to 2500 feet. 41/52
Tue (14 Apr): Decreasing Showers...Partial Clearing. Snow Level 2500 Feet. 36/54
Wed (15 Apr): Becoming Partly Sunny and Warmer. 35/61
Thu (16 Apr): Partly Sunny Early...Increasing Clouds Late. 38/65
Fri (17 Apr): Mostly Cloudy. Chance of Rain. 42/63
ODA Meteorologist
weather at oda.state.or.us
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