Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 359 PM EST Thu Nov 30 2023 Valid 00Z Fri Dec 01 2023 - 00Z Mon Dec 04 2023 ...Cascades through the Northern Rockies... Days 1-3... A prolonged period of wet and unsettled weather, that is likely to continue into next week, is now developing across of the Pacific Northwest with the arrival of the first in a series of shortwaves. Modest moisture and the progressive nature of this system will limit amounts. However, snow levels are low, impacting the Cascade passes at the onset. While the leading wave moves into the northern Rockies on Friday, an upstream wave will quickly follow with an uptick in moisture and better forcing expected to support heavier amounts across western Washington and Oregon while snow levels remain relatively low. This second wave will be progressive as well, however a long fetch of onshore flow with embedded energy aloft will follow, supporting additional periods of precipitation into the weekend. The potential for heavy precipitation is expected to increase as a long fetch of subtropical moisture begins extend inland from the Oregon coast through the Intermountain West on Saturday, before being reorinented farther to the north ahead of an amplifying low moving across the Gulf of Alaska and northeastern Pacific on Sunday. Saturday is also expected to mark the onset of rising snow levels that are forecast to continue into Sunday. WPC probabilties indicate that snow accumulations of a foot or more are likely (greater than 70 percent) along much of the Washington and Oregon Cascades, including the passes, before snow levels start to climb this weekend. Heavy accumulations of a foot or more are also likely farther east across the Blue Mountains and into the northern and central Idaho ranges, and along the southeastern Idaho and western Wyoming into the northern Utah ranges. ...Central Plains into the Midwest & Northern New England... Days 1-2... A shortwave trough now emerging from the Southwest/southern Rockies is expected to assume a negative tilt as it moves into Texas and Oklahoma this evening. The associated strong forcing aloft, overlapping low-to-mid level frontogenesis will support precipitation blossoming on the northwest side a surface low tracking from southwest Oklahoma to Missouri tonight into early tomorrow. There remains the potential, but still a great deal of uncertainty, regarding the development of a narrow swath of moderate to heavy snowfall developing within this deformation zone from the Panhandle Region to southern Iowa overnight and early Friday. While strong dynamic cooling is likely to support a changeover to frozen precipitation on the northwest edge of the precipitation shield, the progressive nature of the system and low SLRs are expected to limit the potential for widespread heavy amounts. However, the HREF guidance continues to show relatively high probabilities for snowfall rates briefly reaching 1 in/hr. Models generally show precipitation waning on the backside of the low during the day on Friday, but then redeveloping by the late afternoon and evening as an upstream shortwave lifts from the central Plains through the mid Mississippi Valley, before reaching the Great Lakes Friday evening. With this potential for redevelopment, the probabilities for accumulations of an inch or more have increased, with WPC guidance now showing some moderate probabilities (greater than 40 to 70 percent) from extreme northeastern Kansas and southeastern Nebraska to northern Illinois. Meanwhile, precipitation is expected to spread out ahead of the surface low and along a slow-moving boundary extending from the Great Lakes into the St Lawrence Valley. Accumulating snow of at least an inch or two can be expected from southern Michigan on Friday to northern New England Friday evening. ...Southwest & Southern/Central Rockies... Days 1-2... A series of shortwaves moving quickly on the heels of the wave moving into the southern Plains this evening will move through the base of a broader scale trough as it moves from the Southwest into the central and southern Rockies on Friday into Saturday. While not expected to produce widespread heavy accumulations, WPC probabilities continue to highlight the threat for additional locally heavy amounts across the higher terrain through late Saturday. This includes Arizona's White Mountains and the north-central New Mexico and the western Colorado ranges. Probabilities for additional amounts of 6 inches or more are high (greater than 70 percent) for much of these areas, with moderate (greater than 40 to 70 percent) probabilities for 8 inches or more across some of the higher peaks. Pereira