Categories
Forecast

Here’s the rain. 10/23 forecast

Good morning!

The sponsor of the report today is Hood River artist Mark Nilsson. Mark’s having a studio sale on TODAY at 7 Hazel Street, starting at 10am and finishing up with cocktail hour around 5pm. You can see his work in Doppio (an amazing world map), on 6th street in Hood River (an incredible tile mural), and all over town on people’s walls. If you head over this morning, you have a chance to meet Mark, wish him a happy birthday (it’s today!), and pick up an original Mark Nilsson painting. Your purchase of Mark’s beautiful artwork will help send him to Paris (assuming the French still aren’t on strike) to celebrate his birthday. To see some of the paintings, visit Mark’s Facebook page. And, one lucky person on the email list will win a mini Mark Nilsson painting – I’ll do the drawing tomorrow morning.

I know I keep saying that the rain is coming, and it should have dampened the roads overnight, but somehow we dodged the bullet so far. On the satellite picture this morning, there’s a band of heavy rain west of us, and the tail end of it will clip the central Gorge. Following this band of moisture, we’ll just see light sprinkles today, so get outside and enjoy the weather (well, get outside after you go to Mark’s studio sale at 7 Hazel Street this morning… )

Indian Summer becomes torrential downpour tonight, as tropically-sourced, moisture-laden clouds pile into Oregon. Precipitation models show 3-hour periods with ½” of rain, for an overnight total of 1-2” of rain in the Cascades and central Gorge. In the wake of this system, we’ll see showers and periods of heavy rain tomorrow, especially before noon.

So, we’re going to lose the mountain bike trails tonight (I know you cross racers want to practice riding in the mud, but please don’t, because it’s really hard on the trails that everyone else uses), leaving us with alternative activities tomorrow.

First choice tomorrow will have to be windsurfing or kiting way out east. The most favorable setup will unfortunately happen in the wee hours tonight, but there should be some remaining strong west wind tomorrow morning in the desert. You may have to wait until midday for the rain to stop, but do keep an eye on Arlington and Threemile for the steadiest conditions. Second choice? Keep an eye on the river levels. The Hood is questionable, but the Klickitat will come up, as will the White Salmon (good thing, because it’s at 1 9/16 feet right now).

Other activities tomorrow include the Columbia Gorge Marathon and skiing at Timberline, where there will be new snow on the slopes. Yay!

Have an awesome day today!

Temira

p.s. If you find this report useful, entertaining, or just want to recognize all the hard work that goes into it, please take the time to make a donation by clicking on the button at the bottom of the page. For a suggested donation of $10, I’ll add you to the email version of this list ‘til May 2011, putting you in the running for cool prizes donated by the weekly sponsors.

Categories
Forecast

Today’s snow and wind forecast 10/22

Good morning!

The sponsor of the report for the next few days is You can see his work in Doppio (an amazing world map), on 6th street in Hood River (an incredible tile mural), and all over town on people’s walls. This coming Saturday, you have a chance to meet Mark, wish him a happy birthday, and pick up an original Mark Nilsson painting. Your purchase of Mark’s beautiful artwork will help send him to Paris (assuming the French still aren’t on strike) to celebrate his (big) birthday. To see some of the paintings, visit Mark’s Facebook page. And, one lucky person on the email list will win a mini Mark Nilsson painting.

Although clouds have moved into the Gorge this morning, it’s still going to be a pleasant day to play outside. We’ll see occasional light showers this morning in post-frontal flow, but not enough to ruin the mountain biking.

The 3-hour precip models says the strongest rain will be overnight tonight, with showers during the day tomorrow. The skies open up tomorrow night, releasing a tropically-sourced downpour over the entire Northwest. We’re looking at .2” tonight, 1” Saturday, and 2” Sunday at higher elevations. That’s going to do nice things to the river levels by Sunday or Monday.

If you’d like to go skiing, keep an eye on the webcams Sunday. Sometime during the day, snow levels will drop to the passes. At least a foot of snow will fall on the slopes at Timberline and also at the base of Meadows. Even Skibowl should see some snow out of this storm.

And if you’d like to go windsurfing or kiting, cross your fingers. At this point, it’s looking like the strongest weekend wind will happen Saturday night into Sunday morning, with a significant pressure gradient driving strong winds in the eastern Gorge. If you’re a speedsailer, you’re probably headed to the coast already for the gale and storm warnings and combined seas of 31 feet (W swell at 20ft) on Sunday. Maybe storm watching is a better idea than open-ocean sailing this weekend…

During the lovely fall weather this weekend, you’ll have the opportunity to run 26.2 miles in the rain at the Columbia Gorge Marathon. And of course, don’t forget to swing by Mark Nilsson’s studio at 7 Hazel street from 10-5 Saturday to drink his coffee and take a look at his fabulous art and wish him a happy birthday!

Have an awesome day today!

Temira

p.s. If you find this report useful, entertaining, or just want to recognize all the hard work that goes into it, please take the time to make a donation by clicking on the button at the bottom of the page. For a suggested donation of $10, I’ll add you to the email version of this list ‘til May 2011, putting you in the running for cool prizes donated by the weekly sponsors.