Hydrometeorological Discussion National Weather Service / California Nevada RFC / Sacramento CA 640 AM PDT Tue May 5 2026 ...COOLER WITH PRECIP CONTINUING TODAY MAINLY NEAR AND S OF I-80... ...DRY WITH WARMING TEMPERATURES THROUGH THE UPCOMING WEEKEND... .METEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS (TUE AM - MON AM)... The upr low off the central CA coast moved inland yesterday and is currently spinning in the vicinity of Bakersfield at this time. Radar imagery shows scattered showers pinwheeling around this feature with the most pronounced echoes streaming onshore across coastal southern CA from Los Angeles to San Diego...while another line of showers moving toward the southwest is set up in a deformation zone generally just south of I-80 from northern NV to the northern San Joaquin Valley and eventually the SF Bay Area. So far...precip gauges since 05/12Z are reporting light amounts near or less than 0.10-inch. Through the rest of today...look for the upr low to open up and shift off eastward across the Desert Southwest before phasing with a disturbance dropping southward over the Rocky Mountain states. Precip will slowly taper off overnight with the best totals stretching in a line from southern Elko county back southwest to the southern Sierra and coastal southern CA between Los Angeles and San Diego. Totals should range from 0.10- to 0.33-inch on average. Lighter amounts less than 0.10-inch are expected across the San Joaquin Valley and the SF Bay Area down to the Monterey Bay area. Freezing levels near and south of I-80 are currently running from 7000-feet near the core of the system to almost 10000-feet and then recovering overnight as the coolest portion of the airmass moves off to the east...generally from 10000- to 12500-feet by Wednesday morning. Building high pressure over the eastern Pacific toward the west coast will be the rule for the remainder of the forecast period...which goes through next weekend. Only a weak disturbance moving through the flow toward the Pacific Northwest on Friday will briefly slow down the anticipated warming. By Sunday...look for high temperatures to be anywhere from plus 10- to plus 20-degF over seasonal norms. Also...dry conditions will be the rule from Wednesday through the upcoming weekend. Beyond the forecast period...the warmth will continue into next week with the Climate Prediction Center showing a higher likelihood of above normal temperatures for the 8-14 Day Outlook...which covers May 12-18. 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. |