That's some impressive water flow!
Friends of mine in Portland report a foot of snow overnightht at their house on Alameda Ridge in NE PDX,Wandering Sagebrush said:Portland is a mess this morning. Reports of up to 11 inches in parts of the city. We only have about 3 inches, but it's still snowing.
For the first time I can remember, chains are required on all vehicles in the city. Studded and snow tires, 4wd aren't enough. To be legal, it's chains.
We have friends in Eugene and they have snow/ice and all kinds of nasty stuff. Kids are out of school and will need to make up as of now at least 6 days.Wandering Sagebrush said:
Yeah... I have a roof rake with a long extension (a tool that I bought for clearing my camper roof when winter camping) that I might use on the lower edge of the roof -- for ice dams.Occidental said:I just got off my roof - but I'm not so worried about the weight, it's the ice dam that is building up over the kitchen and is resulting in some melt off coming out about halfway down my siding that is making me nervous (at least yesterday when things were melting. I measured 35" on the roof while I was up there.
Note to Mark: If you need ice melt, Helena Chemical has quite a bit.
Special Weather Statement
National Weather Service Sacramento CA
508 AM PST Wed Jan 18 2017
CAZ013>019-063-064-066>069-191300-
Shasta Lake Area / Northern Shasta County-
Burney Basin / Eastern Shasta County-Northern Sacramento Valley-
Central Sacramento Valley-Southern Sacramento Valley-
Carquinez Strait and Delta-Northern San Joaquin Valley-
Mountains Southwestern Shasta County to Northern Lake County-
Clear Lake/Southern Lake County-
Northeast Foothills/Sacramento Valley-Motherlode-
Western Plumas County/Lassen Park-
West Slope Northern Sierra Nevada-
Including the cities of Shasta Dam, Burney, Redding, Red Bluff,
Chico, Oroville, Marysville/Yuba City, Sacramento,
Fairfield/Suisun, Stockton, Modesto, Alder Springs, Lakeport,
Paradise, Grass Valley, Jackson, Chester, Quincy, and Blue Canyon
508 AM PST Wed Jan 18 2017
...STORMY WEATHER RETURNING TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA OVER THE NEXT
SEVERAL DAYS...
A SERIES OF PACIFIC FRONTAL SYSTEMS WILL BRING AN END TO THE
PERIOD OF DRY WEATHER NORTHERN CALIFORNIA HAS EXPERIENCED OVER THE
LAST SEVERAL DAYS. THE FIRST STORM IN THE SERIES BEGUN MOVING
INTO NORCAL WEDNESDAY MORNING BRINGING LIGHT PRECIPITATION OVER
PARTS OF THE NORTH STATE. HEAVIER RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW WILL BE
PUSHING OVER THE NORTH STATE BETWEEN WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON AND
THURSDAY.
THIS FIRST MODERATELY STRONG WEATHER SYSTEM WILL BRING BETWEEN
THREE QUARTERS AND TWO INCHES OF RAINFALL TO THE VALLEY FROM MID
DAY WEDNESDAY TO MID DAY THURSDAY. SOME FOOTHILL LOCATIONS COULD
SEE 3 INCHES OR MORE OF RAINFALL. SNOW LEVELS WILL START OUT
MODERATELY HIGH AT BETWEEN 5000 AND 6000 FEET BUT THEN LOWER TO
AROUND 4000 FEET BY THURSDAY AFTERNOON. SEVERAL INCHES OF SNOW
WILL BE POSSIBLE ABOVE 4000 FEET WITH UP TO A FOOT AND A HALF POSSIBLE
HIGHER ELEVATION AND TWO FEET OR MORE POSSIBLE HIGHEST PEAKS.
IN ADDITION TO THE RAIN AND SNOW...GUSTY WINDS ARE LIKELY WITH THE
WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY SYSTEM. WINDS GUSTS TO 40 MPH ARE FORECAST FOR
THE VALLEY AND UP TO 50 MPH OVER THE MOUNTAINS. WHITE-OUT
CONDITIONS WILL BE POSSIBLE AT TIMES OVER THE SIERRA CASCADE
RANGE.
AFTER A BREAK ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING ANOTHER STORM
SYSTEM WILL HIT NORTHERN CALIFORNIA ON FRIDAY. THIS SYSTEM WILL BE
A LITTLE WEAKER THAN THE PREVIOUS SYSTEM IN PRECIPITATION AMOUNTS
AND WIND BUT WILL COME WITH LOWER SNOW LEVELS GENERALLY BETWEEN
3000 AND 4000 FEET. ANOTHER PACIFIC STORM IS FORECAST TO MOVE
THROUGH AROUND SUNDAY BRINGING STILL MORE RAIN, WIND AND MOUNTAIN
SNOW BUT WITH EVEN LOWER SNOW LEVELS BETWEEN 2000 AND 3000 FEET.