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Short Range Public Discussion
 
(Latest Discussion - Issued 1914Z Dec 21, 2025)
 
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Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 213 PM EST Sun Dec 21 2025 Valid 00Z Mon Dec 22 2025 - 00Z Wed Dec 24 2025 ...A highly impactful Atmospheric River event for Christmas week across California... ...Much above average temperatures to stretch across large sections of the Lower 48, with record highs likely from the Southwest into the Central to Southern Plains... A very wet weather pattern will continue along large portions of the West as the Christmas week travel rush begins. A persistent, stronger than average onshore flow of very moist Pacific air will bring rounds of rain into the West from the Pacific Northwest, southward into Northern California. The heaviest rainfall amounts expected across Northern California Monday and Tuesday where totals of 3 to 5 inches are likely across the Northern Sierra and 1 to 3 inches along coastal regions from San Francisco, northward. Snow levels are expected to remain higher than average, with much of the precip impacting northern California falling as rain. While soil moisture is starting out relatively dry across all of California, the potential for several days of heavy rains will lead to increases chances of flooding, along with increasing potential for landslides, rock falls and mudslides as the rainfall totals add up. By late Tuesday into Wednesday, the heavy rain and flooding threat will begin to also push southward into central to southern California as a storm system begins to strengthen off the California coast and move north-eastward. At the same time, another surge of heavy precipitation will impact northern California, along with continued flooding, landslide, rock fall and mudslide threats. This wet weather pattern shows no signs of letting up, with another round of heavy precipitation possible Christmas day into Friday for much of California. By the time the holiday week ends, widespread precipitation totals of 5 to 10 inches possible across much of California, with maximum totals of 10 to 20 inches expected across the Northern Sierra. A relatively drier weather pattern on tap for the remainder of the Lower 48 this week. A quick moving area of low pressure moving across southern Canada will produce generally light to moderate precipitation amounts from the Great Lakes into the Northeast/New England Monday through Wednesday. Accumulating snows are possible across western to Upstate New York, western and northern portions of New England. The very wet weather pattern affecting the West coast this week will also support much above average temperatures across much of the Lower 48. The mid to upper level flow will remain primarily out of the west across the central to eastern U.S. and out of the southwest along the West coast. This will keep arctic air out of the Lower 48, with it remaining north of the border across Canada and Alaska. There is potential for record high temperatures Monday and Tuesday from the Southwest, across the southern Great Basin, Central to Southern Rockies and into the Central to Southern High Plains. Across these regions, high temperatures are forecast to be 15 to 35 degrees above average. This much above average to record high temperature pattern will persist into Christmas, limiting any chances of a white Christmas, defined by 1 inch or more of snow on the ground, to areas of Northern New England, northern to western NY State, the Upper Great Lakes, the Upper Mississippi Valley, Northern Rockies and northern Cascades. Oravec Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php