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Hydrometeorological Discussion
National Weather Service / California Nevada RFC / Sacramento CA
1250 PM PDT Thu Apr 9 2026

...TURNING COOLER WITH UNSETTLED CONDITIONS THROUGH THE WEEKEND...

.METEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS (THU PM - WED AM)...

As the upr low west of the northern CA coast continues to track 
slowly eastward now within 130W...scattered showers and 
thunderstorms are becoming more numerous over portions of northern 
CA early this afternoon. The most concentrated cluster of cells are 
moving northward over Trinity and northeast Humboldt counties and 
making their way toward western Siskiyou county. Through the rest of 
the afternoon and evening...look for convection to increase in 
coverage as the SPC Day 1 Convective Outlook places a marginal risk 
of severe thunderstorms over portions of coastal southern OR and 
northern CA down to about the Eel River basin...while general 
thunderstorms are possible over much of northern CA into northern NV 
and down over portions of interior central CA.

Not much change in thinking with the initial upr low opening up and 
increasing its forward speed to the CA coast later Friday...as a 
deeper upr low dives southeast from the Gulf of Alaska. The best 
precip on Friday will fall over northern/central CA...eventually 
spreading over northwestern NV. Once again...convection will be an 
issue on Friday with the SPC Day 2 Convective Outlook drawing a 
broad area of general thunderstorms across northern CA into northern 
NV and down across portions of interior central CA. 

Then for Saturday...the deep upr low will move toward the northern 
CA coast and shift inland on Sunday morning right near Point Arena. 
This will provide another favorable day of precip production with 
Saturday seeing the highest precip amounts for northern/central CA. 
Coastal areas between the CA/OR border and Big Sur will range from 
0.75- to 1.50-inches...while from the Shasta Lake drainage down the 
length of the Sierra will primarily range from 1.00- to 2.00-inches 
with some localized totals between the Feather and American River 
basins approaching 2.50-inches.

Sunday will see the upr low moving inland while a compact 
disturbance diving southward just off the west coast will move into 
the flow and help dig the overall system toward southern CA. This 
will help push some moderate amounts over coastal sections of 
southern CA and eventually inland over all of NV. 

Freezing levels will drop with each disturbance moving through the 
area as cold air filters across the region. Currently looking at a 
range of 8500-feet northwest to 12500-feet southeast...dropping down 
to a range of 6500-feet northwest and 11000-feet southeast as the 
first s/wv trof moves across on Saturday. Then with the cooler 
system...look for freezing levels to bottom out late Sunday into 
early Monday with 5000-feet for much of northern/central CA into 
extreme western NV...and then 6000- to 7500-feet for the rest of NV 
and southern CA.