Hydrometeorological Discussion National Weather Service / California-Nevada RFC / Sacramento CA 640 AM PDT Mon Jul 13 2026 ...MONSOON MOISTURE CONTINUES THROUGH TUE WITH SCATTERED PRECIP... ...DRYING WED-FRI EXCEPT FAR SOUTHEAST THEN MOISTURE RETURNS SAT... .METEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS (MON AM - SUN AM)... Strong high pressure continues downstream of the area...anchored over the northern/central Rocky Mountain states stretching toward the northern Plains states. This has generated record setting heat with a core of nearly 6000-meters at 500-mb over these locations. Flow across CA and NV on the upstream side of this feature continues from the southeast to south with a strong surge of moisture associated with the monsoon. 13/12Z RAOBs at both KNKX and KREV indicate a PW value very close to 1.00-inch with the overall profile showing less temperature/dew point spread in the lower levels. Radar and satellite imagery shows a stream of cloudiness and scattered echoes streaming northward with the best line of showers stretching from near Lake Tahoe over extreme western NV. This overall flow regime will continue through today and tomorrow with scattered showers and thunderstorms possible mainly over the Sierra...coastal mountains of southern CA and much of NV. Then into Wednesday...the high pressure moves far enough downstream across the middle of the country with a s/wv trof approaching the Pacific Northwest...which is expected to turn the overall flow a bit more from the southwest. This will dry out the atmosphere a bit with PW values dropping closer to 0.50- to 0.75-inch...except for far southern CA and southern NV. This will pull much of the precip back to these areas through Friday. By the time the next weekend approaches...look for the high pressure to re-establish itself over the northern/central Rocky Mountain states stretching toward the northern Plains states. Flow across CA and NV turns southeast and south...drawing the next surge of moisture toward the region. Freezing levels are currently running from 14000- to 17000-feet from northwest to southeast...fluctuating a little through the period. 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. |