Tag Archives: winds

Does Your Head Feel Squished Right Now?

Seattle’s atmospheric pressure was up to 30.79 inches at its peak around midnight last night, says KOMO’s Scott Sistek. Is that a big deal? It sure is. UW meteorologist Cliff Mass says the atmospheric pressure hasn’t gotten this high in the past 15 years in Seattle:

A very strong high pressure area is centered over the Northwest and southwest Canada, with pressures greater than 1040 hPa over much of the region and a 1046 hPa center over southern BC. 1046 hPa is equivalent to 30.89 inches of mercury.

UPDATE: History is made: “UW’s Neal Johnson ran the number and found that the sea level pressure at Seattle-Tacoma Airport was the highest since record keeping began there in 1948. ”

It’s very likely the heads of everyone you know will implode later today. Hairline cracks in the skull first, you know. Well, perhaps not. But Mass does say, “I wonder what this does to people with arthritis and sensitive joints.”

As someone who gets weather-related migraines, I can vouch for it feeling peculiar. Now, initially, full disclosure, I thought that it was due to the flight of Sazeracs I had last night at Canon (brandy, rye, and brandy + rye), but as the sensation has persisted, I realize it’s probably the pressure.

While we’re all feeling slightly smushed in the bell jar, anyone who lives along the “shoulders” of the pressure ridge is seeing pretty spectacular winds due to the pressure differential. One of Mass’s commenters points to this Los Angeles Times story about 100-mph winds. Some 300,000 Southern Californians were left without power.

Meanwhile, except for the threat of head-implosion, we’re sitting pretty, weather-wise: KOMO’s forecast calls for us to dry out over the next few days:

We will see an increase in clouds overnight and early Friday, but we’ll likely stay mainly dry.  Expect more sunshine tomorrow afternoon with highs in the mid 40s.

Saturday through next Tuesday will all be very similar weather-wise:  Areas of morning fog with a cold start, varying levels of afternoon sunshine, temperatures a few degrees cooler than normal.  Each day will also be rain-free.

“With hey, ho, the 60-mph wind and the 4 to 5 inches of rain”

A volunteer demonstrates travel techniques post-flood. You simply use the downed trees to cross safely above the rushing torrents. (Photo: zenobia_joy, in our Flickr pool)

Hatten the batches!

“A VERY serious storm is going to hit the Northwest during the next two days,” warns UW meteorologist Cliff Mass, “one that will cause flooding and coastal wind damage.  And the urban areas are going to experience a deluge.”

Weather models are showing the mountains will get five to ten inches of rain, while “Seattle will get nearly 4-5 inches if this forecast verifies,” says Mass. Rivers are going to flood, and if you know anyone in the Chehalis-Centralia basin, you may want to tell them to move valuables to the attic, and keep the camcorder charged up. But it’s not just torrential rain: The Washington and Oregon coasts will see strong winds, claim the models.

The Seattle forecast from the National Weather Service has just upgraded our chances of getting hit by high winds:

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN SEATTLE HAS ISSUED A HIGH WIND WARNING … WHICH IS IN EFFECT FROM 7 PM THIS EVENING TO NOON PST TUESDAY. THE HIGH WIND WATCH IS NO LONGER IN EFFECT.

  • WIND … SOUTH WIND 20 TO 30 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 45 MPH THIS MORNING … EASING AROUND NOON. SOUTHEAST WIND RISING THIS EVENING TO 30 TO 40 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 60 MPH.
  • TIMING … LOCALLY DAMAGING WINDS ARE POSSIBLE BETWEEN 7 PM THIS EVENING AND NOON TUESDAY … WITH THE STRONGEST WINDS LIKELY BETWEEN 10 PM THIS EVENING AND 7 AM TUESDAY.
  • IMPACTS … WINDS THIS STRONG CAN SNAP TREE BRANCHES…TOPPLE TREES THAT ARE BIG ENOUGH TO DAMAGE HOMES OR CARS OR SEVERELY INJURE PEOPLE … AND CAUSE POWER OUTAGES.

“I’m going to call this morning’s storm Storm #1 because we have several more to go as the week progresses,” writes KOMO’s Paul Deanna. “Storm #2 arrives as soon as tonight:”

This second storm will bring even stronger wind–and even heavier rain–to our area overnight and on Tuesday.  This front will stall right over us, keeping the steady-to-heavy rain around for 24 hours or longer.  As a result, the NWS Seattle office has issued a Flood Watch for all rivers flowing out of the Olympic Mountains through Wednesday.

In one swell foop, we should go from being 30-percent-below-average precipitation for November, to above-average. The combination of heavy rain and high winds is usually a guarantee of at least power outages, as the waterlogged ground lets trees uproot more easily. Also be prepared for your Amtrak trip to to involve buses: Lately any amount of rain has brought about mudslides somewhere along the tracks. Of course, if I-5 floods down by Chehalis then buses are out, too.