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May Winter Continue 2022 PNW


The Blob

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5 minutes ago, ShawniganLake said:

Getting some bonus rain showers here on what I thought was going to be a dry day.  I think that’s 62 or 63 days with measurable rain so far this spring.   Farmers are definitely starting to worry. Crops are a good 3 weeks behind at this point and a lot of fields remain unworkable.   Some flood preparations underway in parts of the interior. With so much snow remaining in the high elevations, it could be a quick melt if we get any warm weather in June. 

Much more dreary here than I thought it was going to be as well. Dry but it looks like it could rain any minute. Only 49 degrees as well. 🤢🤮

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Elevation 580’ Location a few miles east of I-5 on the Snohomish Co side of the Snohomish/Skagit border. I love snow/cold AND sun/warmth! 

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Nice and sunny on the Willamette River today.

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

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5 minutes ago, MossMan said:

Much more dreary here than I thought it was going to be as well. Dry but it looks like it could rain any minute. Only 49 degrees as well. 🤢🤮

We just had a decent gully washer here.  Starting to break up now.  There’s still hope for this afternoon 

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1 hour ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

GFS performs fine. It called that April cold snap a couple weeks in advance. Merica.

Bro the GFS was projecting a massive heatwave in mid-April and another during the second week of May.

Look at the z500 D5 correlations..Euro is a million times better. 

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2 minutes ago, Phil said:

Bro the GFS was projecting a massive heatwave in mid-April and another during the second week of May.

Look at the z500 D5 correlations..Euro is a million times better. 

I don't believe anyone is saying the GFS is great.   But the ECMWF is struggling almost as much with this pattern right now.  

**REPORTED CONDITIONS AND ANOMALIES ARE NOT MEANT TO IMPLY ANYTHING ON A REGIONAL LEVEL UNLESS SPECIFICALLY STATED**

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12z EPS below. Not really a significant change, just a bit more aggressive with the initial -dAAMt which retracts the jet faster.

And sometimes these negative changes in AAM tendency during p8/1/2 orbits do produce a retrograding ridge across western North America, but usually those happen with slower cycles.

 

4264AB2F-C3C2-449D-80F1-D84E0326DFFE.gif

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Tim's mention of the 2011 fire season had me look up the 2012 fire season, which I knew was pretty bad... At the time it set the 100 year record for the worst fire season in the PNW. This followed a winter with high snowpack and a fairly wet spring. However, once things dried out, we had an incredibly long dry streak, there was also a lot of thunderstorm activity that summer. Then, 2013 was the worst fire season in Oregon since 1951. 2014 was another bad fire season, as was 2015. However, in 2016 wildfires in Oregon were down significantly, that was the least acreage burned since 2010. 

2017 was another bad season with about 451K acres burned, and 2018 was twice as bad. 

2019 was the quietest wildfire season in Oregon since 2004 with only 67K acres burned, then came the very bad fire seasons of 2020 and 2021, though it is important to note the 2020 season was not bad until the big blow up around Labor Day. 

Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

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5 minutes ago, Phil said:

12z EPS below. Not really a significant change, just a bit more aggressive with the initial -dAAMt which retracts the jet faster.

And sometimes these negative changes in AAM tendency during p8/1/2 orbits do produce a retrograding ridge across western North America, but usually those happen with slower cycles.

 

4264AB2F-C3C2-449D-80F1-D84E0326DFFE.gif

 

Pretty significant changes... and there was big changes on the control run as well.    It is worth noting that the GFS started picking up on this evolution before the ECMWF/EPS.    

**REPORTED CONDITIONS AND ANOMALIES ARE NOT MEANT TO IMPLY ANYTHING ON A REGIONAL LEVEL UNLESS SPECIFICALLY STATED**

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1 minute ago, TT-SEA said:

I don't believe anyone is saying the GFS is great.   But the ECMWF is struggling almost as much with this pattern right now.  

It’s objectively indisputable that the ECMWF is scoring better than the GFS at 500mb. It’s not even remotely close.

What’s interesting about the upcoming pattern evolution is that, while model guidance tends to struggle during these changes in AAM tendency during CCKW orbits thru the W-Hem, they’re actually quite predictable in many if not most cases with only a few EOFs the system state prefers to enter through and thereafter. Of course if there are a lot of destructively interfering responses it can muddy the picture, but that doesn’t seem to be the case here.

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1 minute ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

Tim's mention of the 2011 fire season had me look up the 2012 fire season, which I knew was pretty bad... At the time it set the 100 year record for the worst fire season in the PNW. This followed a winter with high snowpack and a fairly wet spring. However, once things dried out, we had an incredibly long dry streak, there was also a lot of thunderstorm activity that summer. Then, 2013 was the worst fire season in Oregon since 1951. 2014 was another bad fire season, as was 2015. However, in 2016 wildfires in Oregon were down significantly, that was the least acreage burned since 2010. 

2017 was another bad season with about 451K acres burned, and 2018 was twice as bad. 

2019 was the quietest wildfire season in Oregon since 2004 with only 67K acres burned, then came the very bad fire seasons of 2020 and 2021, though it is important to note the 2020 season was not bad until the big blow up around Labor Day. 

Its very rare for it to be wet all summer... even more so down there.

So if cold/wet springs like 2011 and 2012 led to major fire seasons then its probably something that is pretty hard to avoid... and its part of a healthy ecosystem of course so that might be why its hard to avoid.

**REPORTED CONDITIONS AND ANOMALIES ARE NOT MEANT TO IMPLY ANYTHING ON A REGIONAL LEVEL UNLESS SPECIFICALLY STATED**

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2 minutes ago, TT-SEA said:

 

Pretty significant changes... and there was big changes on the control run as well.    It is worth noting that the GFS started picking up on this evolution before the ECMWF/EPS.    

Not really. It’s just slightly more aggressive in transporting AAM from tropics. All in the timing. The large scale picture is essentially unchanged.

Except there are seasonal changes in teleconnections to p7/8/1/2 orbits via inception of the ISM and insolation/etc, so the response to the jet retraction will likely be a large Central US ridge in early/mid June, with a NPAC/Aleutian ridge also likely.

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10 minutes ago, TT-SEA said:

Its very rare for it to be wet all summer... even more so down there.

So if cold/wet springs like 2011 and 2012 led to major fire seasons then its probably something that is pretty hard to avoid... and its part of a healthy ecosystem of course so that might be why its hard to avoid.

2011 was not a major fire season, it was slightly below normal. 2008, 09, and 10, were pretty benign fire seasons. The 10 year average from 2001-2010 was 312,000 acres a year. In the 2012-2021 period only 2016 and 2019 burned less than the 2001-2010 average, probably not a coincidence that 2016 and 19 were also our coolest summers since 2013. The fact we've had 9 consecutive dry springs, MAY also play a role. 2012 was skewed by a record breaking summer dry spell, and a massive range fire in SE Oregon...

Edited by SilverFallsAndrew
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Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

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Here’s a hovmoller perspective of that CCKW in terms of velocity potential @ 200mb.

Actually an extraordinarily clean wave, that completes the w2 circuit (typical of CCKWs) and brings the system back to a w1/canonical  p8/1/2 MJO cycle (which is clearly beginning later in week-2).

525D3095-9F5E-4744-B27F-EF89F823ADD0.png

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4 minutes ago, seattleweatherguy said:

Not for my area. But up north yeah.

I think there’s gonna be wind advisories as far south as Tacoma tomorrow. The winds still going to be strong in Puget sound tomorrow morning/afternoon. I’d be surprised if there wasn’t an advisory considering trees are leafed out now too. 

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Tacoma WA elevation 300’

Monthly rainfall-3.56”

Warm season rainfall-11.14”

Max temp-88

+80 highs-2

+85 highs-2

+90 highs-0

 

 

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This fire stuff is fascinating... Sorry I'm totally geeking out...

Reading the 2021 report it is interesting because lightning activity was pretty low compared to average in June, July, and August. 

This Century the most lightning recorded in June was in 2004, which is interesting given that was the quietest fire season of the Century, so that could be interpreted that those were #1 likely wet storms, and #2 lightning in June is less likely to get fires going as it is early enough in the season. In that particular season the wet June probably outweighed the significant amount of lightning. 

The July with the most lightning this Century was 2012, and August it was 2013. Both of those were bad fire seasons. 

It looks like last season actually had the fewest strikes this century. The top 3 seasons for lightning strikes since 2000 are: 2013, 2014, 2012. 

The 10 year average for Oregon in the 2011-2020 period is about twice as high as the previous 10 year average. 662K acres a year compared to 312K acres a year in the 2001-2010 period. 

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Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

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14 minutes ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

This fire stuff is fascinating... Sorry I'm totally geeking out...

Reading the 2021 report it is interesting because lightning activity was pretty low compared to average in June, July, and August. 

This Century the most lightning recorded in June was in 2004, which is interesting given that was the quietest fire season of the Century, so that could be interpreted that those were #1 likely wet storms, and #2 lightning in June is less likely to get fires going as it is early enough in the season. In that particular season the wet June probably outweighed the significant amount of lightning. 

The July with the most lightning this Century was 2012, and August it was 2013. Both of those were bad fire seasons. 

It looks like last season actually had the fewest strikes this century. The top 3 seasons for lightning strikes since 2000 are: 2013, 2014, 2012. 

The 10 year average for Oregon in the 2011-2020 period is about twice as high as the previous 10 year average. 662K acres a year compared to 312K acres a year in the 2001-2010 period. 

Busy day at work?   😃

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**REPORTED CONDITIONS AND ANOMALIES ARE NOT MEANT TO IMPLY ANYTHING ON A REGIONAL LEVEL UNLESS SPECIFICALLY STATED**

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20 minutes ago, TT-SEA said:

Busy day at work?   😃

I'm a great multi-tasker. 

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Snowfall                                  Precip

2022-23: 95.0"                      2022-23: 17.39"

2021-22: 52.6"                    2021-22: 91.46" 

2020-21: 12.0"                    2020-21: 71.59"

2019-20: 23.5"                   2019-20: 58.54"

2018-19: 63.5"                   2018-19: 66.33"

2017-18: 30.3"                   2017-18: 59.83"

2016-17: 49.2"                   2016-17: 97.58"

2015-16: 11.75"                 2015-16: 68.67"

2014-15: 3.5"
2013-14: 11.75"                  2013-14: 62.30
2012-13: 16.75"                 2012-13: 78.45  

2011-12: 98.5"                   2011-12: 92.67"

It's always sunny at Winters Hill! 
Fighting the good fight against weather evil.

 

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36 minutes ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

This fire stuff is fascinating... Sorry I'm totally geeking out...

Reading the 2021 report it is interesting because lightning activity was pretty low compared to average in June, July, and August. 

This Century the most lightning recorded in June was in 2004, which is interesting given that was the quietest fire season of the Century, so that could be interpreted that those were #1 likely wet storms, and #2 lightning in June is less likely to get fires going as it is early enough in the season. In that particular season the wet June probably outweighed the significant amount of lightning. 

The July with the most lightning this Century was 2012, and August it was 2013. Both of those were bad fire seasons. 

It looks like last season actually had the fewest strikes this century. The top 3 seasons for lightning strikes since 2000 are: 2013, 2014, 2012. 

The 10 year average for Oregon in the 2011-2020 period is about twice as high as the previous 10 year average. 662K acres a year compared to 312K acres a year in the 2001-2010 period. 

The 2020 fires were crazy. The skies were pure dark red in places. Other seasons were probably worse east of the Cascades though.

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The GFS finally ditched the gulf fakicane.

And seems to have corrected the 500mb evolution towards the 12z EPS, as well.

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7 minutes ago, Phil said:

The GFS finally ditched the gulf fakicane.

And seems to have corrected the 500mb evolution towards the 12z EPS, as well.

😃

The tropical system potential was mentioned in that video as well... all the models were showing at least some potential.

And since when do you track the 18Z GFS as it comes out!

**REPORTED CONDITIONS AND ANOMALIES ARE NOT MEANT TO IMPLY ANYTHING ON A REGIONAL LEVEL UNLESS SPECIFICALLY STATED**

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1 minute ago, TT-SEA said:

😃

The tropical system potential was mentioned in that video as well... all the models were showing at least some potential.

And since when do you track the 18Z GFS as it comes out!

Our discussion today motivated me. :lol: 

And the GFS spinning up fake systems from the Central America/Caribbean domain is a notorious bias with W-Hem CCKW orbits. I could see it from a mile away.

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Actually the GFS still tries to develop it several days later..lol. But it’s at least waking up to reality a bit.

Baby steps. 🙏 

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8 minutes ago, Phil said:

Our discussion today motivated me. :lol: 

And the GFS spinning up fake systems from the Central America/Caribbean domain is a notorious bias with W-Hem CCKW orbits. I could see it from a mile away.

Don't worry... the 00Z will be totally different.   

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**REPORTED CONDITIONS AND ANOMALIES ARE NOT MEANT TO IMPLY ANYTHING ON A REGIONAL LEVEL UNLESS SPECIFICALLY STATED**

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6 hours ago, SilverFallsAndrew said:

12z is a concerning run for folx who don't want to head back into the furnace we have grown accustomed to. 

Gonna be getting the 90F+ pictures ready. Which #1 should I use? Active players only. We've got Kyler Murray, Jalen Hurts, Ja'Marr Chase, Tua Tagovailoa...hmm.

Hopefully Mother Nature keeps us in the QB, punter, kicker and some receivers & one defensive player per team this year.

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Springfield, Oregon regular season 2023-24 Stats:

  • Coldest high: 25F (Jan 14, 2024)
  • Coldest low: 20F (Jan 14, 2024)
  • Days with below freezing temps: 24 (Most recent: Mar 8, 2024)
  • Days with sub-40F highs: 4 (Most recent: Jan 16, 2024)
  • Total snowfall: 0.0"
  • Total ice: 2.25”
  • Last accumulating snowfall on roads: Dec 27, 2021 (1.9")
  • Last sub-freezing high: Jan 15, 2024 (27F)
  • Last White Christmas: 1990
  • Significant wind events (gusts 45+): 0

Personal Stats:

  • Last accumulating snowfall on roads: Dec 27, 2021
  • Last sub-freezing high: Jan 16, 2024 (32F)
  • Last White Christmas: 2008
  • Total snowfall since joining TheWeatherForums: 42.0"
  • Sub-freezing highs since joining TheWeatherForums: 4

 

Venmo

GoFundMe "College Basketball vs Epilepsy": gf.me/u/zk3pj2

My Twitter @CBBjerseys4hope

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14 minutes ago, Eujunga said:

It's all a bit esoteric for me. I'm more of an NBA guy myself. I was thinking of famous NBA players who wore each number. We would start, of course, with the Big "O". The look on his face matches the way I will feel about our first 90º+:

 

 

Screen Shot 2022-05-17 at 4.27.08 PM.jpg


Maybe Gus?

Blog Gus.jpg

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Today was a great day to check out the view from my cousins new apartment. Have never been in any of the tall buildings in Tacoma so it was amazing to see! 60/42 today. 

7D45697B-7F33-44AB-9D4F-55F8576F8B37.jpeg

DD3AE863-C4C7-4F99-8F42-210D3F1B4BD5.jpeg

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Tacoma WA elevation 300’

Monthly rainfall-3.56”

Warm season rainfall-11.14”

Max temp-88

+80 highs-2

+85 highs-2

+90 highs-0

 

 

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2 minutes ago, TacomaWaWx said:

Today was a great day to check out the view from my cousins new apartment. Have never been in any of the tall buildings in Tacoma so it was amazing to see! 60/42 today. 

7D45697B-7F33-44AB-9D4F-55F8576F8B37.jpeg

DD3AE863-C4C7-4F99-8F42-210D3F1B4BD5.jpeg

Nice!  That area is really growing. 

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https://www.wrh.noaa.gov/pqr/paststorms/
This page was pretty interesting to read. One thing I found were snow totals from January 1950 (in Oregon):

Portland Airport: 41.0 inches
Downtown Portland: 32.9 inches
Troutdale: 36.7 inches
Hillsboro: 42.4 inches
Molalla: 30.0 inches
Forest Grove: 59.0 inches
Oregon City: 34.0 inches
Estacada: 31.0 inches
McMinnville: 47.0 inches
Salem: 32.8 inches
Albany: 54.7 inches
Eugene: 36.0 inches
Roseburg: 28.0 inches
Medford: 20.1 inches

One interesting thing is the big difference in snow totals between Albany and Salem despite not being that far apart. Also, looks like Hillsboro did better than Downtown, the Airport, and a lot of the eastern suburbs. The past few years have had the eastern areas and the airport do a lot better than places like Hillsboro.



 

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9 minutes ago, T-Town said:

Nice!  That area is really growing. 

The area near stadium has changed so much even since I went to high school there. 

Tacoma WA elevation 300’

Monthly rainfall-3.56”

Warm season rainfall-11.14”

Max temp-88

+80 highs-2

+85 highs-2

+90 highs-0

 

 

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I also decided to check out snow totals for December 2008 in the Portland metro area. I didn't live here then so I was curious one which areas did well.
December 12-14th:

  • PORTLAND (WEST HILLS).... 5.5 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (WEST HILLS).... 5 INCHES 
  • OREGON CITY.............. 5 INCHES
  • WEST LINN................ 5 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SKYLINE)....... 4.5 INCHES
  • LAKE OSWEGO.............. 4.5 INCHES
  • OREGON CITY.............. 4 INCHES
  • BEAVERTON................ 4 INCHES
  • YACOLT................... 4 INCHES
  • TUALATIN................  4 INCHES
  • SHERWOOD................  4 INCHES
  • DAMASCUS.................  4 INCHES
  • SCAPPOOSE................ 4 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SOUTHEAST)..... 3.5 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (DOWNTOWN)...... 3.5 INCHES
  • BETHANY.................. 3.5 INCHES
  • ALOHA.................... 3 INCHES
  • MILWAUKIE...............  3 INCHES
  • TIGARD..................  3 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SOUTHEAST)....  3 INCHES
  • HAPPY VALLEY............. 2.5 INCHES
  • FAIRVEIW................  2.5 INCHES
  • NORTH PLAINS............. 2 INCHES
  • NEWBERG.................. 1 INCH
  • TROUTDALE...............  1 INCH
  • PORTLAND AIRPORT AREA...  1 INCH

December 17th:

  • FOREST GROVE............  4 INCHES
  • GASTON..................  4 INCHES
  • CAMAS (ELKHORN MTN).....  2.5 INCHES   1400 FT
  • HILLSBORO...............  2 INCHES
  • NEWBERG.................  2 INCHES
  • BEAVERTON...............  1.5 INCHES
  • TROUTDALE...............  1 INCH
  • CORNELIUS...............  1 INCH
  • SCAPPOOSE...............  1 INCH
  • SHERWOOD................  1 INCH

December 20th-22nd:

  • NORTH PLAINS........................ 17 INCHES
  • TUALATIN............................ 16 INCHES
  • BEAVERTON........................... 16 INCHES 
  • OREGON CITY......................... 16 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (WEST HILLS)............... 16 INCHES
  • BORING.............................. 15 INCHES
  • YAMHILL............................. 15 INCHES
  • GASTON.............................. 15 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SOUTHWEST - GARDEN HOME).. 14 INCHES
  • TIGARD.............................. 14 INCHES
  • SHERWOOD............................ 14 INCHES
  • WILSONVILLE......................... 14 INCHES
  • TROUTDALE........................... 14 INCHES
  • CANBY............................... 14 INCHES - UPDATED
  • WEST LINN........................... 13 INCHES
  • HILLSBORO........................... 13 INCHES
  • PORTLAND NWS OFFICE (NORTHEAST)..... 13 INCHES
  • NEWBERG............................. 13 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (POWELL BUTTE)............. 12 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (DOWNTOWN)................. 10 INCHES
  • SALEM..............................6-12 INCHES - UPDATED
  • MOUNT ANGEL........................   8 INCHES - NEW REPORT
  • MOLALLA (6 MI SOUTHWEST)............  7 INCHES - NEW REPORT
  • DALLAS..............................3-6 INCHES - NEW REPORT
  • PHILOMATH...........................  1 INCH   - NEW REPORT
  • CORVALLIS...........................  1 INCH   - NEW REPORT
  • SCIO................................  1 INCH   - NEW REPORT

December 24th:

  • Forest Grove: 2.5 inches
  • Scappoose: 3 inches
  • Fairview: 4 inches
  • Beaverton: 2 inches
  • Bethany: 2 inches
  • Vancouver: 3 inches
  • Ridgefield: 4.5 inches
  • Hazel Dell: 3 inches
  • Gresham: 4 inches

Overall it looks like my area did pretty well, maybe 21-25 inches total, but I had to estimate for some of the systems.

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5 minutes ago, Doiinko said:

I also decided to check out snow totals for December 2008 in the Portland metro area. I didn't live here then so I was curious one which areas did well.
December 12-14th:

  • PORTLAND (WEST HILLS).... 5.5 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (WEST HILLS).... 5 INCHES 
  • OREGON CITY.............. 5 INCHES
  • WEST LINN................ 5 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SKYLINE)....... 4.5 INCHES
  • LAKE OSWEGO.............. 4.5 INCHES
  • OREGON CITY.............. 4 INCHES
  • BEAVERTON................ 4 INCHES
  • YACOLT................... 4 INCHES
  • TUALATIN................  4 INCHES
  • SHERWOOD................  4 INCHES
  • DAMASCUS.................  4 INCHES
  • SCAPPOOSE................ 4 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SOUTHEAST)..... 3.5 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (DOWNTOWN)...... 3.5 INCHES
  • BETHANY.................. 3.5 INCHES
  • ALOHA.................... 3 INCHES
  • MILWAUKIE...............  3 INCHES
  • TIGARD..................  3 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SOUTHEAST)....  3 INCHES
  • HAPPY VALLEY............. 2.5 INCHES
  • FAIRVEIW................  2.5 INCHES
  • NORTH PLAINS............. 2 INCHES
  • NEWBERG.................. 1 INCH
  • TROUTDALE...............  1 INCH
  • PORTLAND AIRPORT AREA...  1 INCH

December 17th:

  • FOREST GROVE............  4 INCHES
  • GASTON..................  4 INCHES
  • CAMAS (ELKHORN MTN).....  2.5 INCHES   1400 FT
  • HILLSBORO...............  2 INCHES
  • NEWBERG.................  2 INCHES
  • BEAVERTON...............  1.5 INCHES
  • TROUTDALE...............  1 INCH
  • CORNELIUS...............  1 INCH
  • SCAPPOOSE...............  1 INCH
  • SHERWOOD................  1 INCH

December 20th-22nd:

  • NORTH PLAINS........................ 17 INCHES
  • TUALATIN............................ 16 INCHES
  • BEAVERTON........................... 16 INCHES 
  • OREGON CITY......................... 16 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (WEST HILLS)............... 16 INCHES
  • BORING.............................. 15 INCHES
  • YAMHILL............................. 15 INCHES
  • GASTON.............................. 15 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (SOUTHWEST - GARDEN HOME).. 14 INCHES
  • TIGARD.............................. 14 INCHES
  • SHERWOOD............................ 14 INCHES
  • WILSONVILLE......................... 14 INCHES
  • TROUTDALE........................... 14 INCHES
  • CANBY............................... 14 INCHES - UPDATED
  • WEST LINN........................... 13 INCHES
  • HILLSBORO........................... 13 INCHES
  • PORTLAND NWS OFFICE (NORTHEAST)..... 13 INCHES
  • NEWBERG............................. 13 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (POWELL BUTTE)............. 12 INCHES
  • PORTLAND (DOWNTOWN)................. 10 INCHES
  • SALEM..............................6-12 INCHES - UPDATED
  • MOUNT ANGEL........................   8 INCHES - NEW REPORT
  • MOLALLA (6 MI SOUTHWEST)............  7 INCHES - NEW REPORT
  • DALLAS..............................3-6 INCHES - NEW REPORT
  • PHILOMATH...........................  1 INCH   - NEW REPORT
  • CORVALLIS...........................  1 INCH   - NEW REPORT
  • SCIO................................  1 INCH   - NEW REPORT

December 24th:

  • Forest Grove: 2.5 inches
  • Scappoose: 3 inches
  • Fairview: 4 inches
  • Beaverton: 2 inches
  • Bethany: 2 inches
  • Vancouver: 3 inches
  • Ridgefield: 4.5 inches
  • Hazel Dell: 3 inches
  • Gresham: 4 inches

Overall it looks like my area did pretty well, maybe 21-25 inches total, but I had to estimate for some of the systems.

Ya but did how did the beaches do

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