Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 401 PM EDT Sat May 4 2024 Valid 00Z Sun May 05 2024 - 00Z Wed May 08 2024 ...Cascades through Sierra Nevada, Intermountain West, and Rockies... Days 1-3... A large vertically stacked low is moving ashore near the California-Oregon border this afternoon. The storm is characterized by low heights indicative of an unseasonably cold air mass. As of this writing, snow levels are falling through the 5,000s ft above sea level, resulting in snow ongoing across much of the Sierra Nevada range of California. The peak precipitation rates over the next 3 days are happening now into the Sierra Nevada in association with the strong cold front demarcating the leading edge of the much colder air mass. The surface low will rapidly weaken as it moves inland and is sheared apart by the mountains. Thus, while overall precipitation rates will diminish, the upper level forcing will continue pressing eastward, allowing the associated cold air to do the same. Thus, snow will continue to move inland into the Intermountain West through Day 2/Monday, with nearly all mountain ranges in the western states outside of Arizona and New Mexico picking up at least some snow. The greatest snowfall amounts will be in the Sierra Nevada broadly, but over the next 3 days, the highest peaks of the Cascades down to the Sierras could easily top 4 feet of new snow, again with the heaviest snow ongoing through tonight before gradually tapering to more of a long-duration light snow. Atmospheric moisture amounts are about 3 sigma above normal across the Central Valley this afternoon. While these levels will taper as the storm moves into the Intermountain West, the unseasonably cold air to follow keeps the snow going through the mountains and passes, causing travel delays with major impacts nearly certain in the probabilistic winter storm severity index across the Sierras with potential for near major impacts by Tuesday into the Little Belt and Highwood Mountains of central Montana. The upper level low will track eastward and open up into a negatively tilted trough over Colorado and Wyoming by early Monday morning. The vigorous energy associated therewith will allow the development of a new surface low over the High Plains of eastern Montana Sunday night. The low will quickly intensify as the upper level energy wraps back on itself along the ND/MT border Monday. This will allow the comma-head region of the low to draw in Gulf moisture as an extended LLJ reaches from the waterlogged upper Texas Coast all the way into the Canadian Prairies. Due to it being almost mid-May by this point, most areas will get rain, but the higher elevations of Montana and the Bighorns of Wyoming will see upwards of a foot of new snow on Monday as a result. The probability of significant icing is less than 10 percent. Wegman