[willamette-fcst] Silverton Hills Forecast - Fri, Aug 13 2010
Willamette Valley Field Burning Forecast
willamette-fcst at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Fri Aug 13 08:56:12 PDT 2010
SILVERTON HILLS FIELD BURNING FORECAST
OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY WEATHER OFFICE
9:00 AM PDT FRI AUG 13, 2010
Fire Marshal Conditions are possible this afternoon and likely both Saturday and Sunday
afternoons
BURN ADVISORY:
Recommended burn times for agricultural burning are from noon to 6:30pm
Prep burning is not allowed.
Propane flaming is not allowed.
WEATHER DISCUSSION:
An upper-level ridge is building just offshore with a dry north-northwesterly flow aloft
over western Oregon. The surface chart shows a thermal trough building northward, from
southwestern Oregon, into the Willamette Valley this morning. Satellite imagery shows low
clouds along most of the immediate coastline, where the flow is still weakly onshore.
However, skies are clear just inland and over the entire Willamette Valley.
Gradients are already offshore this morning, from Redmond to Salem, and expected to
increase this afternoon. Down-sloping northeasterly winds and a full day of August
sunshine will warm valley temperatures well into the 90s, with very low humidity levels.
Northeasterly transport winds are not conducive to good valley ventilation, so the
prospect for any burning today is poor. The focus of todays discussion is on next weeks
weather. More on that in a moment
TODAYS FORECAST:
Sunny and warmer. After reaching 88 degrees on Thursday, Salem's high temperature today
will be near 93 degrees. The mixing height will climb to 3000 feet about noon and likely
top out near 5000 feet around 5 p.m. No evening sea breeze is expected this evening, with
persistent dry offshore flow, so surface temperatures will be slow to cool. That will
likely keep the mixing height above 1500 feet until about sunset. Light northerly surface
winds, this morning, will turn north-northeasterly and increase to about 10 mph this
afternoon. NE transport winds will increase to about 15 mph this afternoon. Relative
humidity will drop to 50% by 11 a.m. and to near 21% around 5 p.m. The ventilation index
will climb to 80 this afternoon.
Silverton area sunset tonight: 8:16 pm
THREE-HOURLY DATA:
11am 2pm 5pm 8pm
Temperature: 76 87 93 84
Relative Humidity: 45% 29% 21% 29%
Surface Wind Direction: 010 010 010 010
Surface Wind Speed: 7 8 12 8
Transport Wind Direction: 020 030 040 030
Transport Wind Speed: 7 14 16 12
Estimated Mixing Height: 2200 3800 5000 1500
Ventilation Index: 15 53 80 18
EXTENDED DISCUSSION:
A strong upper-level ridge of high pressure will build over the Pacific Northwest Saturday
through Monday. Sunny skies and dry offshore flow will bring near-record warmth to the
Willamette Valley. A weak upper-level trough is forecast to undercut the ridge and move
across northern California on Sunday, possibly bringing some thunderstorms to the southern
Oregon Cascades.
The ridge is forecast to peak over the region on Monday, with a stronger upper-level
trough approaching the southern Oregon Coast by Tuesday. That system may circulate
thundershower activity further north, along the Cascades, and should initiate a cooling
trend. That may create an open burning opportunity, as early as Tuesday afternoon, with
transport winds forecast to turn back onshore.
The long-range models are beginning to come into agreement that the upper-level trough
will come onshore Wednesday and/or Thursday. Increasing onshore flow and continued
cooling may create an enhanced opportunity open burning opportunity one or both of those
days. Temperatures will likely cool back to normal by Thursday. Strong onshore flow is
forecast on Friday with considerable marine clouds penetrating into the Willamette Valley.
Gradient-stacking may be too great for open burning by that time.
EXTENDED FORECAST:
Saturday: Sunny with near-record warmth. NE wind 5-10 mph. 58/97
Sunday: Sunny with near-record warmth. Light wind. 59/98
Monday: Sunny with near-record warmth. Light wind. 61/99
Tuesday: Sunny. A little cooler. Wind possibly becoming W 5-15 mph. 61/94
Wednesday: Partly cloudy and cooler. Wind W 5-15 mph. 57/87
Thursday: Partly cloudy. Slight chance of showers. 54/80
Friday: Morning clouds with afternoon clearing. 51/77
Notes:
1. Mixing height, as used here, is the lowest height at which the
potential temperature exceeds the potential temperature at the
surface.
As a practical matter it is the approximate height to which a
smoke plume will rise assuming good ignition, dry fuels, and
winds less than about 15mph.
2. Transport winds are a layer average through the mixing height,
weighted slightly toward the winds at the top of the layer.
3. Ventilation Index is the height of the mixing layer times
the transport wind speed divided by 1000.
4. Surface wind direction is the general expected wind direction.
At a specific point surface winds are highly dependent on local
terrain conditions.
This forecast is provided under an agreement between the Oregon Department of
Agriculture and the Oregon Department of Forestry. For information contact ODA at
503-986-4701.
Pete Parsons
ODF Meteorologist
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