


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Spokane, WA
Issued by NWS Spokane, WA
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805 FXUS66 KOTX 112341 AFDOTX Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Spokane WA 441 PM PDT Sat Oct 11 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Moderate to heavy snow for the mountains Sunday into Monday morning. - Gusty north to northeast winds on Monday. Cold wind chills in the teens to single digits in the mountains. - Below normal temperatures Sunday into early next week with highs in the 50s. Low temperatures dropping into the 20s and 30s by Tuesday. && .SYNOPSIS... Rain will continue over much of extreme eastern Washington into the Idaho Panhandle tonight. Heavy snow with winter conditions is expected in the Cascades and northern mountains above 3000 feet Sunday into Monday. Dry weather with fall like temperatures are expected Tuesday through Thursday. && .DISCUSSION... ...EARLY SEASON WINTER STORM TO BRING MODERATE TO HEAVY SNOW TO THE CASCADES, NORTHERN MOUNTAINS OF EASTERN WASHINGTON AND NORTH IDAHO... Tonight: A trough of lower pressure pushing across the Inland Northwest will bring light precipitation through tonight. Additional energy diving south across BC will reinforce the moist isentropic ascent across the eastern half or so of the forecast area tonight. Snow levels will also begin to drop overnight down to between 3000- 4000 over the Cascades and the northern mountains. We will start to see light snow for those higher elevations particularly closer to the Cascade crest. The Idaho Panhandle will see up to a quarter of an inch to up to a half of an inch of precipitation for those more favored higher elevations where orographics help generate lift. Expect low clouds and a damp morning on Sunday especially for the eastern half of the forecast area. Winds will remain breezy, but higher gusts will generally die off overnight. Sunday through Monday: Bigger impacts are anticipated with a second upper level low that deepens across western Washington. Models remain in good agreement with a surface low spinning up over northwest Washington Sunday afternoon and continuing to deepen as it tracks down the western Washington coastline. This will do two things: (1) tighten the northerly pressure gradient with cold Canadian air advancing into the region, and (2) draw moisture northward across the region that overruns the advancing cold air. Advection of colder Canadian air will drop snow levels further Sunday night. Snow will accumulate further down in elevation through the nigh on Sunday with the northern locations such as Republic, Northport, Sandpoint, Bonners Ferry, Porthill, and Eastport picking up at least a dusting. Warm road temperatures may make it difficult for snow to accumulate initially, but these temperatures are expected to drop overnight Sunday. Strong dynamics and vertical lift in the snow growth zone may also push snow levels down more so than models are letting on. The east slopes of the Cascades will be favored for higher intensity snowfall south of Lake Chelan with north-northeast winds resulting in favorable upslope flow into this area. This will be particularly so into Mission Ridge where burst of heavy snow is possible. A big concern will be for any backcountry recrationalists camping in the mountains this weekend. Weather conditions will deteriorate rapidly particularly late on Sunday. Expect winter conditions and cold temperatures. Mountain passes will also see the potential for snow covered roads and heavy at times for Washington Pass and Sherman Pass; however, Loup Loup Pass, Stevens Pass, and Blewett Pass will also see the potential for snow travel. Below are the probabilities for snowfall thresholds of at least 2", 4", and 8" at our mountain passes: Mountain Pass Chance of 2+" Chance of 4+" Chance of 8+" Washington 95% 90% 60% Sherman 100% 85% 30% Lookout 80% 45% 5% Stevens 95% 80% 45% Blewett 90% 70% 20% Loup Loup 85% 50% 5% North to northeast winds will also be gusty, especially down the Okanogan Valley, Purcell Trench and across the Columbia Basin. The ECMWF ensemble has a mean wind gust speed of 40 mph at Sandpoint for Monday. The gusty winds and cold air is expected to produce chilly wind chills in the single digits in the mountains. Wind chills in the teens can be expected in the mountains in the Cascades and across the northern mountains of Eastern Washington. The combination of changing weather conditions to snow and then add the bitterly cold wind will make for dangerous winter conditions for anyone in the backcountry that is prepared. The Winter Storm Watch has been upgraded to a Winter Storm Warning in North Idaho above 3,000 feet. Snow accumulations don`t look to meet warning criteria for the rest of the higher terrain and Winter Weather Advisories have been issued instead. There is potential for heavy snow accumulation across the higher terrain of Chelan County especially as temperatures cool and snow ratios increase early Monday morning, but not confident enough that snow will be heavy enough to warrant a winter storm warning. Wind gusts on Monday will range from between 30-40 mph for the Okanogan Valley, Purcell Trench, and Columbia Basin. /SVH Monday Night through Thursday: A quieter pattern returns as the low drops south over California and an upper ridge builds off the coast providing a dry north to northwest flow over the Inland Northwest. It will feel like fall as low temperatures drop into the 20s and 30s for most of the region, and daytime highs in the mid 50s to low 60s. By Friday, 85% of the ensembles shows another system dropping in from the northwest but differ with the strength. 40% show a windy and wet scenario while 45% show a weaker trough. Forecast currently leans towards the weaker scenario but this will continue to be monitored in the coming days. JW && .AVIATION... 00Z TAFS: Steady light rain through tonight into Sunday across extreme Eastern Washington and the Idaho Panhandle. A moist boundary layer fueled by the rain and upslope flow into the Palouse (KPUW), Spokane-Coeur d`Alene corridor (KGEG/KSFF KCOE), northeast Washington (KDEW/K63S) and Idaho Panhandle (K65S/KSZT) will keep low stratus and MVFR conditions in place through the night. Additional precipitation for the afternoon on Sunday will keep ceilings low. FORECAST CONFIDENCE AND/OR ALTERNATE SCENARIOS: Moderate confidence for MVFR conditions to continue at KPUW/KGEG/KSFF KCOE through the night tonight. There is some potential for drier air to advect into the Spokane Area with VFR conditions for KGEG/KSFF between 08-14Z before stratus fills back in. /SVH ----------------------- Confidence descriptors: Low - Less than a 30 percent chance Moderate - 30 to 70 percent chance High - Greater than a 70 percent chance For additional probabilistic information for NWS Spokane airports, please refer to the Aviation Dashboard on our webpage: https:/weather.gov/otx/avndashboard && .Preliminary Point Temps/PoPs... Spokane 41 48 35 49 31 55 / 80 90 90 20 0 0 Coeur d`Alene 41 47 34 49 31 55 / 90 90 100 10 10 0 Pullman 41 45 39 52 31 55 / 90 90 90 20 10 10 Lewiston 47 53 44 59 39 58 / 90 80 80 20 10 10 Colville 35 48 32 50 19 56 / 90 90 100 20 0 0 Sandpoint 40 45 32 46 25 53 / 100 90 100 10 10 0 Kellogg 40 45 32 46 32 53 / 100 100 100 20 10 10 Moses Lake 43 53 40 54 34 58 / 20 70 90 60 0 0 Wenatchee 44 51 37 50 36 57 / 40 80 90 80 0 0 Omak 42 51 37 55 33 59 / 60 80 90 30 0 0 && .OTX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... WA...Winter Weather Advisory from 5 PM Sunday to 5 AM PDT Monday for Northeast Mountains-Okanogan Highlands. Winter Weather Advisory from 8 AM Sunday to 11 AM PDT Monday for Central Chelan County-Western Chelan County-Western Okanogan County. ID...Winter Storm Warning from 2 PM Sunday to 5 AM PDT Monday for Northern Panhandle. && $$