Hydrometeorological Discussion National Weather Service / California Nevada RFC / Sacramento CA 830 AM PDT Sat Apr 11 2026 ...ONGOING WET PATTERN THROUGH THE WEEKEND UNDER UPPER LOW... .METEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS (SAT AM - FRI AM)... Radar reflectivity currently shows light shower activity across northern California and Nevada as a shortwave, that was cutoff over the previous days, departs the region through N. NV. and a stronger upper low approaches the N. CA Coast. A band of precipitation is currently being picked up by radar off the North Coast. The upper low will continue to approach the northern California coast over the next several hours, spreading heavier precipitation inland into Monday. The heaviest precipitation associated with this upper low is looking to target the Northern California Mountains with 2 to 3 inches over the northern Sierra and Shasta drainage over the next 24 hours. Additional locations across northern California could see 1 to 2 inches while the Sac Valley is expected to see <1 inch. Cold air aloft is likely to provide support for thunderstorm develop across the region, which may lead to higher localized amounts where thunderstorms develop and track. The low is forecast to slow down and become quasi-stationary over northern California today and into Sunday. As it does so, smaller vortices are forecast to swing through the base of the broader trough and spread heavier precipitation through the Big Sur coast today and southern California mountains tomorrow. Totals in these locations range from 1 to 3+ inches. A brief period dry period is expected early next week as ridging returns to the region before another low approaches the coast by mid- to-late week. Current precipitation forecasts for this low are relatively light and primarily confined to the mountains north of the I-80 corridor. Freezing levels are forecast to lower throughout today to below 6k feet across the north and 9k feet across the south before rising again under the brief ridging midweek. Please Note: This product may NOT be routinely updated. Please refer to the following product issued by the CNRFC www.cnrfc.noaa.gov/Daily-Briefing for a graphical summary of weather and hydrologic conditions. |