A winter weather advisory was issued by the National Weather Service on Thursday at 1:48 p.m. valid for Friday between 7 a.m. and 4 p.m. for Oregon Lower Treasure Valley and Baker County.
The NWS forecasts sustained winds of 25 to 35 mph, with gusts reaching up to 50 mph. These conditions could result in unsecured objects being blown around, tree limbs falling, and scattered power outages across the affected area.
The National Weather Service (NWS) had winter weather warnings in place for 11 states early on Thursday, with up to 1 foot of snow forecast for some parts of the country. Snow can disrupt travel and lead to hazardous driving conditions.
Rain and snow is returning to Oregon this weekend, and low elevation snow and ice will become possible next week.
The long stretch of sunny and dry weather comes to an end on Thursday as clouds increase and Portland prepares for rain and potential snow.
A surface inversion is preventing the normal mixing of air, meaning pollutants will remain trapped at lower altitudes.
It should be another nice day today as our atmosphere gets set up for the winter weather pattern. Highs today will be in the 40s and 50s. We’ll have a mostly sunny start, but clouds will increase throughout the afternoon,
The National Weather Service has simplified some of its winter weather alerts for Wind Chill and Extreme Cold Warnings.
Cold Weather Advisories have been put into place across the Pacific Northwest this week, but many might be unaware of the new cold weather terms.
The snow level will begin at around 4,000 feet tomorrow before dropping to around 3,000 feet by Friday night. “Heavy snow possible above 3,000 feet. Total snow accumulations bet
A blast of Arctic air is set to push into the Pacific Northwest this weekend, bringing plunging temperatures, mountain snow, and the potential for lowland snowfall in some areas, meteorologists say. According to Michael Snyder of the Pacific Northwest Weather Watch,