Hopefully, this system might also bring some much needed moisture into
Southern Arizona.  We've had virtually nil rain from October to the
present.  Here's a rainfall map at this URL:

http://rainlog.org/usprn/html/main/maps.jsp

Jim Cloud
Tucson, AZ

On Jan 17, 9:58 am, Ray <r.sh...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> A friend  who has a son that works at Sacto international airport
> received this weather update via The  Western Coastal and Marine
> Geology, U.S. Geological Survey this morning.
>
> Currently, the strong El Nino is reaching its peak in the Eastern
> Pacific, and now finally appears to be exerting an influence on our
> weather. The strong jet has been apparent for quite some time out over
> the open water, but the persistent block had prevented it from
> reaching the coast. Now that the block has dissolved completely, a
> 200+ kt jet is barreling towards us. Multiple large and powerful storm
> systems are expected to slam into CA from the west and northwest over
> the coming two weeks, all riding this extremely powerful jet stream
> directly into the state. The jet will itself provide tremendous
> dynamic lift, in addition to directing numerous disturbances right at
> the state and supplying them with an ample oceanic moisture source.
> The jet will be at quite a low latitude over much of the Pacific, so
> these storms will be quite cold, at least initially. Very heavy
> rainfall and strong to potentially very strong winds will impact the
> lower elevations beginning late Sunday and continuing through at least
> the following
>
> Sunday. This will be the case for the entire state, from (and south
> of) the Mexican border all the way up to Oregon . Above 3000-4000
> feet, precipitation will be all snow, and since temperatures will be
> unusually cold for a precipitation event of this magnitude, a truly
> prodigious amount of snowfall is likely to occur in the mountains,
> possibly measured in the tens of feet in the Sierra after it's all
> said and done. But there's a big and rather threatening caveat to that
> (discussed below).Individual storm events are going to be hard to time
> for at least few more days, since this jet is just about as powerful
> as they come (on this planet, anyway). Between this Sunday and the
> following Sunday, I expect categorical statewide rainfall totals in
> excess of 3-4 inches.
>
> That is likely to be a huge underestimate for most areas. Much of
> NorCal is likely to see 5-10 inches in the lowlands, with 10-20 inches
> in orographically-favored areas. Most of SoCal will see 3-6 inches at
> lower elevations, with perhaps triple that amount in favored areas.
> This is where things get even more interesting, though. The models are
> virtually unanimous in "reloading" the powerful jet stream and forming
> an additional persistent kink 2000-3000 miles to our southwest after
> next Sunday. This is a truly ominous pattern, because it implies the
> potential for a strong Pineapple-type connection to develop.
>
> Indeed, the 12z GFS now shows copious warm rains falling between days
> 12 and 16 across the entire state. Normally, such as scenario out
> beyond day seven would be dubious at best. Since the models are in
> such truly remarkable agreement, however, and because of the extremely
> high potential impact of such an event, it's worth mentioning now.
> Since there will be a massive volume of freshly-fallen snow (even at
> relatively low elevations between 3000-5000 feet), even a moderately
> warm storm event would cause very serious flooding. This situation
> will have to monitored closely. Even if the tropical connection does
> not develop, expected rains in the coming 7-10 days will likely be
> sufficient to cause flooding in and of themselves (even in spite of
> dry antecedent conditions).
>
> In addition to very heavy precipitation, powerful winds may result
> from very steep pressure gradients associated with the large and deep
> low pressure centers expect ed to begin approaching the coast by early
> next week. Though it's not clear at the moment just how powerful these
> winds may be, there is certainly the potential for a widespread
> damaging wind event at some point, and the high Sierra peaks are
> likely to see gusts in the 100-200 mph range (since the 200kt jet at
> 200-300 mb will essentially run directly into the mountains at some
> point). The details of this will have to be hashed out as the event(s)
> draw closer.
>
> In short, the next 2-3 weeks (at least) are likely to be more active
> across California than any other 2-3 week period in recent memory. The
> potential exists for a dangerous flood scenario to arise at some point
> during this interval, especially with the possibility of a heavy rain-
> on-snow event during late week 2. In some parts of Southern
> California , a whole season's worth of rain could fall over the course
> of 5-10 days. This is likely to be a rather memorable event. Stay
> tuned.”
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