Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 409 PM EDT Sun May 5 2024 Valid 00Z Mon May 06 2024 - 00Z Thu May 09 2024 ...Cascades through Rockies... Days 1-3... A mid-level low currently centered over southeast OR per GOES-WEST water vapor imagery is progged to shear open tonight as a shortwave rounds it over the southern Great Basin. This makes for a potent base of the trough pushing northeast over CO late tonight before reforming a mid-level low again over the northern Plains Monday. This low then phases with a reinforcing trough that approaches from the PacNW Tuesday, drawing the low center west from ND into MT Tuesday night before lingering over SD Wednesday. Pacific-sourced moisture streaming in ahead of the low over the Great Basin will continue to bring warm air advection precip over UT this afternoon and CO/WY this evening. High snow levels of 8000-10,000ft are present in this warm air, but rapid height falls under the approaching low/trough will quickly bring snow levels down to around 5000ft yet tonight over the Wasatch/Uinta in UT, Wind River and Bighorns in WY, and the western slopes of the CO Rockies. Decent instability under the trough will continue to allow shower activity to spread east in the colder/lower snow level air. Day 1 PWPF for these terrain areas are 40-90% for >8" with the highest values in the Flat Tops (just west of the Sawatch) in CO. Meanwhile, the next wave arrives into the PacNW late tonight with snow levels around 4000ft and moderate precip rates. Day 1 PWPF for >8" are 40-90% along the OR/WA Cascades. The main low shifts onto the northern Plains Monday and the phasing keeps its precip focus over the Plains where it's mainly rain into Tuesday. The trough crossing the Northwest allows snow levels to drop to around 3000ft, but it mostly has continental air to work with, so Day 2 snowfall is somewhat limited - PWPF for >8" is 30-70% over the WA/OR Cascades, north-central ID and northwest MT (around Glacier NP) ranges, Wasatch, and the Park Range in CO with the highest values (over 80%) for the Tetons. The phasing low that retrogrades toward the northern Rockies Tuesday then shifts southeast into SD maintains NNE flow into the eastern slopes of the MT Rockies and the Bighorns with snow levels around 4000ft. This persistent flow could make for some notable snow totals. Currently the Little Belt Mtns in west-central MT are progged to receive over 2" of QPF and 2 feet or more snow. Day 3 PWPF for >12" are 30-60% around Glacier NP, the northern Absarokas/Bighorns with >80% for the Little Belts. The probability of significant icing across the CONUS is less than 10 percent. Jackson