Probabilistic Heavy Snow and Icing Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 340 AM EST Sat Mar 8 2025 Valid 12Z Sat Mar 08 2025 - 12Z Tue Mar 11 2025 ...Southern Rockies through Oklahoma/Texas Panhandles into western Oklahoma... Day 1... Closed low over AZ/NM border will slowly fill as it shifts east to northwest TX today and along the Red River tonight. A strong SWly jet streak persists over west TX today, aiding ascent as the associated surface trough shifts east. This deep layer lift and increasing moisture will result in expanding precip over N Texas and OK through this afternoon with an axis of moderate to heavy precipitation across the TX Panhandle through central OK. Height falls under the upper low and dynamic cooling in the banding should allow snow to fall/accumulate over the TX Panhandle into western OK this afternoon. 00Z HREF mean snow rates are generally not that high, up to 0.75"/hr, though diurnal effects are probably causing some of the limitation. Generally speaking, if snow bands become strong/heavy enough they can overcome diurnal effects and accumulate. Day 1 PWPF for >4" is 40-60% across the central TX Panhandle, particularly along the I-40 corridor. Some probabilities for >2" extend east into OK, but really it comes down to the banding. The NAMnest likely remains too heavy/snowy, but the recent HRRRs have trended a bit colder/snowier and a blend of these two models is probably a decent approach. ...Washington to northwest Montana... Days 2-3... A deepening trough from low pressure over the Gulf of Alaska will interact with a building ridge across the Desert Southwest to funnel strengthening S/SW flow into western WA tonight, expanding east to the northern Rockies through Monday. A weak shortwave and accompanying vorticity lobe will swing onshore Sunday evening, and along with the right entrance of a jet streak over Canada, enhance lift. This will result in increasing wintry precipitation over the WA Cascades and Olympics, pivoting into the Northern Rockies Sunday night. Snow levels on the WA Cascades will generally be around 4000 ft during the heaviest precipitation, but will crash to as low as 1500 ft just before precip ends Monday morning. This combined with the transient nature of forcing suggests most of the impactful snow will remain above pass levels, but Day 2 WPC probabilities for >6" are 70-90% in the WA Cascades, with Day 2.5 probs 30-60% for the Lewis Range in Glacier NP. The probability of significant icing is less than 10 percent. Jackson