[willamette-fcst] Silverton Hills Midday Forecast.doc

Willamette Valley Field Burning Forecast willamette-fcst at listsmart.osl.state.or.us
Thu Aug 2 11:56:57 PDT 2012


SILVERTON HILLS FIELD BURNING FORECAST

OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY WEATHER OFFICE

11:55 AM PDT THU AUG 2, 2012



BURN ADVISORY:



Agricultural burning is not recommended.

Prep burning is allowed from noon until 2:00 p.m. with a 50 acre limit.

Propane flaming is allowed from noon until 5:00 p.m.



WEATHER DISCUSSION:



An upper-level trough, cutting across southwestern British Columbia, is maintaining a dry and stable westerly flow aloft.  Infrared satellite imagery shows a narrow band of associated mainly middle and high clouds stretching from northern Idaho across northern Oregon.  At the surface, weak onshore flow continues across northwestern Oregon.  Late-morning visible satellite imagery showed low clouds extending from the north coast, along the Columbia River, into the extreme northern Willamette Valley.  Patchy morning low clouds have given way to sunshine in the Silverton Hills region.



Today should turn out very similar to yesterday, with plenty of sunshine and mostly northerly winds.  There continues to be some pressure gradient stacking this morning, but daytime heating may balance that out later this afternoon, much like it did yesterday. Transport winds are forecast to be mostly northerly, which should limit field-burning opportunities.  Pibals are scheduled to begin at 2:00 p.m.



TODAY'S FORECAST:



Sunny and seasonably warm.



Salem's high temperature today will be near 81 degrees (normal is 84).

Relative humidity drops to near 40% by 5 p.m.

Surface winds:  N 5-10 mph; becoming NNW 7-12 mph this evening.

Transport winds: NNW 8-12 mph; becoming NW 10-15 mph this evening.

Mixing height: Rising to 4500 feet by 5 p.m.

Salem's sunset tonight: 8:36 p.m.



THREE-HOURLY DATA:

                                2 p.m.  5 p.m.  8 p.m.

     Temperature:                 76      80      74

     Relative Humidity:           45%     38%     50%

     Surface Wind Direction:     350     350     320

     Surface Wind Speed:           8       9      10

     Transport Wind Direction:   350     350     340

     Transport Wind Speed:        10      10      14

     Mixing Height:             4000    4500    2000

     Ventilation Index:           40      45      28



EXTENDED DISCUSSION:



The Canadian upper-level trough is forecast to drop into eastern Montana and western North Dakota on Friday, with a building offshore ridge of high pressure turning the flow aloft more northerly over Oregon.  That should shut off the onshore flow across the Willamette Valley and allow temperatures to climb into the upper 80s.  North to northeast transport winds will be unfavorable for burning.  The ridge is forecast to move directly over Oregon on Saturday with a surface thermal trough pushing northward over the region.  That should produce the warmest temperatures so far this year, with valley highs climbing at least into the mid 90s.



The upper-level ridge is forecast to shift eastward by Sunday, with increasing southerly flow aloft introducing middle and high-level monsoonal moisture into the region.  That will begin a cooling process but also bring in a chance of thunderstorms.  The flow aloft is forecast to turn more southwesterly Monday and Tuesday.  That should stabilize the air mass and bring increasing onshore flow.  Significant cooling is forecast by next Tuesday, which could correspond with a burning opportunity.



The National Weather Service's digital forecast is available at:

http://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=44.90549606158295&lon=-122.8106689453125&site=pqr&unit=0&lg=en&FcstType=text



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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