Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 310 AM EDT Fri May 3 2024 Valid 12Z Fri May 03 2024 - 12Z Mon May 06 2024 ...Cascades through Sierra Nevada and Intermountain West... Days 2-3... An upper low will continue to deepen as it drops southeast from the Gulf of Alaska and across the northeastern Pacific today, reaching the Pacific Northwest tonight. Models continue to advertise an anomalously deep system for early May, with 500mb heights dropping 2-3 standard deviations below normal across Oregon and northern California as the system moves onshore. This system will bring widespread precipitation and windy conditions across the region, beginning in the Pacific Northwest and northwestern California tonight, before spreading further south and east on Saturday. As snow levels drop below 5000ft from the southern Cascades to the northern Sierra, impactful accumulations are expected in the higher terrain on Saturday. The heaviest amounts are most likely to fall along the Sierra Nevada, where left-exit region upper jet forcing in addition to strong upslope flow are expected to help bolster rates. WPC PWPF shows high probabilities for 8 inches or more falling along the northern to central Sierra in areas above 5000ft on Saturday. Heavier accumulations of 1-2ft can be expected across some of the higher peaks. In addition to the falling snow, gusty winds and blowing snow are forecast to contribute to moderate winter storm impacts as indicated by the WSSI. The system is forecast to gradually weaken and transition to an open wave as it swings east across the Great Basin into the central Rockies on Sunday into early Monday. Widespread heavy snow accumulations are not expected, although some portions of the Great Basin into the Rockies could see some locally heavy totals. This includes the eastern Oregon, northern Nevada, and northern Utah mountains. The probability of significant icing is less than 10 percent. Pereira