Hydrometeorological Discussion National Weather Service / California Nevada RFC / Sacramento CA 1230 PM PST Tue Mar 3 2026 ...TROUGH MOVING IN FROM THE NW TO BRING SHOWERS/T-STORMS TO NRN CA & THE SIERRA WEDS WITH LINGERING SHOWERS THURS... ...DRY CONDITIONS THROUGH AT LEAST SAT UNDER HIGH PRESSURE, A DEVELOPING LOW MAY BRING LIGHT SHOWERS TO COASTAL SRN CA SUN... .METEOROLOGICAL CONDITIONS (TUE PM - MON AM)... Forecast remains on track with only minor updates to the afternoon package. High pressure sits overhead as a trough approaches from the northwest. This system will bring showers into nrn CA tonight before spreading inland throughout the day tomorrow. Showers spreading into NV in the afternoon and into the nrn/central Sierra. Chances of thunderstorms over these areas as well. The trough will then swing inland while digging south the rest of Wednesday. Lingering showers over NV on Thursday as the system exits with strong high pressure building in behind it allowing conditions to dry out. Models continue to develop another trough over the Intermountain West late in the week moving south through the region before forming into a closed low just offshore of srn CA into Saturday. The low should rotate offshore throughout the rest of the weekend picking up moisture. There is still uncertainty on the positioning of this system and therefore any resulting precip. It should be dry as it moves across the region but after taking in moisture should be rotating bands of precip towards srn CA, but whether or not those reach land and how much/how far spreads inland will depend on where the low ends up. For now amounts look minimal at a few hundredths of an inch or so, though 12z models have shifted lighter showers further northward along more of coastal srn CA than previously. The forecast was a blend of the morning WPC guidance and the latest NBM. Added in a little of the GFS/ECMWF for Sunday to show showers along the srn CA coast. Best totals over the Smith Basin and srn OR Cascades. QPF through the period: 0.30-1" north coast, 0.75-1.50" srn OR Cascades, 0.10-0.50" rest of nrn CA, and 0.10" or less generally across most of the Sierra, and a few hundredths or so along the coast from Ventura County to San Diego. |